Tamme-Lauri oak
0 sources
Tamme-Lauri oak
Summary
Tamme-Lauri oak is a tourist attraction[1]. It draws 9 Wikipedia views per month (tourist_attraction category, ranking #77 of 219).[2]
Key Facts
- Tamme-Lauri oak is located in Antsla Rural Municipality[3].
- Tamme-Lauri oak is in the country of Estonia[4].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's image is recorded as Tamme-Lauri tamm2.JPG[5].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's image is recorded as Tamme-Lauri tamm suvepäeval.jpg[6].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's instance of is recorded as tourist attraction[7].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's instance of is recorded as remarkable tree[8].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's location is recorded as Urvaste[9].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's Commons category is recorded as Tamme-Lauri Oak[10].
- +1326-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Tamme-Lauri oak[11].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 57.91722222, 'lon': 26.57666667}[12].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/09gk_vs[13].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's WDPA ID is recorded as 172244[14].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's IUCN protected areas category is recorded as IUCN category III: Natural Monument or Feature[15].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's heritage designation is recorded as individual protected natural object[16].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's EELIS object register code is recorded as KLO4000427[17].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as Eesti 1000[18].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's individual of taxon is recorded as Quercus robur[19].
- Tamme-Lauri oak's OpenStreetMap node ID is recorded as 423187550[20].
Body
Geography
Tamme-Lauri oak is in the country of Estonia[4]. It is located in Antsla Rural Municipality[3].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include tourist attraction[7] and remarkable tree[8]. Tamme-Lauri oak's heritage designation is recorded as individual protected natural object[16].
History and Context
+1326-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Tamme-Lauri oak[11].
Why It Matters
Tamme-Lauri oak draws 9 Wikipedia views per month (tourist_attraction category, ranking #77 of 219).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21]