In the Miyazaki Prefecture in southern Japan, groups of Japanese cedar trees appear to be arranged in concentric circles, strangely similar to crop circles and it’s not the work of green-thumbed aliens. The formation is actually the result of a meticulous project begun in 1973, centered around forest growth and spacing. The area was designated as “experimental forestry,” with one experiment calling for the planting of trees in 10-degree radial increments to form 10 concentric circles.

45 years later, the trees have grown in a unique convex shape, creating a beautiful formation and proving that tree spacing does indeed affect growth patterns

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amazing and beautiful. would love to take a walk into the bullseye 🎯

That’s an awesome pic. You could probably see from the center to the outside edge with nothing blocking your line of sight.

It makes me wonder if a spiral would be even more efficient than concentric circles?