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The never-ending plains that stunned the heartland's settlers have fared poorly beneath the plow, but in a few promising pockets, the flowers still come back each spring.
Badlands, Theodore Roosevelt National Park, ND |
Land As Big As the Sky
The Sierra Club seeks a thriving American heartland spared from additional plowing and
draining. Club activists are working to preserve the small amount of native prairie that
remains, to institute farming practices that will not deplete this fertile land, and to
organize the people of the region to ensure its bountiful future.
On Our Agenda
- Establish a system of national parks and monuments including the Flint Hills of Kansas
and the Sand Hills-Niobrara Valley of Nebraska.
- Reform U.S. Forest Service policies regarding grazing, oil-and-gas development, and coal
mining on the national grasslands.
- Implement agricultural policies that mandate erosion control, groundwater protection,
crop diversification, and biological pest control.
- Enact waste-storage programs in every state and province to protect them from becoming
dumping grounds for nuclear, toxic, and solid wastes.
- Protect waterfowl nesting and breeding grounds in North Dakota and Manitoba.
The Land
The varied grasses of the Great North American Prairie grow from central Canada to the
Mexican border and from the Rockies to Indiana, covering more than a million square miles.
Before the plow and the cow, the tallgrass prairie dominated the humid east and the
shortgrass prairie the arid west, with the mixed-grass prairie in between. Within the
ecoregion's boundaries are 16 national grasslands and five national parks, but no
federally protected native tallgrass prairie.
Population
33.5 million.
Economy
Although mining and oil-and-gas development lurk in the corners of the ecoregion,
agriculture rules the Great Plains. Traditional rural life is on the wane, however, as
mechanization and agribusiness consume family farms and the land itself succumbs to
shortsighted agricultural practices.
Well-Known Fact
60 years ago dust clouds blackened the midday ski above the mixed-grass prairie (during
one storm the dirt blew to the decks of ships 300 miles off the Atlantic coast). This was
the site of the Dust Bowl of the 1930s, a result of years of excessive cultivation coupled
with drought and overgrazing.
Little-Known Fact
The source of drinking water and irrigation for Plains residents from Nebraska to
Texas, the Ogallala Aquifer is one of the world's largest--as well as one of the most
rapidly dissipating. Every year farmers pump 6 million acre-feet of water from the
Ogallala, which recharges at an annual rate of only 185,000 acre-feet. If current
irrigation practices continue, agribusiness will deplete the Ogallala Aquifer in the next
century.
Nature Meccas
It's still possible to stand beneath waves of bluestem in the rolling grass oceans of
the Osage Hills of Oklahoma and the Flint Hills of Kansas, where conservationists hope to
protect a viable tallgrass prairie. Good times are to be had in the Badlands' of North
Dakota's Theodore Roosevelt National Park, where Teddy himself found solace in the
spectacularly chaotic pinnacles, spires, and buttes. In Oklahoma's Wichita Mountain
National Wildlife Refuge, visitors can see descendants of the 25 million bison that once
roamed the plains.
Superlatives
From March to October, at least a dozen different species of wildflowers bloom in the
prairie each week, ever taller to stay eye-to-eye with the rising grasses. Almost half of
the United States' migratory waterfowl, including snowgeese, whooping cranes, and sandhill
cranes, pass through the prairie-pothole region of the Northern Plains.
Progress
In one of its most recent victories, the Sierra Club successfully lobbied to designate
sections of the Niobrara and Missouri rivers as part of the National Wild and Scenic River
System. In previous years Club activists helped stop the siting of nuclear-waste-storage
facilities in Kansas, North and South Dakota, and Wyoming, and worked to enact federal
legislation to force the cleanup of uranium mining and milling wastes; helped prevent
construction of the Oahe Diversion Project in South Dakota; campaigned to protect Cheyenne
Bottom in Kansas, a major wetland on the Central Flyway; and contributed to the passage of
ballot measures in Missouri to increase funding for the purchase of tallgrass prairielands
as state parks and preserves.
Unprotected Treasures
North Dakota's Little Missouri National Grassland is under siege by oil-and-gas
developers, and although only 5.3 million of the original 17 million acres of wetlands
remain, the state's prairie-pothole region is still being drained for conversion to
cropland.
Biggest Threats
Despite federal "sodbusting" regulations, virgin grassland continue to be
plowed; groundwater supplies are dwindling; and federal and state officials see the
region's unpopulated open spaces as the perfect places to stash toxic and nuclear trash.
Celebrators
Writers Kathleen Norris, Willa Cather, Ole Rolvaaag, Ray A. Young Bear, and William
Least Heat-Moon.
Tells It Like It Is
Where the Sky Began: Land of the Tallgrass Prairie by John Madson (Sierra Club
Books, 1982).
To Learn More
- "So Shall We Reap," by Jane Smiley, Sierra, March/April 1994, pp. 75ff.
The Land Institute can be contacted at 2440 E. Water Well Road, Salina, KS 64701,
913-832-5376.
- A Prairie Grove by Donald C. Peattie (The Literary Guild of America, 1938);
- Soil and Survival: Land Stewardship and the Future of American Agriculture by
Joe Paddock, Nancy Paddock, and Carol Bly (Sierra Club Books, 1988);
- Wildflowers of the Tallgrass Prairie by Sylvan T. Runkel and Dean M. Roosa
(Iowa State University Press, 1989).
- Restoring the Tallgrass Prairie, by Shirley Shirley, University of Iowa Press,
1994.
- Grassland by Richard Manning, Viking, 1995.
- The Tallgrass Prairie in
Illinois. by Kenneth R. Robertson.
- Guide to Natural Areas in and around
Iowa City.
- Boundary Waters Canoe Area
Contact: Sierra Club's Northern Plains Office
23 N. Scott, Room 25
Sheridan, WY 82801
307-672-0425 nt-wy.field@sierraclub.org
Photo courtesy Philip Greenspun.
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