Barh or Banyan tree is considered to be sacred in some places in India. A specimen in the Calcutta botanical garden is more than 100 years old. Banyan is a remarkable tree of India and tropical Africa sends down from its branches great numbers of shoots, which take root and become new trunks. Banyan unusually shaped tree of the mulberry family (Morceau) native to the Indian subcontinent. The banyan reaches a height up to 30 metres (100 feet) and spreads laterally indefinitely. Aerial roots that develop from its branches descend and take root in the soil to become new trunks. One tree may in time assume the appearance of a very dense thicket as a result of the tangle of roots and trunks. One individual, known as Thimmamma Marrimanu, in Andhra Pradesh, India, is thought to have the broadest canopy of any tree in the world. The banyan is the national tree of India.