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Interior Secretary Adds Six Natural Landmarks To National Natural Landmarks Program

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Six beautiful landscapes in the West have been added to the National Natural Landmarks Program by Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, who believes the designations will "pass down to future generations those awe-inspiring places that make America truly beautiful.”

The six additions found in Arizona, Colorado, Oregon and Washington feature "hanging gardens, fossil footprints and rare Palouse prairie," according to a release from the Interior Department.
 
“One of the major goals of President Obama’s America’s Great Outdoors initiative is to develop a conservation ethic for the 21st Century,” Secretary Salazar said. “By designating these remarkable sites in Arizona, Colorado, Oregon, and Washington as national natural landmarks, we  help establish and pass down to future generations those awe-inspiring places that make America truly beautiful.”
 
The new national natural landmarks are Barfoot Park, Golden Fossil Areas, Hanging Lake, Kahlotus Ridgetop, Round Top Butte, and The Island.  According to Interior officials, "each site has been identified and evaluated through a rigorous process - including a scientific evaluation and public comment period - to formally acknowledge their outstanding and unique biological or geological features."

“This program not only encourages preservation of our nation’s natural heritage but it also enhances our scientific understanding of these unique places,” said National Park Service Director Jonathan B. Jarvis, whose agency oversees the program. “Some of the landmarks are the best remaining examples of a type of feature in our nation – sometimes in the world – and we should continue to recognize and study these important natural features.”

There are 591 national natural landmarks with last week's addition of:

·         Barfoot Park in the Chiricahua Mountains of southern Arizona supports an unusual mix of Sierra Madre and Rocky Mountain flora and fauna that includes four pine species and 18 other tree species. It also includes more than 15 acres of talus slopes, along with three meadows and two permanent springs.  The landmark encompasses 680 acres of federal land managed by the U.S. Forest Service.
 
·         The 19-acre Golden Fossil Areas west and north of Golden, Colo., were designated as an extension to the existing Morrison Fossil Area National Natural Landmark, and will now be known as the Morrison-Golden Fossil Areas National Natural Landmark. The Golden Fossil Areas are among the most important paleontological sites in the Front Range and the western United States. They are known internationally as the only sites in the world to have produced a number of unique fossil footprints representing reptiles, birds, and mammals.
 
·         Hanging Lake National Natural Landmark is located along I-70, east of Glenwood Springs, Colo. The site is an outstanding example of a lake formed by travertine deposition. The lake and associated falls support a rare wetland ecosystem, including hanging gardens. The 72-acre site is situated within the White River National Forest.
 
·         Kahlotus Ridgetop National Natural Landmark is a remnant of the Palouse Prairie located about four miles north of Kahlotus, Wash. The Palouse Prairie is the most endangered and the most altered landscape in the inland Pacific Northwest. Approximately 1 percent of the original prairie remains and occurs in small fragments in developed landscapes. This 240-acre site is managed by the Washington Department of Natural Resources.
 
·         Round Top Butte National Natural Landmark includes a basaltic butte, flat volcanic plains and small hills near Medford, Ore. Its vegetation is a mix of dry grassland, ponderosa pine, white oak and buck brush. The habitats are exceptional because they are dominated by native bunchgrasses. The new landmark encompasses 747 acres in two parcels: an established Research Natural Area managed by the Bureau of Land Management, and a preserve managed by The Nature Conservancy.
 
·         The Island National Natural Landmark is located on an isolated plateau at the confluence of the Deschutes and Crooked rivers in east-central Oregon. This 208-acre site supports one of the best known and least disturbed examples of native juniper savanna located within the Columbia Plateau. The Island is also a designated Research Natural Area, and is jointly managed by the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service.

 
 
Administered by the National Park Service, the National Natural Landmarks Program http://www.nature.nps.gov/nnl/ was established in 1962. It is the only natural areas program of national scope to encourage the preservation of the best remaining examples of the nation’s biological and geological features in both public and private ownership. The federal action of designation imposes no new land use restrictions that were not in effect before the designation.

Comments

Great news! There are many more places across the country that deserve recognition as well.


This link is a Blog posting of the first birding impact assessment of Barfoot Park since the massive Horseshoe Fire II in Arizona. We had heard Barfoot was GONE, and indeed the historic lookout is, but the meadow is green, signature species of our region like Red-faced Warblers, Olive Warblers and Mexican Chickadees are there in mixed flocks. Trees still rim the meadow, mixed conifers are represented still. The humid old-growth forest going into Barfoot is gone, but live, tall aspens and scattered conifers remain on the downhill side. The uphill side is high intensity burn. Fire scars may mar some of the beauty, but the processes that make this area so special, worthy of National Natural Landmark remain intact. An album of photos called Chiricahua Fire Assessment can be found on the Friends of Cave Creek Canyon (FOCCC) Facebook page.


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