The Way it Was
Presettlement Vegetation Patterns
By Karen Furnweger
The magnificent bur oak stands three
hundred feet from a busy intersection in western Cook
County. From its height and girth, one might deduce that
this tree has witnessed several centuries' worth of changes
in the landscape. But, according to Marlin Bowles of the
Morton Arboretum, this tree could have served as a different
kind of witness.

Between the 1820s and 1840s, surveying
teams hired by the U.S. General Land Office measured northeastern
Illinois into townships of 36 one-square-mile sections.
A deputy surveyor systematically recorded a legal and
physical description of the terrain in each section in
advance of European immigrants who would purchase, settle
on and farm the rich Illinois soil. To help identify these
sections, the surveyor selected up to four "witness"
trees closest to where section lines crossed, and an axman
blazed the trees and stamped the coordinates of the intersection
into the exposed wood.
The trees inscribed, the surveyor
and his team trudged on. As he walked, the surveyor also
made notes about the vegetation prairie, timber,
marsh, "barrens" which would be of vital
importance to settlers looking for productive farmland,
building materials, and fuel.
The surveys were carried out across
Illinois and the rest of the new territories. This Public
Land Survey (PLS) is a nineteenth-century databank of
hand-drawn maps and hand-written notebooks on which everything
from property descriptions to street maps are based.
For plant conservation biologists
like Bowles, the maps and first-hand descriptions of the
landscape preserved on microfilm are also
a gold mine of information on presettlement vegetation.
Bowles has long been fascinated with the way local grasslands
and forests "have been pushing and chewing at each
other for thousands of years." In the early 1990s,
with grants from the Forest Preserve District of DuPage
County and the Chicago Wilderness consortium, Bowles and
geographic information system (GIS) specialist Jenny McBride
began mining the PLS documents covering DuPage County.
They have since done the same for Will and Cook Counties.
"The most important piece of
information the Public Land Survey tells us," says
Bowles, "is landscape pattern: how timber and prairie
were patterned across the landscape." The surveyors'
field notes painted a precise picture. Each mile-long
section line was measured with a 66-foot iron or brass
chain consisting of 100 links, each 7.92 inches long.
Eighty chain lengths equaled a mile. Using the chain and
links as units of linear measure, surveyors had to record
where the vegetation changed along the section line. In
addition, at every half-mile, they had to rate the quality
of the land for agricultural use and identify any tree
species and undergrowth by common name.
On June 3, 1840, deputy surveyor William
L. D. Ewing walked west on a section line in Township
38 North, Range 9 E of the 3rd Principal Meridian (part
of DuPage County) and wrote:
At forty chains and seven links, he
set a wooden quarter-section corner post marking
the half-mile point on the section line and noted
the distance in links and direction from the post to two
witness trees, a fourteen-inch-diameter elm and a six-inch-diameter
aspen. At this point he also noted: "Land
1st-rate soil & fit for cultivation. Timber
Burr oak, lynn [basswood], hickory, elm and aspen. Hazel
& hickory & oak undergrowth."
"I have the measurement
along each section line where the vegetation type changed.
This was a marsh," McBride says, pointing to a Cook
County map in progress on her office wall. "The notes
tell me at exactly what point this marsh started and stopped."
She marks the marsh on a plastic overlay of the quad map,
which is affixed to a digitizing drawing board. When she
has transferred all the data from the PLS records, she
traces the lines on her new map with a mouse to enter
it into her computer.
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This savanna in Cook County's
Palos forest preserves was restored to good health
with guidance from the 1830s "Public Land Survey."
Photo by Mike MacDonald.
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Shuttling between technologies nearly
two centuries apart has been an accomplishment for McBride.
Just as she taught herself to use the computer software,
she trained herself to decipher the handwriting in the
field notes, which she reads from microfilm.
"Most of the notes I've looked
at were from surveys between 1821 and 1848. They were
recopied around 1850 or 1860, but they're still in this
fancy old script with curlicues and the double s that
looks like an f," she says. The penmanship varies
from notebook to notebook, as does the depth of detail
in the descriptions. "Every so often, I'll get something
funny. One surveyor working in a marshy area in Cook County
called it 'a complete quagmire' that wasn't fit for anything
but a muskrat."
Bowles gives the surveyors credit
for their overall competency in identifying trees and
community types in all seasons. While no certification
existed at the time, surveying was a respectable vocation
for educated gentlemen. (Ewing was a land speculator who
served briefly as Illinois governor and twice won the
speakership of the Illinois House over Abraham Lincoln.)
The surveyors also recorded evidence
of fires one witness tree was a charred stump on
a second round of surveys and they probably recognized
the role of fire in the pattern of prairie and timber.
When a warmer, drier climate set in
about seven thousand years ago, prairies began replacing
the oak-pine forests that dominated the post-glacial Chicago
Wilderness landscape. With the prairies came great fires,
naturally sparked by lightning, but also deliberately
set by native Americans, who definitely influenced "presettlement"
vegetation. These conflagrations also swept through wooded
areas, eating up soft, thin-skinned trees like maples
but barely scorching the thick, corky bark of oaks. By
keeping open the woody edges the savanna, or "scattering
timber" on surveyors' maps the midwestern
prairie was gradually making inroads into the eastern
forests. When settlers suppressed the fires, maples and
other fire-sensitive trees, including nonnative species,
slowly obliterated the oak woods, the savannas, and the
grasslands.
McBride's witness tree map shows high
tree densities and fire-sensitive species such as sugar
maple, basswood, and ash on the eastern side of rivers
and other natural barriers to the eastward-moving prairie
fires. Prairies, barrens, and savannas, occupied mainly
by fire-tolerant white, bur, and red oaks, grew on the
western, windward side of landscape firebreaks.
These patterns reinforce existing
knowledge about presettlement vegetation, but from the
old notes, McBride injected new precision and exquisite
detail into the picture. And there was "one wonderful
surprise," says Bowles.
"What Jenny found in the surveyors'
notes for DuPage County was that the majority of the section
lines in timber had woody undergrowth. About 50 percent
of the savanna areas also had woody undergrowth,"
he says.
"Until we started working on
these Public Land Survey notes, the general concept of
our native presettlement oak woodlands was that there
was no undergrowth," Bowles says. "Into the
mid-1990s, restoration ecologists and land managers thought
that if they were going to restore something to presettlement
structure, it would be a two-tiered community: oaks and
ground-layer vegetation. So this helped reshape our concepts
about management and restoration."
The notes revealed that American hazelnut
was the most abundant woody understory species, occurring
on 90 percent of the timber and savanna section lines.
"This information tells us that if we want to try
to restore these communities, we've got to have American
hazelnut," Bowles says.
From McBride's maps, Bowles calculated
species abundance, tree density at section corners and
the relative size of trees in a given stand. From this,
he ranked the relative "importance value" of
each tree species in timber, savanna, barrens, and prairie.
White oak dominated, except in the barrens, where stunted
red oaks and hickories persisted more successfully through
repeated fires. In the other communities, bur oak was
the second most abundant tree, although in varying ratios
to white oak.

Bowles and McBride's studies reinforced
and clarified the critical role of fire in shaping the
entire landscape. "We found that fire probably structured
timber throughout the landscape except in the very most
fire-protected pockets, such as the east sides of major
rivers," Bowles says. "But even there, oaks
were present, and it's most likely that during drought
years, fire swept through those areas."
But restoring natural areas to match
the surveys is not necessarily the goal or even
a possibility. "It's impossible to manage for presettlement
conditions," says Marcy DeMauro, superintendent of
planning and development for the Forest Preserve District
of Will County. "The landscape is extremely modified."
Still, she says, "Most of the
properties we own are large sites, so we look at restoring
them on a landscape scale." Raccoon Grove, for example,
is a true prairie grove six hundred acres of savanna
and forest surrounded by prairie. "We try to manage
for the historically natural processes that were operating
at a landscape scale. Marlin's work gives us a good sense
of that."
From Bowles and McBride's findings,
DeMauro realized that the prairie being managed at Hickory
Creek was really barrens. "We were having a lot of
trouble with shrub growth, so we took a step back to figure
out what was going on. Marlin's work suggested we had
a barrens habitat here. All the species were there, along
with soils, topography. and general landscape." Management
efforts shifted from shrub removal and prairie-scale burns
to hazelnut reintroduction and lighter burns.
"It's not the only piece of information
we rely on when we make a decision on what we're going
to do with a particular property," says DeMauro,
"but I couldn't imagine doing management planning
without it."
Bowles acknowledges that it's difficult
to re-create sustainable presettlement plant communities
in a heavily fragmented landscape. "No longer do
we have what I call an infinite landscape, where you start
a fire here and it burns for fifteen miles until it hits
a firebreak. Now, it has to cross three interstates and
four shopping centers to get from stand A to stand B
and, of course, it doesn't.
Sometimes, Bowles says, you get lucky,
and the presettlement vegetation pattern is right in front
of you, alive and pretty well. "Wolf Road Prairie
is the one place where you can look at a line drawn by
the Public Land Survey people in the 1820s and then go
there and still see the same prairie-timber boundary that
they saw. That gives me goose bumps."
Into the 1960s, local kids unknowingly
perpetuated the management practices of the Potawatomi
by periodically torching the prairie. The fires kept grassland
and woodland in edgy equilibrium, with the lightly wooded
oak savanna at the center of the turf war. But since the
landscape-scale fires stopped, the savanna has started
filling in. Experiments with manipulating the canopy by
trimming tree limbs or removing certain trees could help
redefine the slipping savanna, Bowles says.
On a visit to the prairie, Bowles
stands on a triangle of grass at Thirty-first Street and
Wolf Road and points to one of several ancient bur oaks.
Is this a witness tree?
There are two ways to prove it, he
says. The first is to stand in the middle of the intersection,
measure the exact distance to the tree and take a compass
reading. If the distance and compass reading match exactly
with those taken by surveyors in the 1820s, that would
be "pretty good, but still circumstantial" evidence
that the massive oak is a witness tree. He and McBride
did just that. "The tree was pretty close, but it
wasn't exact. We don't know how good survey instruments
were in those days." He does know that the surveyors
weren't dodging cars as they worked. Bowles would like
to measure again some time, preferably early on a Sunday
morning.
"These communities are bits of
our natural heritage that we have inherited from the past.
If we want them to persist, we've got to replicate the
ecological processes they were living with in the past,"
Bowles states. "It's never going to be quite the
same, but the research gives us a framework for trying
to restore the processes that allow us to take care of
them now and into the future."