19 May 2026 #humanrevealed #didyouknow #ginkgo
Ginkgo biloba | vascular cambium | R-genes | flavonoids | 600 years no aging | Hiroshima survivor tree
A single ginkgo tree survived the 1923 Tokyo earthquake and the 1945 Hiroshima atomic bomb. Scientists discovered why — its cambium never stops dividing, its defense genes never go quiet, and its chemistry keeps cleaning the wood from the inside.
⏱ TIMESTAMPS
0:00 — 1923 Tokyo earthquake: one tree still standing
0:27 — 1945 Hiroshima: six ginkgo trees inside the blast radius
1:06 — The vascular cambium: a layer that never slows down
1:58 — R-genes: defense compounds that stay active with age
2:17 — Flavonoids: a slow rinse that protects the wood
2:37 — Bark as a firewall: how the outer layers absorbed the damage
3:01 — 600 years, no aging: what biology almost never sees
3:42 — Hibakujumoku: survivor trees sent to 100+ cities
4:29 — Nature speaks. We translate.
🎬 About this video
Researched and produced by humans.
Every fact is backed by published research — sources listed below.
AI generates visuals and narration under human direction.
📖 SOURCES
Vascular cambium activity in 600-year-old ginkgo — Wang et al. 2020, PNAS
R-gene expression maintained in aged ginkgo — Wang et al. 2020, PNAS
Flavonoid biosynthesis in ginkgo wood tissue — Wang et al. 2020, PNAS
Hibakujumoku survivor tree program — Green Legacy Hiroshima
1923 Great Kanto Earthquake ginkgo survival — Tokyo Metropolitan Government records
Hiroshima A-bomb survivor trees — Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum
Ginkgo bark fire resistance — Hori et al. 1997, Journal of Wood Science