HOW FAR WILL NATURE RESTORE HER WASTED GIFTS?
The natural wealth of our country
is its soil, water, forests, minerals, animal and
bird life, and, finally, its climate and scenery.
Of all these, climate and scenery
are the only ones which we can use and enjoy as much
as we like without any danger of their ever failing
us. The sun will shine through the blue sky, the
winds will blow, and the storms will come just the
same, no matter what we may do.
Did you ever think how long a time
it has taken to make the wonderful world in which
we live, and place upon it the mountains and valleys,
lakes and oceans? Did you ever think how long
a time it has taken to make the rocks and store away
in them gold, silver, copper, and iron? Did you
ever think how long a time it has taken to cover the
rocks with soil, and spread over the surface the flowers
and trees and to stock it with uncounted numbers of
animals and birds?
Nature usually works very slowly,
but she never rests. The earth and all things
on its surface, have always been changing, but changing
so slowly that we do not ordinarily notice what is
going on. When there is an earthquake, or a slide
of rock on a mountain side, or an eruption of a volcano,
we are astonished and often terrified.
Stories that have come down to us
from the distant past tell us that the earth looked
then much the same as it does now. If we could
look away back to a time long before the first men
lived, when even the animals and plants were different
from those around us, we should discover that the
surface of the earth was quite different from that
of today. We should then see mountains and hills
where now we find valleys, and dry land where now
lies the blue ocean.
Nature has been such a long time making
the beautiful world in which we live, that we ought
to treat it with great consideration. It is also
a wise thing for us to be heedful of her requests,
for, if we will work with her, the earth with all
its treasures will be at our command.
Shall we not now seek to learn which
of the natural resources of our land will never be
replaced if we squander them? Let us also learn
which may be made good again by Nature, if we are
willing to wait long enough, as well as to assist
her in her slow work.
Each year the growing plants take
certain substances from the soil. It is necessary
for us to put back like substances if we would keep
up the fertility of the soil. If we are neglectful
of this law, or allow water to wash the soil away
until only the bare rocks remain, poverty will be
our lot for many years.
Nature will, however, if we give her
a chance, renew the soil. The rocks will crumble
and, by and by, seeds will sprout and tiny plants obtain
a foothold. But it may take a whole lifetime,
or hundreds of years, even, for a new and fertile
soil to come again.
During the early years of placer mining
in California thousands of acres of rich lands in
the foothills were destroyed. Only boulders were
left. Now fifty years have passed and a new soil
is being formed, but it will be a long time yet before
it will be as good as it was in the first place.
Upon the Western prairies only grain
has been raised for so many years that in many places
the soil will scarcely grow a crop worth gathering.
Many farmers have never thought of this, but the wise
ones understand that they must frequently add plant
food to the soil to replace that taken by crops.
They understand also that it is a good thing to change
the crops grown upon any particular field from year
to year, since different plants take different substances
from the soil.
Water goes through a ceaseless round.
It rises from the sea and lakes to form the clouds,
falls as rain or snow, and then flows back down the
slopes to the sea. Although we have learned that
we cannot change the quantity of rain that falls in
any place, we can influence the way in which it runs
back to the sea. This in turn affects the lives
of people. We can store water in reservoirs,
and by building canals have it to use on the land
during the summer. We can also keep it from flowing
back to the sea as rapidly as it otherwise would,
by leaving uninjured the covering of vegetation which
has been spread over the mountain slopes. The
water will run from bare rocks and bare soil much more
quickly than it will from soil that is covered with
leaf mold and held by plant roots. Do you not
see, then, that we have almost as much control over
water and its distribution as though we could increase
or decrease the rainfall?
What about the forests? If we
cut them down, will they ever come back? All
through the eastern part of our country and in the
mountains of the West are lands once forested which
have been cleared and turned into farms. Many
of these farms, when abandoned, have in a few years
been covered with a growth of young trees. The
scattering trees that had been left in the vicinity
of the clearings furnished the seed. The winds
and the birds carried the seed to the open fields
and so the forests began again.
It will be hundreds of years before
the trees are as large and valuable as those of the
first forest. The “big trees” of the
Sierra Nevada Mountains are found nowhere else in
the world, for they are the last of their race.
Some of these trees are more than 4000 years old.
They stood here when our forefathers were still savages
and lived in trees or caves. Much of the region
where these trees are found has now been reserved
as a park. If the lumberman had been allowed to
get at them, they would have soon been gone forever.
It is far more difficult to destroy
completely most of the species of forest trees than
it is to destroy the species of animals and birds.
We can cut down the trees and in some cases they will
grow again from sprouts. Many will hide away
in remote places and furnish seed for new forests.
The animals as well as the plants
have had a long history. They have had a harder
struggle than the plants, because many of them prey
upon one another. We often dig up the skeletons
of strange animals unlike any now living. These
must have all been killed long ago. Each species
or kind of animal now living must have come off victorious
in the struggle with its enemies.
Does it not seem a heartless thing
for us, who call ourselves civilized, to destroy so
completely any species of animal or plant that not
one of its kind remains alive? No species which
we destroy will ever come back again, and its place
will always remain empty. There are a few predatory
animals and birds that destroy vast numbers of useful
ones. We should keep these in check by every
means in our power, but for our thoughtless destruction
of the valuable ones the world will always be poorer.
What of the mineral treasures hidden
away in the earth? Will these be replaced when
once they have all been used up? It took Nature
a very long time to make coal out of the vegetation
which had gathered in some ancient swamp. It
took her fully as long to make the oil and gas from
the bodies of the little organisms that once lived
in the sea.
The bodies of the little creatures
from which oil is made are still gathering upon the
bottom of the sea, and there are many swamps where
we find vegetation and peat accumulating. But
it is a long story from these substances to oil and
coal. I am afraid we should get tired of waiting
for Nature to make a new supply.
Gold, silver, copper, and other minerals,
so useful to us, are found in very small quantities
scattered throughout most of the solid rocks of the
earth. It would be impossible for us to obtain
these from rocks, because there is so little in any
one place. But Nature has collected a part of
them in veins in the rocks. We sink shafts upon
these veins and mine the ores. It will be a long
time before we shall have mined all there is of these
minerals. Because they are so hard to get we are
not likely to waste them. But it is quite certain
that there is a limit to the supply of mineral treasures,
and equally certain that they can be renewed either
very, very slowly, or not at all. Shall we cause
our remote descendants to suffer for our carelessness?