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      • A century ago, the forests of the Eastern U.S. looked very different. They were packed with towering chestnut trees. But since then, those trees have largely disappeared, and the forests have evolved in a new direction, and relatively rapidly.
      www.npr.org/2024/10/06/nx-s1-5140040/how-eastern-us-forests-look-almost-a-century-after-chestnut-trees-started-disappearing
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  2. Nov 13, 2013 · Before Europeans arrived, American beech, red oak and sweet birch trees shaded Conestoga Creek, according to a study the researchers published today (Nov. 13) in the journal PLOS ONE....

  3. Nov 14, 2013 · Before Europeans arrived, American beech, red oak and sweet birch trees shaded Conestoga Creek, according to a study the researchers published Wednesday in the journal PLOS ONE. Some 300...

  4. Oct 6, 2024 · A century ago, the forests of the Eastern U.S. looked very different. They were packed with towering chestnut trees. But since then, those trees have largely disappeared, and the forests...

  5. By 1920, more than two-thirds of American forests had been leveled at least once, including the vast majority of eastern forests. Timber companies simply harvested the forest and moved on, from the Great Lakes to the South and across the West, leaving behind stumps, fire prone slash and dead or dying lumber towns.

  6. 1906: El Junque National Forest was established in Puerto Rico; it was originally preserved by the King of Spain so it was already in the public domain as a result of the Spanish-American War of 1898. 1907: The Monongahela Flood caused severe damage in the central Appalachians.

  7. How the Eastern Forests Were Established In 1900, nearly 300 years after the first English settlement in North America, an awakened public consciousness of the rapid destruction of forests and the damage to watersheds occasioned by unregulated cutting and fire resulted in an investigation of these conditions in the remaining forests of the East ...

  8. Feb 25, 2020 · And of course, Native Americans profoundly shaped forests in many parts of the eastern United States for millennia. Dr. Reka Aszalos stands next to a yellow birch in an old-growth forest in Adirondack State Park.

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