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  3. Here's a tale of how nature triumphs in the end.

Here's a tale of how nature triumphs in the end.

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  • John Carlos BaezJ This user is from outside of this forum
    John Carlos BaezJ This user is from outside of this forum
    John Carlos Baez
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    Here's a tale of how nature triumphs in the end.

    Steel mills dumped molten slag in parts of Chicago and nearby areas. The slag hardened in layers up to 15 feet deep. These places became barren wastelands. Other industries dumped hot ash and cinders there.

    But eventually the steel mills closed.

    The deep layers of hard, toxic material were not friendly to plants. Cottonwoods are usually 30 meters tall or more. In the slag fields, stunted cottonwoods grow to just 2 meters.

    But rare species that could handle these conditions began to thrive. The lakeside daisy, a federally threatened species lost to Illinois for decades, turns out to grow taller on slag than on topsoil! The capitate spike-rush, last recorded in Illinois in 1894 and considered locally extinct, was rediscovered growing on slag.

    And more! Native prairie grasses like little bluestem. Native milkweeds. Even tiny white orchids called sphinx ladies' tresses.

    A team of women ecologists began studying these unusual landscapes. They call themselves the Slag Queens.

    (1/n)

    Esslar2F John Carlos BaezJ 2 Replies Last reply
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    • John Carlos BaezJ John Carlos Baez

      Here's a tale of how nature triumphs in the end.

      Steel mills dumped molten slag in parts of Chicago and nearby areas. The slag hardened in layers up to 15 feet deep. These places became barren wastelands. Other industries dumped hot ash and cinders there.

      But eventually the steel mills closed.

      The deep layers of hard, toxic material were not friendly to plants. Cottonwoods are usually 30 meters tall or more. In the slag fields, stunted cottonwoods grow to just 2 meters.

      But rare species that could handle these conditions began to thrive. The lakeside daisy, a federally threatened species lost to Illinois for decades, turns out to grow taller on slag than on topsoil! The capitate spike-rush, last recorded in Illinois in 1894 and considered locally extinct, was rediscovered growing on slag.

      And more! Native prairie grasses like little bluestem. Native milkweeds. Even tiny white orchids called sphinx ladies' tresses.

      A team of women ecologists began studying these unusual landscapes. They call themselves the Slag Queens.

      (1/n)

      Esslar2F This user is from outside of this forum
      Esslar2F This user is from outside of this forum
      Esslar2
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @johncarlosbaez "The Slag Queens?" You know damn well I'm going to read about any group who calls themselves that!

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • John Carlos BaezJ John Carlos Baez

        Here's a tale of how nature triumphs in the end.

        Steel mills dumped molten slag in parts of Chicago and nearby areas. The slag hardened in layers up to 15 feet deep. These places became barren wastelands. Other industries dumped hot ash and cinders there.

        But eventually the steel mills closed.

        The deep layers of hard, toxic material were not friendly to plants. Cottonwoods are usually 30 meters tall or more. In the slag fields, stunted cottonwoods grow to just 2 meters.

        But rare species that could handle these conditions began to thrive. The lakeside daisy, a federally threatened species lost to Illinois for decades, turns out to grow taller on slag than on topsoil! The capitate spike-rush, last recorded in Illinois in 1894 and considered locally extinct, was rediscovered growing on slag.

        And more! Native prairie grasses like little bluestem. Native milkweeds. Even tiny white orchids called sphinx ladies' tresses.

        A team of women ecologists began studying these unusual landscapes. They call themselves the Slag Queens.

        (1/n)

        John Carlos BaezJ This user is from outside of this forum
        John Carlos BaezJ This user is from outside of this forum
        John Carlos Baez
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        Ecologist Alison Anastasio visited a former US Steel South Works site in Chicago. She expected to find “all crap plants” — common invasive weeds. To her surprise she spotted little bluestem and three species of native milkweed. She already knew she didn't want a career as an academic scientist. But she came up with the idea of forming a group to study this ecosystem: “a dream team of people I wanted to work with.”

        She knew Laura Merwin from the University of Chicago, and later she met Lauren Umek, a project manager for the Chicago Park District. She invited them to brunch to pitch her idea to research plants growing on slag. Not for any obvious career goal. Just from sheer curiosity.

        Merwin and Umek were excited to join her project - a “reverse side hustle,” since it involved a lot of work, but cost money. And thus the Slag Queens were born.

        Their first paper, “Urban post-industrial landscapes have unrealized ecological potential,” was published in Restoration Ecology in 2022. It argues that slag fields don't need to be fixed. They have ecological value in and of themselves. And land managers should forget whatever ecosystem was there before. Instead, they should look to more exotic ecosystems as a guide, like the dolomite prairies of Illinois, where magnesium-rich rock near the surface makes it hard for ordinary plants to thrive. Slag too is rich in magnesium.

        The Slag Queens are continuing their revolutionary work even now! For more, start here:

        • Carrie Gous, The beauty of slag, https://mag.uchicago.edu/science-medicine/beauty-slag

        Some of what I just wrote is a paraphrase of this article.

        (2/2)

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