Despite failing as a industrial resource, the tree's striking made it an immediate hit as an ornamental plant.
The European "chapter" of its story began in , when Captain James Cook sighted Norfolk Island during his second voyage on the HMS Resolution . araucaria excelsa
The story of , widely known today as the Norfolk Island Pine , is a tale of ancient survival, mistaken identity, and eventual global fame as a "living Christmas tree." 1. A Relic of the Dinosaur Age Despite failing as a industrial resource, the tree's
Long before it was discovered by humans, the Araucaria family flourished across the globe. Fossil records from roughly show these trees lived alongside dinosaurs like the Argentinosaurus . Their distinctive, tough, upward-curving needles may have even evolved as armor to protect them from hungry prehistoric herbivores. While they eventually went extinct in the Northern Hemisphere, they survived in the South Pacific as "living fossils". 2. Discovery and "The Great Mistake" A Relic of the Dinosaur Age Long before
: When the British later attempted to use the wood, they discovered a fatal flaw: while the trunks were tall and straight, the timber was not resilient enough to withstand the stresses of high-seas sailing. The wood was too "knotty" and brittle for masts, leading the Navy to abandon the island's timber industry entirely. 3. From Island Giant to Household Ornament
: Seeing the trees' perfectly straight trunks—often reaching over 60 meters (200 feet)—Cook and his botanist, Joseph Banks, believed they had found a perfect source for ship masts and yards for the British Royal Navy.