CMPLD Local History Collection

Libertyville Independent, 10 May 1928, p. 10

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t o -- C F6 ; of fuhapekewbeuaho.wau?zbd*wilh ferns, f you go into the forest in the famous "redwood belt" of the coast of northern California will find exactly such a picture. Andywwifiwfindit whreel,onufih! * There are other writings on the multiplex pages of the ancient stone books which Dr. Chaney has read--corollary notes to his chapter on the march £ the redwoods. _ For instance, there is a livi Spocits of havthoie Seneniere Chin and Jopat mmmhflmmm found in Oregon, is T eetkn havikers ht mhove a lhe relufing: ship. One of the common elms now growing in northern China is much like a fossil elm from east-- stream courses and Oregon which has no near relative, cither T vng w hoskh, ts 'Americes* Sepnte is Chie Toemg this valuable information. h K on 4 TlTlttlilltTtTtTtTtTtTtTtTtTtTttl"T"""3 " oo s( e e i o e e o s hn C oo oo ce e o t 4o prg Nob oo h uP 30 Te O ns Apei t i i es Waiem 9y h a Ae : v ies NCA Nt mol ols Ned uP ealie Tok 0s e en mc Petnaule olA ons . mife cal l ts oi wl io o We d es o. .o n D. , | onn mpalenghr Seuan, peaaiitie it s ud t s + ce Te ol ie . qh s ie it 9 pan o o i t neny aae it ue o o i h k c (9% ols . 44 n » * '* e ® hiee e wage hoh 3 2s * y SA +4 "'-_ ag P (he ie c ht ® o C _ : Mn $* % 4 mt ob % o i * Pdbntg . . -;,~,\f.k !') ract yPe SR F . "':' . e t o o dn o . lt tX ":*ht':" €.'% .',_'.'" / C o * us Sirkegt ax i e s yA ** x +, ~ ) t 32. ns $ + o t' *°%' wik4 ) t y Phe o aaee n ie . f ~a o eRaimoks! t C & i+ & feiacky" / t n' "ant ;-- 1e t on s n P % * hat "y * * + y f e vexs 5+ "% K. * .. Ce 29% * Te * d * , ¥8iG .. i= * f » " K » 4 _ & * %4 % . % & * ": + ~ L + j 7 I * ' % . % ® t s D 4 ; $ k' y g ¢ . % & f * se o h.4 # » + 3 " % . L -- h > +s ® -- ) *I 6 \o, = $ t e h * ; f & * A * a A ¢ ; & * Wl y x a A 4 § + tR T & " » * * f * ? « @ ps s m ' *4 C " ¢ J : 4 : +4 § h % ° = 4 1 f ' x * i /# & ® : n 4 J i 4: & * ' * a ' < 4 4 » . + ¥ f % ® L a . C ¢ PR ¢ i _ # C k e # , + / © 7 s v \ -.\ 4 y & 5 & 8 & P > . 4. j f 4 f 1 o s s /\ % % a P U p L 4 r 7 dn . F T * wagi toimes dise, now buried under the groaning glaciers of . _ 2 m § o usA l low rainfal Greenland, or perhaps even sunk beneath the' S an, interesting experiment, which will hfl!fi trea.mfii Atctic ¥ea? -- themin L wwR t 0 2c a &'fig{.;:: years, .perhaps cg:i.n'ven' ::':!:lelr nnlquubon. ascinating as it is, must remain. --. -- * centuries, amm *t, Dr. Chianey : unanswered for the present. . > .. /. has planted --near Peking and also in the Alta ~~ fossil anima is iBe. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Magagine and Science Service) 5. * y>> In Shabarakh, Mongolia . . . in this barren spot evid of the world--wide parade of the redwoods is nrit in rock millions of gyears old * S t o might have been willing to mth =-- what less humid climate. gt.fi;k:'e can (:e"lfilee doubt that when'ths Manchurian coal beds were being: formed this ancient Asiatic 'land was at there the climate was exaclly like that of modern nofthern California. Dr. Chanes points out that redwoods grow in the northern United Stites when-- transplanted, and that these ancient trees might have been willing to get along with a some-- *, It is not necessary to infer, however;" that in the milderclimate days when the redwoods grew there the climate: was exactly like that of modern least a little more California--like than it is now. 1AE TNE CR N + 8 e s DS show that the Gobi was still sticking to much--the same kind of climate. . At present there .are no trees at all in the Gobi proper, but in the canyons of--the Altai mountains, which extend out into it, there are numerous cottonwoods and shrubby nosaurs 'indicates that the Mongolian 1 of these great lizards were dry-lza.° eoolm m]'htuwehnniwolinesofévflmthatdae Gobi of two million years ago was more or less like{heGobiofto@ay--oouogg.pul_upt.bd\ certainly not a moist country, nb)ecttoa rather cool climate. -- _ Other fossilis of a later date, the Tertiary, when the dinosaurs had vanished from the earth, connected with the di-- .fii&r iz «xddH M TL NIEOTHRA ET NURONNINNINH en > cadig ns af t foren Atnaals whinh shou «x1 FTLARLLETHE NNNE ESHTRINNE UNN O ATNNIONN When one realizes that these greatest of the forest folk were many centuries old before the first white man set foot:on the western-- world, the march of the redwoods becomes a fascinating story. American continent; every, year thousands of tourists walk about the butts of the towering giants, as mary elanmd:amuhm' vari--colored : maw of the Canyon; or the roaring, plunging falls of Niagara. ing, and as soon as the revolutionary difficulties in China shall have run their course, scholarly ad-- venturers will again be hard at their lessons, turn-- 'The redwood forests of California comprise Alhe redwooed forests of CaAiiforma t oneoftheacefiicmawupiaeaof_thauth be preserved in the rocks had there been wide-- spread forests in Mongolia during that period. Thus far have the of the stone books of Mamcheria and Mengihe beeneponed by the scientist (They still await further read-- sutmune ... ts tmmue .. mm omm ... Auges «muge ... smm

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