In New York Artist Maya Lin apos;s apos;Ghost Forest apos; Warns On Rising Sea...

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May 10 (Reuters) - In the center of New York City's spring greenery, artist Maya Lin has installed the barren, brown trunks of 49 dead Atlantic White Cedar trees in a Manhattan park as a "Ghost Forest" to warn of the danger of climate change and the threat of rising sea water.

"This is a grove of Atlantic Cedars... victims of saltwater inundation from rising seas due to climate change," said Lin, designer of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, DC.

"They're called, 'Ghost Forests,' so I wanted to bring a ghost forest to raise awareness about this phenomenon," she added, kinh nghiệm du lịch côn đảo noting that more than 50% of Atlantic Cedars on the U.S.

Eastern Seaboard have been lost.

The trees, Côn Đảo some of them 80 years old, are from the Atlantic Pine Barrens of New Jersey, which is about 100 miles (160 km) from downtown Manhattan.

The exhibit in Madison Square Park, in the shadow of the Empire State Building, will be displayed until Nov.

14.

(Reporting by Dan Fastenberg and Hussein al Waaile; Editing by Dan Grebler)