WISH LIST WILDERNESS ENDGAME in the BLACK HILLS NATIONAL FOREST Robert Wellman Campbell Black Hills State University

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

WISH LIST WILDERNESS ENDGAME in the BLACK HILLS NATIONAL FOREST Robert Wellman Campbell Black Hills State University University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Great Plains Quarterly Great Plains Studies, Center for Fall 2010 WISH LIST WILDERNESS ENDGAME IN THE BLACK HILLS NATIONAL FOREST Robert Wellman Campbell Black Hills State University Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/greatplainsquarterly Part of the American Studies Commons, Cultural History Commons, and the United States History Commons Campbell, Robert Wellman, "WISH LIST WILDERNESS ENDGAME IN THE BLACK HILLS NATIONAL FOREST" (2010). Great Plains Quarterly. 2629. http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/greatplainsquarterly/2629 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Great Plains Studies, Center for at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Great Plains Quarterly by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. WISH LIST WILDERNESS ENDGAME IN THE BLACK HILLS NATIONAL FOREST ROBERT WELLMAN CAMPBELL In January 1979 Dave Foreman loosened his the top on another Stroh's" as he brooded. The tie, propped his cowboy boots up on his desk, Forest Service had just recommended increas­ and brooded awhile on RARE II. In a second ing its Wilderness acres from 18 million to try at Roadless Area Review and Evaluation 33 million, or about a sixth of its 190 million (RARE), the u.s. Forest Service had just spent acres. Foreman wished for much more, and he two years deciding once and for all how much regretted that conservationists like himself had of its undeveloped land should be designated been moderate in their demands and tactics. Wilderness. To Foreman, a Washington execu­ By 1980 a disgusted Foreman had "loosened tive of the Wilderness Society, RARE II tasted his tie" all the way back to New Mexico, out of of bitter defeat, and he lonesomely "popped the Wilderness Society, and into Earth First!, a radical new environmental group that was best known for advocating sabotage of logging and construction projects. As Foreman told this story in his autobiography, Confessions of an Key Words: Beaver Park, Black Elk Wilderness, Eco-Warrior, RARE II was the last straw'! Norbeck Wildlife Preserve, RARE II, South Dakota, U.S. Forest Service Around the same time, South Dakota con­ gressman Jim Abdnor also held a RARE II postmortem, but in a lighter mood. Meeting Robert Wellman Campbell was born in Spearfish, SD, with environmental activists in his Rapid and earned degrees from Harvard College, Augustana City office, including Sierra Clubber Sam College, and the University of Kansas. He worked for the U.S. Geological Survey's Center for Earth Clauson, who related this story years later, the Resources Observation and Science and is currently Republican congressman lit a cigar, put his feet assistant professor of history and geography at Black up on his desk, and asked without much care, Hills State University. He is working on a book on "Now what the hell are we going to do about aerial wilderness. this wilderness thing?" The Black Hills, lying in Abdnor's "West River" district of western [GPQ 30 (Fall 2010): 287-305] South Dakota, were to get their first official 287 288 GREAT PLAINS QUARTERLY, FALL 2010 Wilderness. There was some question how to public lands. Partly for this reason, the case name it-after a military explorer, a Lakota of the Black Hills is interesting less for its holy man, or a conservationist governor-and unsurprising result-Wilderness status for the though Abdnor was not enthusiastic about an Norbeck Wildlife Preserve-than for how the Indian name, he could accept anything. RARE political game played out. II had come out satisfactorily for Abdnor, but he had bigger fish to fry as he worked toward PREGAME (1874-1977) his 1980 campaign to unseat Senator George McGovern.2 The historical background of the Black Hills Two very different reactions from two differ­ is beyond our scope, but a few points are rel­ ent perspectives. Dave Foreman, having little evant. The first is just how developed the Black to do with South Dakota, typifies the national Hills were. George Custer's 1874 invasion trig­ reaction: angry rejection from both sides. But gered a powerful, long-term transformation of the reaction in the Black Hills region was prob­ the landscape. Immigrants were busy building ably closer to Abdnor and the environmental­ mines, towns, farms, sawmills, and most impor­ ists: some interest, some controversy, but also tantly, roads for almost a quarter century before some rather cool satisfaction. This article the creation of the Black Hills Forest Reserve looks at RARE II from the latter perspective, in 1897, later renamed the Black Hills National to shed a different light on the sausage-making Forest.5 At that point the federal government of wilderness legislation.3 This illuminates two assumed control of a working forest, an "estate issues in particular. First, as a very small state in with many tenants" who certainly resented both population and in attitude, South Dakota Democrat Grover Cleveland's eleventh-hour provides a useful example of state-federal ten­ proclamation creating the reserve.6 The lands sion in environmental politics. Who would call they owned are still private inholdings today. the shots in this case, D.C. or S.D.? Second, as Federal timber sales began immediately, and a western area developed to a level more typical most of the national forest has been repeat­ of the East and of the nation as a whole, the edly logged. These "Hills," though actually Black Hills provide a view into how a postin­ old, weathered mountains, have a moderate dustrial America might think about the nature topography that makes access to timber quite in its own well-worked back yard. The question easy. And plentiful snowfall and rainfall in the is whether we believe in redemption for land­ spring and early summer make the Black Hills a whether nature heals or nature is what was natural nursery for abundant ponderosa pine. there before the wound. Do we believe our land So this was, and is, a domesticated place. can revert even to "go-back wilderness," or do And yet, like many places, it can give you a fair we see development as a one-way street?4 impression of wildness. Once off the highway RARE II was meant to settle the political the slopes block your sight, the pines hush contest that had been fought over wilderness your hearing, something hits your nose the since 1964, as the endgame to decide once right way, and there is some opportunity to get and for all the winners and losers among lost if you cooperate. A unique mix of plants federal lands. RARE II was a modified ver­ grows in the Black Hills: northern, western, sion of the process dictated by the National and eastern forest species overlap at the far Environmental Policy Act of 1970, which by ends of their ranges, blending with the short­ the time of RARE II was already a well-prac­ grass prairie that flows up the valleys from the ticed set piece within the broader politics of plains and becomes quite tallgrass in the Black environmentalism. These NEPA contests were Hills' wetter climate.7 And people did act to not just about the specific policy questions at preserve these natural qualities, most notably hand; they were also strategic, symbolic plays Peter Norbeck, South Dakota's conservationist in the never-ending contest over the nation's governor and senator. Norbeck created Custer WILDERNESS ENDGAME IN THE BLACK HILLS NATIONAL FOREST 289 State Park, one of the largest state parks in the community of life were untrammeled by the nation, as well as what's now called Norbeck Wilderness Act of 1964, where preservation Wildlife Preserve.8 The Preserve is on national itself was a visitor who did not remain. Now, forest land and includes Harney Peak, the tall­ for almost exactly two years, the Forest Service est point east of the Rockies at 7,242 feet. would look again, in a process divided like an Since World War II the Black Hills economy athletic contest into four quarters, in this case has been an interesting contradiction of tour­ lasting six months each. This sounds like a ism and extraction. Winnebago campers and long time, but for evaluating tens of millions of logging trucks; the faces at Rushmore and acres across the continent it was an ambitious the open pit at Homestake Mine; the pretty schedule. and the prolific, tightly intertwined. These same contradictions pulled the U.S. Forest FIRST QUARTER: INVENTORY Service in opposite directions. Congress for­ (SPRING To FALL 1977) malized this tug-of-war in the Multiple Use Act of 1960 and the Wilderness Act of 1964. From late spring to fall 1977, Black Hills The Wilderness Act gave the Forest Service National Forest officials inventoried the ten years to recommend which of its wild region to determine what "road less and unde­ lands should be managed as official, "big W" veloped areas" existed. By late July, Rangers Wildernesses. (Only acts of Congress could and Supervisors were revising the list, phon­ actually create them.) The Forest Service met ing each other as they pored over maps. By this deadline with an effort called the Roadless August the Forest was soliciting public com­ Area Review and Evaluation, or RARE. But its ment through news releases and at least two results were criticized, legally challenged, and informational meetings in Sundance and ultimately discarded. Rapid City. Citizens were asked to critique Jimmy Carter, an avowed conservation­ the draft inventory and to suggest criteria for ist, took office in 1977. He appointed Rupert judging the road less areas.
Recommended publications
  • Committee on Appropriations UNITED STATES SENATE 135Th Anniversary
    107th Congress, 2d Session Document No. 13 Committee on Appropriations UNITED STATES SENATE 135th Anniversary 1867–2002 U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON : 2002 ‘‘The legislative control of the purse is the central pil- lar—the central pillar—upon which the constitutional temple of checks and balances and separation of powers rests, and if that pillar is shaken, the temple will fall. It is...central to the fundamental liberty of the Amer- ican people.’’ Senator Robert C. Byrd, Chairman Senate Appropriations Committee United States Senate Committee on Appropriations ONE HUNDRED SEVENTH CONGRESS ROBERT C. BYRD, West Virginia, TED STEVENS, Alaska, Ranking Chairman THAD COCHRAN, Mississippi ANIEL NOUYE Hawaii D K. I , ARLEN SPECTER, Pennsylvania RNEST OLLINGS South Carolina E F. H , PETE V. DOMENICI, New Mexico ATRICK EAHY Vermont P J. L , CHRISTOPHER S. BOND, Missouri OM ARKIN Iowa T H , MITCH MCCONNELL, Kentucky ARBARA IKULSKI Maryland B A. M , CONRAD BURNS, Montana ARRY EID Nevada H R , RICHARD C. SHELBY, Alabama ERB OHL Wisconsin H K , JUDD GREGG, New Hampshire ATTY URRAY Washington P M , ROBERT F. BENNETT, Utah YRON ORGAN North Dakota B L. D , BEN NIGHTHORSE CAMPBELL, Colorado IANNE EINSTEIN California D F , LARRY CRAIG, Idaho ICHARD URBIN Illinois R J. D , KAY BAILEY HUTCHISON, Texas IM OHNSON South Dakota T J , MIKE DEWINE, Ohio MARY L. LANDRIEU, Louisiana JACK REED, Rhode Island TERRENCE E. SAUVAIN, Staff Director CHARLES KIEFFER, Deputy Staff Director STEVEN J. CORTESE, Minority Staff Director V Subcommittee Membership, One Hundred Seventh Congress Senator Byrd, as chairman of the Committee, and Senator Stevens, as ranking minority member of the Committee, are ex officio members of all subcommit- tees of which they are not regular members.
    [Show full text]
  • It's Unfair to the People of This Area for Us To
    “It’s unfair to the people of this area for us to collect taxes from our customers to help TVA [Tennessee Valley Authority] sell power at a lower price to their customers.” NEIL SIMPSON, President, Black Hills Power and Light Company 60 Expanding Futures on the Great Plains 4 EXPANDING FUTURES ON THE GREAT PLAINS Black Hills Power and Light continued to expand. The company absorbed smaller utilities. It offered power and transmission services to other areas in collaboration with public power agencies and rural electric cooperatives. But tensions with the rural cooperatives were building over territories and customers. As the federal government began to construct dams and hydroelectric facilities on the Missouri River, company officials scrambled to hold onto Black Hills Power and Light’s market and customers. 61 Expanding Futures on the Great Plains Govenor Peter Norbeck’s plan to build a dam dams on the river would revive the state’s proponents of the public power district bill were and hydroelectric facilities on the Missouri River economy. Their efforts to encourage the federal able to convince legislators that new districts after World War I died for lack of sufficient government to build a series of dams gained were needed to secure the power to be generated demand, but the idea lingered in the minds of momentum in 1943 after spring floods caused by Missouri River hydroelectric plants. The public many policymakers in Pierre and Washington, major damage to downstream communities, power district bill passed in 1950. D.C. After drought, depression and war, South especially Omaha, Nebraska.
    [Show full text]
  • Secretary Richard Benda From
    To: Secretary Richard Benda From: Melissa Bump Date: 06/09/09 RE: May 2009 - 2010 Summary Accomplishing the 2010 Initiative will take the Office of Tourism, the visitor industry, and the State of South Dakota to a whole new level. Feedback and suggestions regarding this summary report are encouraged. GOAL ONE: Double Visitor Spending from $600 Million to $1.2 Billion by 2010 Tourism Office Funding Update: April 2008 April 2009 % Change Deadwood Gaming Tax $ 260,945 $ 244,384 -6.3% Tourism Promotion Tax $ 228,602 $ 252,709 10.5% Total Monthly Deposits $ 489,547 $ 497,093 1.5% FY 2008 vs. 2009 $8,345,367 $8,443,677 1.2% 1A. Change the way we market South Dakota. • Tour Operators: Hosted From the Prairies to the Mountains familiarization tour for 10 domestic tour operators: two from W. Bloomfield, Michigan; two from Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin; one from Mountain Home, Arkansas; two from Woodville, Mississippi; two from Winston-Salem, North Carolina; and one from Indianapolis, Indiana; plus three tour representatives from Suriname. 1C. greater use of partnerships and cooperative efforts. • Million Dollar Challenge: New projects for FY2010 include Cow-Spring Creek Peninsula Recreation Area for Tony Dean Festival, August 7-9; and Watertown CVB’s City Monopoly and Geocaching promotion. • MultiMedia Press Release Co-op: Fort Sisseton had an open rate of 31.84%; Mount Rushmore Facelift had an open rate of 39.45%; Mt. Rushmore Black Hills Gold Jewelry Co. had an open rate of 29.80%; and Reptile Gardens had an open rate of 36.31%. 1E. Capitalize on the existing outdoors opportunities in our state.
    [Show full text]
  • Climbing Inyan Kara
    SACRED MOUNTAIN Climbing Inyan Kara >> By Jerry Penry, PS Displayed with permission • The American Surveyor • Vol. 10 No. 10 • Copyright 2013 Cheves Media • www.Amerisurv.com rom many miles away, solitary mountains have captured the attention of explorers and surveyors. Undoubtedly, thoughts of climbing to the summit dominated their minds as they drew closer. Likewise, Native Americans were drawn to isolated mountains and even revered them with spiritual practices. Inyan Kara Mountain is located in northeastern Wyoming approximately five miles off the western edge of the Black Hills and 13 miles south of the town of Sundance. The mountain rises to a height of 6370 feet above sea level and, at well over 1300 feet above the surrounding terrain, can be described as a solitary peak. The name, Inyan Kara, is a modern term derived from the Lakota word, “Heeng-ya ka-ga”, which means “rock gatherer”, or “the peak which makes stone”. Inyan means “stone” in the Dakota language. The word Kara is not part of this language, but is thought to have been a corruption of “Ka-ga” which translates, “to make”. The name probably refers to the fact that the mountain has long been a place for native peoples to gather quartzite for knapping into projectile points and Above: Lt. G. K. Warren of the U. S. Topographical Engineers led the first military expedition to Inyan Kara in 1857 resulting in a tense standoff with the Sioux Indians. Library of Congress. Displayed with permission • The American Surveyor • Vol. 10 No. 10 • Copyright 2013 Cheves Media • www.Amerisurv.com The peak of Inyan Kara is hidden by the Above: Chief Red Cloud southeastern portion of the horseshoe- gave a clear message shaped outer rim that surrounds the to Sir George Gore at mountain.
    [Show full text]
  • Environmental Assessment Agriculture
    United States Department of Environmental Assessment Agriculture Forest Service Byway Lakes Enhancement Project August 2013 Hell Canyon Ranger District, Black Hills National Forest Custer & Pennington Counties, South Dakota T02S, R05E Sections 11 T02S, R06E Sections 27, 28 T03S, R05E Sections 15, 22 Horsethief Lake 1938 For Information Contact: David Pickford 330 Mt. Rushmore Road Custer, SD 57730 Phone: (605) 673-4853 Email: [email protected] The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, and where applicable, sex, marital status, familial status, parental status, religion, sexual orientation, genetic information, political beliefs, reprisal, or because all or part of an individual’s income is derived from any public assistance program. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large-print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA’s TARGET Center at (202)720-2600 (voice and TDD). To file a complaint of discrimination, write to USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410, or call (800)795-3272 (voice) or (202)720-6382 (TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. Table of Contents SUMMARY ..................................................................................................................................... i CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
    [Show full text]
  • South Dakota's Forests Stores As Much Or More Carbon Than That in Neighboring States, Both Within and Across Forest-Type Groups (Fig
    South Dakota’s Forests 2005 Resource Bulletin NRS-35 United States Forest Northern Department of Agriculture Service Research Station Acknowledgments The authors thank the individuals who contributed both to the inventory and analysis of South Dakota’s forest resources. Staff with key responsibility for data management, processing, and estimation included Gary Brand, Mark Hansen, Pat Miles, Kevin Nimerfro, and Jim Solomakos. Staff with key responsibilities in selecting inventory plot locations and collecting field data included Bob Adams, Ryan Binder, James Blehm, Kelsie Chesley, Jessica Cline, Steve Flackey, Deborah Goard, Dick Kessler, Barbara Knight, Greg Liknes, Tim Halberg, Doug Hansen, John Hinners, Dan Huberty, Karlis Lazda, Greg Liknes, Matt Logghe, Mark Majewsky, Issac Moll, Adam Morris, Marc Much, Sheldon Murphy, Trent Murphy, Grant Nielsen, Cassandra Olson, Leah Raymond, Travis Rymal, Jeff Walle, and Kris Williams. Various individuals contributed their time and constructive comments during meetings and manuscript reviews: John Ball, Blaine Cook, John Coulston, Larry DeBlander, Gretchen Smith, and Tom Troxel. Note: Core tables, a glossary, and sample quality assurance/control methods will be included in a companion document, Plains States’ Forests, 2005: Statistics and Quality Assurance, Resource Bulletin NRS-xx, to be published online only. Data for the South Dakota forest inventory can be accessed at: http://fiatools.fs.fed.us Cover: Custer State Park. Photo used with permission by Gregory Josten, South Dakota Department of Agriculture. South Dakota’s Forests 2005 Ronald J. Piva, W. Keith Moser, Douglas D. Haugan, Gregory J. Josten, Gary J. Brand, Brett J. Butler, Susan J. Crocker, Mark H. Hansen, Dacia M. Meneguzzo, Charles H.
    [Show full text]
  • BLACK HILLS There Are Many Great Motorcycle Roads in the Picturesque Black Hills Area
    Popular South Dakota Motorcycle Roads Motorcycling in the BLACK HILLS There are many great motorcycle roads in the picturesque Black Hills area. Below are three favorites of both the locals and the many motorcycle riders who come in from out of town to attend the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally. The Central Hills Loop is a 57-mile loop and a perennial favorite of motorcycle riders. It passes by the Mt. Rushmore National Memorial offering riders a chance to pull over, stretch their legs, and visit the world class memorial and it’s informative & inspiring museum. Rider after rider who take this route rave about the picture opportunities as well as the great curves, pavement conditions, and many enjoyable souvenir browsing & restaurants stops along the way. This motorcycle road also encompasses the incredible “Needles Highway” which is showcased on the next page of this Black Hills area motorcycle riding guide. Spotlight on Needles Highway A particular favorite stretch of motorcycle road is known as “Needles Highway.” This approx. 14 mile stretch of road is named for the incredible spires of solid granite (appearing like “needles”) that surround the road and enchant the travelers lucky enough to take in this scenery. Additionally the road travels through two incredibly narrow tunnels that have been blasted through pure granite walls and only allow single vehicles to travel through at a time. The Needles Highway is part of the Central Hills Loop (described above) and starts south of Hill City, SD where Highway 385 & Route 87 meet. From there take Route 87 south for 14 miles! Custer State Park … Miles & Miles of Motorcycle Riding Bliss Custer State Park Wildlife Loop Road is a 32- mile loop encircling the awe-inspiring Custer State Park located just east of Custer, SD.
    [Show full text]
  • Southwestern Showy Sedge in the Black Hills National Forest, South Dakota and Wyoming
    United States Department of Agriculture Conservation Assessment Forest Service Rocky of the Southwestern Mountain Region Black Hills Showy Sedge in the Black National Forest Custer, Hills National Forest, South South Dakota May 2003 Dakota and Wyoming Bruce T. Glisson Conservation Assessment of Southwestern Showy Sedge in the Black Hills National Forest, South Dakota and Wyoming Bruce T. Glisson, Ph.D. 315 Matterhorn Drive Park City, UT 84098 email: [email protected] Bruce Glisson is a botanist and ecologist with over 10 years of consulting experience, located in Park City, Utah. He has earned a B.S. in Biology from Towson State University, an M.S. in Public Health from the University of Utah, and a Ph.D. in Botany from Brigham Young University EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Southwestern showy sedge, Carex bella Bailey, is a cespitose graminoid that occurs in the central and southern Rocky Mountain region of the western United States and Mexico, with a disjunct population in the Black Hills that may be a relict from the last Pleistocene glaciation (Cronquist et al., 1994; USDA NRCS, 2001; NatureServe, 2001). Southwestern showy sedge is quite restricted in range and habitat in the Black Hills. There is much that we don’t know about the species, as there has been no thorough surveys, no monitoring, and very few and limited studies on the species in the area. Long term persistence of southwestern showy sedge is enhanced due to the presence of at least several populations within the Black Elk Wilderness and Custer State Park. Populations in Custer State Park may be at greater risk due to recreational use and lack of protective regulations (Marriott 2001c).
    [Show full text]
  • Historical Musings: the Contours of South Dakota Political Culture
    Copyright © 2004 by the South Dakota State Historical Society. All Rights Reserved. Historical Musings The Contours of South Dakota Political Culture JON LAUCK, JOHN E. MILLER, AND EDWARD HOGAN like other states of the Midwest and Great Plains, South Dakota en- joys a moderate republican political culture, rooted in a belief in the equality of individuals and their ability to work together for the greater good. While similarities among these states abound, differences also persist. The political culture of South Dakota is distinct from that of Minnesota, known historically for its liberal leanings, and that of Wy- oming, known for its conservatism. The political culture of South Da- kota, where Populism originated, is even quite distinct from that of North Dakota, where radical pohtical reforms did not take hold until later. As the editor of the Watertown Public Opinion noted in 1890, the "politics of North Dakota is a product of an entirely different breed of cats."' We aim to sketch some of the influences that shape the broad contours of South Dakota's political culture and, therefore, the prac- tice of politics in the state. These contours, like those of a winding streambed, can change in response to events and trends from without but frequently return to form, or what anthropologist Adam Kuper calls "the authentic, local way of being different."^ The authors wish to thank Dwight Adams, Robert Burns, Loren Carlson, Herb Cheever, Alan Clem, Marshall Damgaard, Dave Danbom. Bill Dougherty, Steven Davis, Frank Den- holm, Gilbert Fite, Erin Hogan Fouberg, Neil Fulton. Doug Hajek, Noel Hamie!, Scott Heidepriem, Stephanie Herseth, Dave Kranz, Howard Lamar, Ted Muenster, George Mc- Govern, Lynwood Oyos, Bill Richardson, Jamison Rounds, RoUyn Samp, and Chuck Wood- ard for their generous comments on tliis essay.
    [Show full text]
  • South Dakota - Ranked Bibliography
    South Dakota - Ranked Bibliography Preservation ofthe Literature ofAgriculture Phase VI Nancy Marshall & Lisa Lindell, Co-Investigators Hilton M. Briggs Library South Dakota State University Agriculture - Theses Farm Accounting-Economics Seminar. Absher, Clyde B. Rating: 3.5 The Cultivation of Ephedra Sinica inSouth Dakota. Hiner, Lovell David. Rating: 3.5 The Quantitative Estimation of Cellulose by the Cross and Bevan's Process anda Preliminary Study of the Adaptability of Such Fiber to Paper Making. Jobe, Lowell A., and Cecil M. Stephens. Rating: 3.5 Report on the Cellulose Content ofHollyhock and Sweet Clover and the Preparation ofCellulose Pulp from These Plants by the Cross and Bevan's Process. Orvedahl, Walter, and Herman Koch. Rating: 3.5 Land Utilization in Haakon County, South Dakota. Berry, William Julius. Rating: 3.25 Extraction of Oil from Hollyhock (Althea Rosea) Seed. Muffat, Donald. Rating: 3.25 The Quantitative Estimation of Cellulose Fiber by the Cross and Bevan's Process and Preliminary Study of the Adaptibility ofSuch Fiber to Fiber Fabrication. Potter, C. Wesley, and Jerome Marvin Rosen. Rating: 3.25 The Preparation of Pulp and Paperfrom Sweet Clover Stalk. Ross, Ralph E., and Rollin G. Taecker. Rating: 3.25 The Suitability ofSunflower Seeds asa Pulping Material and a Study ofthe Yield Per Acre ofSeeds of Helianthus Annuus. Behrens, Robert. Rating: 3 Determination ofCellulose in Sweet Clover. Buckingham, John Herbert, Everett Gerald Cashman, and Maurice William Clarkson. Rating: 3 Twenty Years of Brown County Agricultural History, 1880-1899. Cleworth, Marc Malvern. Rating: 3 The Analytical Determination ofCellulose and the Cellulose Content ofSweet Clover. Dean, Roy Kenneth.
    [Show full text]
  • VPHS RCHPC Draft Essay Ri
    The Ridgeline and the Creek Landscape and Memory in Rapid City Executive Summary For millennia, the natural resources and allure of the Black Hills have drawn people to the region to hunt, explore, pray, recreate, and live in and around what is now Rapid City. The community sits where the open prairie meets rocky hills and thick forests. For generations, area residents have shaped their lives, in terms of both work and play, in response to the opportunities and limitations presented by these surroundings. High ridges on Skyline Drive and Cowboy Hill, flowing waters in Rapid Creek and Canyon Lake, and pine forests and grasslands fill the city limits. Rapid City’s scenery attracts visitors and transplants to the area. Although connections to place are articulated through different cultural and spiritual lenses, many residents feel a strong connection to the landscapes, waterscapes, and skyscapes in and around Rapid City. The settlement of Rapid City was part of the imposition of Euro-American land ethics onto the Northern Plains. Throughout Rapid City’s history, as in much of the American West, competition for land and natural resources has fueled tensions over public and private management, industry and development, and preservation and conservation. These tensions have shaped and reshaped the landscape even as natural forces have altered the environment through slow processes like erosion or climate change, as well as sudden disasters like floods, fires, and blizzards. The landscape that endures, reflected in public parks and open spaces, has played a critical part in building and sustaining community identity and character. In many cases, it has been preserved by private citizens and public policymakers at the behest of their constituents.
    [Show full text]
  • Map of the Hills
    From Broadus, - Little Bighorn From Buffalo, SD Belle Fourche Reservoir From Bowman, ND From Faith, SD Z Rocky Point Devils Tower Battlefield and Alzada, MT and Medora, ND State Rec. Area Orman Dam and Dickinson, ND and Lemmon, SD National Monument Belle Fourche River 212 J 85 212 From Devils Tower Tri-State Museum NEWELL and Hulett, Wyo 22 BLACK ? Center of the Nation 212 NISLAND 24 34 Monument 10 Belle Fourche ALADDIN McNenny River 543 Fish Hatchery BELLE FOURCHE Mirror Lake EL3021 VALE HILLS 111 10 20 21 34 BEULAH 17 & BADLANDS 90 19 ? 2 85 Spearfish Rec & ST. ONGE 14 8 Aquatic Center 79 205 10 18 D.C. Booth Historic ofSouth Dakota 10 12 19 Nat’l Fish Hatchery & Northeastern Wyoming ? 14 17 SPEARFISH J 23 3 EL3645 90 Bear Butte 863 WHITEWOOD Bear Butte State Park 34 MAP LEGEND Crow Peak EL3654 Lake From Devils Tower, Wyo Tower, From Devils Termeshere Gallery & Museum Tatanka Story of ©2018 by BH&B 134 14A High Plains Western the Bison Computer generated by BH&B Citadel 30 Bear Butte Creek ? SUNDANCE 130 Spearfish Heritage Center Boulder Canyon 112 EL4744 Rock Peak 85 14 STURGIS Interchange Exit Number Byway Golf Club at EL3421 14 U.S. Hwy. Marker 214 195 Broken Boot 8 6 J Bridal Apple Springs 44 Scenic Veil Falls Gold Mine State Hwy. Marker Mt. Theo DEADWOOD ? Iron Creek Black Hills Roosevelt 14A Canyon 32 Ft. Meade Old Ft. Meade 21 Forest Service Road EL4537 Grand Canyon Lake Mining Museum Canyon Little 133 12 Moskee Hwy. 134 Boulder 18 Crow Peak Museum 4 County Road Adventures at Sturgis Motorcycle 141 Cement Ridge Museum 170 34 ? Visitor Information Lookout Spearfish 19 CENTRAL CITY Days of 76 Museum Canyon Lodge Spearfish ? ? & Hall of Fame Bikers 7 Mileage Between Stars 222 Spearfish Historic LEAD 103 Falls Homestake EL5203 Adams Museum & House 170 Black Hills Scenic SAVOY PLUMA 79 37 Byway Paved Highway 807 Opera House 3 National Dwd Mini-Golf & Arcade 18 Cemetery Multi-Lane Divided Hwy.
    [Show full text]