New Delhi: California's oldest treasure - the famous Pioneer Cabin Tree – was destroyed after it fell victim to a massive storm.


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One of the oldest tourist attractions, the giant sequoia is reckoned to be over 1,000 years old and stood tall in the Calaveras Big Trees State Park.


The tree was around 100 feet tall and 22 feet in diameter. It has been known to withstand the test of times after it was hollowed by lightning strikes in the 1800s and after a tunnel was cut into it in the 1880s to allow tourists to pass through. Looks like this time, it had had enough.


The giant tree came down after more than three inches of rain water fell on Sunday during a seasonal storm known as the Pineapple Express.


A statement from California State Parks read: “A combination of trunk and root decay and storm water runoff appears to have brought the giant sequoia down at its base, shattering it and a nearby cedar tree. No one was hurt.”


According to the Calaveras Big Trees Association, the tree will “most likely remain where it fell, providing habitat for many creatures and slowly decomposing to improve the soil for future sequoias,” Yahoo News reported.



People on Twitter were seen paying tributes through their posts and reminiscing about how it looked before.


Take a look!