The document describes the creosote bushes that dominate the Mojave desert as an "ancient forest" that is invisible to many. It notes that individual creosote bushes can be thousands of years old, with some estimated at over 11,000 years old. Though unremarkable in appearance, these creosote bushes represent a vast ancient landscape that is increasingly threatened by development and habitat destruction. The author argues this ancient desert ecosystem deserves more appreciation and protection.
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Writing and photography from the Mojave and Sonoran deserts by Chris Clarke
The giant ancient forest you cannot see
Posted by Chris Clarke
Imagine we found a country the size of France covered in ancient forest, where trees a century old were mere saplings
just getting started, where the oldest sprouted when nearmythical monsters roamed the landscape.
Imagine visiting this country, standing in a particular spot and watching. Perhaps you’ve left the house on an errand.
Perhaps you just went out to get some air. And you walk a half a block from the place you’re staying, caught up in one
important thought or another, and you suddenly realize that within 60 feet of you are three trees more than a thousand
years old. You turn your head and there are two more.
You start to see the open, parklike forest with new eyes, really seeing the unimaginable ancientness of it. Everywhere
you look: trees 700, 1,000, 3,000 years old. You rack your brain for halfremembered scraps of human history.
Charlemagne was emperor when that tree sprouted, and that one a dozen paces east was probably sending out leaves
when the Magna Carta was written. Every now and then you see a tree that could have sheltered Nefertiti, had she the
airfare.
And imagine that as you really see the trees for the first time, you remember hearing about a hundred different plans
to cut them down. It’s not that their timber is valuable, or that people need centuriesold firewood.
It’s just that people have deemed this incredibly ancient forest worthless, and they’ve decided the land it occupies
could be better used for other things. And so they plan to bulldoze it, stack the trees in debris piles to rot, and build
their more important parking lots and garbage dumps.
This country, this forest: they exist. I live there. The trees rarely exceed ten feet in height. They are well known to
science: Mojave yucca, diamond and buckhorn cholla, Mormon tea, but mostly, and almost everywhere you look
below 5,000 feet in the Mojave, Sonoran, and Chihuahuan deserts, creosote.
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July 24, 2016
8 Replies
Creosote is the most common woody plant in the Mojave. No one fears its extinction. In this renewable energy plan,
creosote is mentioned primarily to identify the kind of habitat it dominates. It is not a special status species; it is
barely a regular status species. It is ubiquitous and environmentalists peer through its branches hoping to see
something interesting on the other side.
I have seen creosote rings 1,500 years old on the footprints of proposed desert solar facilities, at the verges of dirt
roads in offroad vehicle sacrifice areas. I have seen them bedecked with discarded plastic bags in vacant lots next to
chain drugstores.
They make up the only ancient forest I’ve ever heard of that no one can see, though they look square at it.
I see it lately, and it tears my heart. And once seen, it cannot be unseen.
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Camille Thompson on July 24, 2016 at 9:10 pm
you mean the old greasewood trees? their blossoms and branches make an oily tea that has to be drunk in
small sips. usually a room temperature tea. very
toxic if taken too much or too fast…whistling wind through the branches helps the tea go down.
Samantha Vimes on July 24, 2016 at 10:55 pm
I had no idea.
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