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Last of the Eastern Wilderness: An Article on the Proposed Great Smoky National Park

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  • 628 THE LAST OF THE EASTERN WILDERNESS BEAR PEN HOLLOW, THE HAUNT OF THE WILD TURKEY. the untouched wildwood, which has been left to itself these many thousands of years and provides a mold rich in organic matter and so spongy as to hold moisture at all times. The decaying trunk of a fallen tree, despised by foresters, is really a priceless thing, giving life and sustenance to forms of beauty that nothing else can nourish. Leaving the cove, a steep climb of a couple of thousand feet brings the visitor to the top of one of the ridges that lead on up to the main divide. From here, as far as one can see in every direction, are wooded mountains without a clearing or other trace of man's activity. On the drier slopes, especially on the south side, the prevailing growth is oak and chestnut, with considerable locust interspersed. The ridge tops have many pines. Hemlocks crowd the deep, cool recesses at the heads of small tributary streams. Beech, yellow birch, buckeye, and chestnut are found within a wide range of altitude, persisting to the edge of the sub-arctic zone, which begins at about five thousand feet in the region east of Siler's Bald. The natives of this region do not consider that one knows anything about the Smokies until he has been "up among the i THICKET OF RHODODENDRON IN THE HEART OF THE SMOKIES
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Object’s are ‘parent’ level descriptions to ‘children’ items, (e.g. a book with pages).