Tree of life (disambiguation)
(Redirected from Tree of life)
- Tree of Life in scripture:
- The best-known Tree of Life appears in the story of Adam and Eve in the Book of Genesis of Hebrew Bible.
- A tree of life also appears in the New Testament in the Book of Revelation of John. (It is not immediately obvious nor is it universally accepted that the Book of Genesis account and the Book of Revelation account speak of the same tree of life.)
- A tree of life in the form of ten interconnected nodes is an important part of the Kabbalah.
- The tree of life appears in the Book of Mormon in a revelation to Lehi (Book of Mormon). It is symbolic of salvation and post-mortal existence.
- The tree of life appears in Norse religion as Yggdrasil, the world tree, the ash tree (sometimes thought to be yew) with an eagle on top and a serpent, offering immortality, on the bottom. An interesting similarity was found in China, where carvings of a tree with a bird on top and a dragon at the bottom were discovered fairly recently. The dragon, of course, often represents immortality in Chinese mythology.
- A tree of life can be found in Aztec legend, as a Tule tree. The Tule tree in modern times is a real tree, and is thought to be the single largest and oldest biomass in the world.
- The tree of life (a term used by Charles Darwin) that describes the evolutionary relationships of all life on Earth is described in the evolutionary tree.
- Tolweb.org[1] - The tree of life is an ongoing Internet project containing information about phylogeny and biodiversity, produced by biologists from around the world. Each page contains information about one group of organisms, illustrating by the connectedness to the other pages, the evolutionary tree that unites all living things.
- There is also a tree of life on the island of Bahrain.
- The Tree-of-Life also appears in Larry Niven's Known Space novels.