Gratis billeder : hjul, vindue, kørsel, motorvej, forrude, rat, california, Miata, oleander, Caltrans, neriumoleander, bil make, automotive eksteriør, luksus køretøj 2400x1714
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The secret history of freeway plants Oleander (Nerium oleander) is incorrectly thought to be an import from the Mediterranean regions of Iberia and North Africa, adapted by the California Department of Transportation for planting in freeway median strips. Little known is that it was actually here in California long before humans migrated across the Bering Strait. First nation peoples arrived and found long meandering lines of Oleander, which they called, in various dialects, “that useless plant that goes in long pointless lines nowhere.” Out of sense of perverse curiosity, people followed the long lines of plants, leaving trails in the soil, later to become de facto trade routes. In time, the Native American trails were overlaid with European settler’s roads, and eventually the state and Interstate Freeways we know today.
Den frie høj opløsning foto af bil, hjul, vindue, kørsel, motorvej, køretøj, forrude, rat, california, Miata, oleander, Caltrans, neriumoleander, bil make, automotive eksteriør, luksus køretøj
, taget med en Canon PowerShot G9 01/15 2017 Billedet taget med 8.0mm, f/4.0s, 1/250s, ISO 80











