03533oam 2200397Ia 450 991070457570332120131023115036.0(CKB)5470000002441946(OCoLC)832756550(EXLCZ)99547000000244194620130327d2012 ua 0engurmn|||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierEuropean settlement-era vegetation of the Monongahela National Forest, West Virginia[electronic resource] /Melissa A. Thomas-Van Gundy and Michael P. StragerNewtown Square, PA :U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station,[2012]1 online resource (43 unnumbered pages) illustrations (some color), maps (some color)General technical report ;NRS-101Title from title screen (viewed on Mar. 27, 2013)."August 2012."--P. [2].Includes bibliographical references (pages 37-39).Forest restoration would be greatly helped by understanding just what forests looked like a century or more ago. One source of information on early forests is found in old deeds or surveys, where boundary corners were described by noting nearby trees known as witness trees. This paper describes the creation and analysis of a database of witness trees from original metes and bounds surveys of what became the Monongahela National Forest in West Virginia. We include an estimate of positional error from the conversion of paper maps to digital format. The final database contains 15,589 corners and 22,328 trees of 49 species from deeds dating from 1752 to 1899. White oak was the most frequent witness tree, followed by sugar maple, American beech, and American chestnut, and distribution patterns were recognizable across the study area. In early forests of the study area, magnolia, sugar maple, and black cherry were found on high-elevation ridges. Red spruce, hemlock, birch, and American beech were found on high-elevation toe slopes. Basswood was found in high-elevation coves, and red oak was associated with bench landforms at high elevations. At moderate elevations American chestnut and chestnut oak were associated with ridges, white pine and yellow pine occurred on benches, and an unknown species called spruce-pine was found on valley landforms. Blackgum was associated with toe slopes on low elevations, and black walnut was found on low-elevation benches. Low-elevation valleys contained white oak, elm, and sycamore. An important finding from this analysis is that some associations between species and environmental variables differed based on the ecological setting. Indicator kriging, using presence-absence data, resulted in probability of occurrence maps for selected species. We estimate that white oak covered 26 percent of the study area, sugar maple 19 percent, American chestnut 3 percent, and red spruce 2 percent.Forests and forestryWest VirginiaMonongahela National ForestHistoryForests and forestryHistory.Thomas-Van Gundy Melissa A1388608Strager Michael P1388609United States.Forest Service.Northern Research Station.OREOREGPOBOOK9910704575703321European settlement-era vegetation of the Monongahela National Forest, West Virginia3439398UNINA