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More than 200 bidders came to the Sydney Botanic Gardens for the Sotheby’s auction Oct. 23, 2005 to bid on 292 first generation Wollemi saplings grown from cuttings of rare parent pines in the Wollemi National Park of New South Wales, Australia. The Wollemi pine was food for the dinosaurs and found only in fossil records?EUR??,,????'??+until Sept. 1994, when bushwalker David Noble stumbled upon a group of Wollemia in Sydney?EUR??,,????'???s Blue Mountains. The discovery was considered a major botanical find. It?EUR??,,????'???s estimated that less than 100 of the adult trees exist in the wild.
The most coveted lot, the Sir Joseph Banks collection of 15 trees, went for $149,000. Another batch of 20 pines destined to line a Parisian avenue, garnered only $23,700, about half the price expected.
Peter Nowland, a Landscape Architect for the Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority, purchased two two-meter trees for $4,500. Nowland told the Sunday Mail he was drawn to the tree?EUR??,,????'???s great shape and strong trunks and wanted these special trees for the public domain.
Francisco Uviña, University of New Mexico
Hardscape Oasis in Litchfield Park
Ash Nochian, Ph.D. Landscape Architect
November 12th, 2025
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