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Winter
1998
[TEXT ARCHIVE WEB-PUBLISHED
AUGUST 2001.
ORIGINAL PRINT PUBLICATION DATE: WINTER 1998.]
The Power
of Ice: Trekking the Glacial Landscape
By
Sheryl De Vore
Jagged
ice chunks collide and crunch at the edge of Lake Michigan
on a 10° F day. Was this what it was like 16,000 years
ago, you wonder, when a huge sheet of frozen water inundated
the Chicago region? How did this Siberia-like world, where
it seemed neither beast nor bush could survive, pave the
way for the ecosystems that today offer a home to an astounding
array of globally significant flora and fauna?
Strange as it may seem, the region's biodiversity is a gift
of the glaciers, says Ron Riepe, geology professor at the
College of Lake County in Grayslake, Illinois. That's because
the places harboring the rare and wonderful plants and animals
of our region our prairies, fens, lakes, bogs, wetlands,
and savannas are products of thousands of years of
glacial action.
What is now the Chicago Wilderness region began as the rest
of our world began, with the formation of the Earth's crust
some 4.6 billion years ago. The bare, hilly landscape, punctuated
with rivers and streams, supported no life because the necessary
mix of oxygen and other gases did not yet exist. Over time,
a shallow sea covered some of what is now Illinois, including
the Chicago region. As life evolved, creatures such as snails,
clams, trilobites, and other marine animals lived in this
region about 420 million years ago.
Continents shifted and collided, forming a great landmass
known as Pangaea. The Chicago region was then situated near
the equator, where palm trees and giant dragonflies thrived
in the tropical climate. Then came the period of dinosaurs.
Though none of their fossilized remains have been discovered
in the region, the Jurassic-era creatures most likely lived
here, too.
Approximately one million years ago, our most recent Ice
Age began. Over eons, ice sometimes one-quarter-mile thick
repeatedly advanced and retreated, laying the foundation
for the diverse landscape we see today.
Those times were not void of animals and plants as it might
seem, especially toward the end of the last glacial advance
and retreat in our region some 16,000 years ago. By then,
the climate had changed to support a mosaic of tundra, taiga,
and spruce forests. The Chicago Wilderness region mirrored
the Upper Michigan and Canadian boreal forests of today,
though many of the species that flourished then have since
gone extinct. Mastodons, Arctic shrews, giant beavers, peccaries,
musk oxen, boreal redback voles, and other animals lived
here among spruces and poplars, within bogs and marshes.
Time passed and the climate warmed further. "What replaced
the spruce forest was a rich, deciduous forest," says Ed
Collins, biologist for the McHenry Conservation District.
Then, about 8,000 years ago, the climate became drier. Both
the new climate and the relatively flat landscape created
by glacial action fostered fire. Influenced by these periodic
fires and dependent upon them, the region's dominant ecosystems
evolved: our tallgrass prairies and oak woods. Other ecosystems
flourished, too, in areas where glacial action caused ridges
and depressions to form fens, marshes, and bogs. "All those
various ecosystems that evolved are still here, except for
the tundra," says Collins.
Understanding this glacial geology is no easy task, and
scientists continue to debate how the various landforms
the basis of the region's ecosystems developed.
But they do agree that the glacier that once covered part
of Illinois came down from a spreading center near Hudson's
Bay in Canada. There snow fell in winter but did not melt
in summer, turning to ice under its own weight and oozing
laterally southward.
This glacier was not a flat sheet of ice moving uniformly
atop a flat piece of ground, but rather an amoeba-like ribbon
of three-dimensional frozen water with dips and peaks, cracks,
and rivers flowing beneath. As it advanced and retreated,
the ice acted "like a crazy conveyor belt," carrying unsorted
boulders, pebbles, and sand, says Ralph Thornton, land manager
for the Cook County Forest Preserve District. The glacier
deposited these particles, which are called glacial till,
and picked up new ones along the way. Running water later
sorted the glacial debris, Thornton says, depositing it
in various places to create Chicago lake plain clays, sand
dunes, beach ridges, and gravel beds beneath fens.
While the rivers flowed and the glaciers retreated, "a silt
called loess was blown on top of the till," says Ray Wiggers,
a geologist from Beach Park, Illinois. The silt came from
the huge muddy streams that flowed here in summer when the
glaciers melted. In winter, the streams were reduced to
a trickle, exposing the loose silt to be blown by strong
winds. "It's this mixture of silt and glacial till that
helped form the prairie soils," says Wiggers, author of
Geology Underfoot in Illinois (Mountain Press, 1997).
Glacial soils
At least 600 types of soils developed from the windblown
silt that overlies glacial debris in Illinois, says William
E. McClain, author of Prairie Establishment and Landscaping
in Illinois. One of the richest of these is the black soil
like that found at Wolf Road Prairie in Westchester, considered
one of the finest remaining examples of a black soil prairie
in Illinois, where 400 plant species exist.
A plenitude of grasses and forbs evolved in the region's
diverse soils. They developed deep root systems, sometimes
20 feet below the ground, to protect themselves from the
dry, hot summers and cold, hostile winters that now characterize
our climate. Over the years, the organic root mass of these
prairie grasses and forbs nourished and fertilized the soil,
producing what some have called "the richest soil in the
world." Prairies also attracted nesting birds such as grasshopper
sparrows, bobolinks, and meadowlarks, whose plumages mimic
the grasses' hues.
Dry prairies
Ecologists recognize several types of dry prairies in our
region, including the very rare dolomite prairie. Dolomite
is a type of limestone rich in magnesium. A deluge of glacial
meltwater scraped away all the glacial till in some places,
exposing ancient dolomite rocks deposited under the sea
some 420 million years ago.
The minerals in dolomite affect soil chemistry enough that
unusual plant species, such as the federally endangered
leafy prairie clover and rare slender sandwort, survive
only at these sites. The Hines emerald dragonfly, which
now lives only a few places on Earth, can be found at specific
sites in Cook and Will Counties where dolomite prairies
exist.
The sand prairies along Lake Michigan are also remnants
of glacial action. "The ice sheet flowed most easily over
the Lake Michigan basin because it had a bedrock of soft
shale and was easily eroded," Wiggers says. Indeed, the
region bears evidence of three major earlier shorelines
associated with the Lake Michigan basin. In time, modern-day
Lake Michigan formed. Waves sorted glacial debris, depositing
tiny sand particles along the lake's edge. Winds then tossed
the sand particles to create dunes. At Illinois Beach State
Park in northern Lake County, plants such as a prostrate
shrub called bearberry and the prickly pear cactus, whose
yellow blooms brighten the dunal landscape in summer, evolved
under the dry, windy dune conditions close to shore.
Westerly winds also created the high dunes at Indiana Dunes
National Lakeshore. Here a dense network of rare marram
grass clings to the seemingly inhospitable sand along the
shoreline, spreading its rhizomes sometimes 20 feet to keep
the wind and waves from killing it. In nearby interdunal
ponds, the rare Fowler's toad lays its eggs. Along pond
edges grow rare flowers such as the insect-eating horned
bladderwort.
Farther inland, skunk cabbage and ferns thrive in moist
woods, while lupine grows in open oak savannas. The lupine
attracts the world's third-largest population of the federally
endangered Karner blue butterfly, which feeds on this plant.
Glacial deposits also created wetlands. Once upon a time,
most of the city of Chicago was one big, flat wetland complex
consisting of wet prairie, sedge meadows, marshes, and some
dunal ridges. Silt, separated by lake and wind action, created
a gooey marshland. Signs of the area's historic wetlands
are still evident in places such as the Lake Calumet area
south of the city. Here, wetlands such as Indian Ridge Marsh
host one of Illinois' largest documented breeding colonies
of the state-endangered black-crowned night-heron.
Moraines
Meanwhile, long ridges of glacial material known as moraines
formed higher ground and harbored the region's woodlands
and savannas. Fire travels quickly uphill, but slows considerably
on the way down. When fire reached the top of one of these
ridges, it slowed, encouraging the development of wooded
areas, principally on the north and eastern sides, which
became populated by fire-dependent oaks. The Chicago Wilderness
region contains dozens of moraines. The Valparaiso moraine,
one of the largest, stretches all the way from the Wisconsin
line well into Indiana.
Kettles, bogs, and fens
Rare wetlands and inland lakes exist in the region because
of another glacial effect: the creation of kettles. "When
a glacier retreats or melts, it does so in chunks and pieces,"
says geologist Wiggers. "Detached chunks of ice get buried
under glacial debris." Imagine a colossal ice cube submerged
under the sand at a Lake Michigan beach. When the cube melts,
the sand sinks into the hole it leaves. The depression left
by the melting of a glacial ice cube is known as a kettle.
Some kettles became glacial lakes now dotting Lake and McHenry
Counties. Cedar Lake in Lake Villa, because it is one of
the region's cleanest glacial lakes, harbors several rare
plants and animals.
Efforts to protect Cedar Lake by residents such as botanist
Dr. Linda Curtis and others have helped preserve its quality
and purity. While canoeing several years ago on Cedar Lake,
Curtis discovered the state-endangered water marigold blooming
among other threatened and endangered submerged aquatic
plants. Rare fish such as the black-nosed shiner also swim
in the waters here. The only populations of this species
in Illinois are found in clear, well-vegetated glacial lakes
in the Chicago Wilderness.
Kettles sometimes don't remain mere kettles. "If the water
in the kettle gets acidic," says Wiggers, "the kettle becomes
a bog." Bogs become acidic because they are closed systems,
where no water enters except from rain. Acid develops from
the slow breakdown of dead plant material in the cold bog
waters. Sphagnum moss, which thrives in bogs, also adds
acidity to the substrate. The cold, acidic conditions of
bogs offer few nutrients, so plants get their food in other
ways than from the substrate. At a bog near Lake Defiance
at Moraine Hills State Park, for instance, the pitcher plant
drowns unsuspecting insects in its cup-like appendages that
fill with rain water.
But a kettle may also contain a fen, another kind of living
history. Remember that long before the glaciers came, Illinois
contained shallow seas teeming with hard-shelled creatures.
When these creatures died, their shells became the foundation
for the region's dolomite bedrock. In some places, glaciers
or their meltwater broke and moved this exposed bedrock.
As water seeped through the dolomite, it leached out some
of the calcium and magnesium. When water reached the clay
or shale layer, it flowed horizontally, traveling through
the substrate and creating a more alkaline soil when the
water reached the surface. In time, says geology professor
Riepe, the fen environment may become more acidic.
Fens harbor unusual plants such as turtlehead, a plant that
attracts the Baltimore checkerspot, a rare butterfly here.
"These butterflies need the turtlehead in order to survive
because it's the only plant that the female lays its eggs
on," says Doug Taron, exhibit coordinator at the Chicago
Academy of Sciences and coordinator of the regional volunteer
butterfly monitoring network. The white lady's slipper and
the Ohio goldenrod are two other species that thrive in
the characteristic alkaline soils of fens.
Glaciers did not create neatly isolated landscapes. Instead,
different types of wetlands are scattered throughout the
region, sometimes next to each other. At the aptly named
Glacial Park in McHenry County, for instance, you can find
an acidic bog and an alkaline fen very close to one another,
says Wiggers. "A slight change in elevation, the chemistry
of the soil, and other factors can mean a substantial change
in vegetation," says biologist Ed Collins.
Kames
Of Glacial Park's 3,000 acres, 400 are part of the Illinois
State Nature Preserve system due to the importance of the
area's kettle and kame or "basin and knob"
glacial topography. The basins are the kettles and the knobs
are the kames, the region's natural high rises.
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FURTHER
READING
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Geology
Underfoot in Illinois, Mountain Press. Ray Wiggers.
1997
Or
visit Illinois State Museum's "Online
Ice Age Exhibit"
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Several
types of kames exist at Glacial Park and each developed
from different geological forces. The rises and dips in
glaciers become filled with debris when a glacial river
flows on top of, within, or underneath the glacier. When
the ice melts, what's left is a mound of gravelly debris.
Geologists think the kame at Johnson's Mound in Kane County
developed in this way. A delta kame, on the other hand,
developed when debris was deposited where a glacial river
formed a delta at the glacier's melting edge. The two large
"camelback kames" at Glacial Park are delta kames.
Johnson's
Mound and the kames at Glacial Park are visible links to
our geological past. Reading the glacial landscape from
the sandy Lake Michigan shoreline to the elevated kames
can enhance our appreciation of this globally significant
region we call the Chicago Wilderness.

Sheryl
De Vore is an award-winning environmental journalist for
Pioneer Press Newspapers, the Chief Editor of Meadowlark,
A Journal of Illinois Birds, and Assistant Editor of
Chicago Wilderness.
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