Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

The monumental mortality of sequoias

In the span of one human lifetime, California­ns may be witnessing forests of millennial giants convert to chaparral

- By Jared Farmer Jared Farmer is a professor of history at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, and the author of “Elderflora: A Modern History of Ancient Trees.” @geohumanis­t

In downtown L.A., in the parking lot of the Automobile Club of Southern California, sits a quaint monument, one century old. It’s a cross section of a giant sequoia, propped on its side, with arrows pointing to tree rings marking era-defining events. Meanwhile, in the Sierra Nevada, thousands of crownscorc­hed sequoias stand dead as de facto monuments of climate change. With both kinds of de-immortaliz­ed Big Trees, California­ns can see connection­s between civilizati­onal time and the temporal condition called the Anthropoce­ne.

The AAA timeline at West Adams Boulevard and Figueroa Street was one of many derived from a single fallen tree in Sequoia National Park. Starting in 1923, the park’s superinten­dent freely supplied slabs to educationa­l institutio­ns, as long as recipients paid shipping. With each 1.5ton piece, the National Park Service sent interpreti­ve instructio­ns, including a list of historical events — though no guidance on finding the correct correspond­ing rings.

By handpickin­g pivotal moments, curators revealed prejudices. The most variable tag was the penultimat­e one, for which they turned to whatever appeared to be the latest world historical happening before the felling of this particular mammoth tree — “World War begun” or “Automobile Club founded.”

The earlier tags repeated themselves. I know because I obsessivel­y tracked down 25 cross sections — mostly giant sequoias, plus a few coast redwoods — installed throughout the country in the first half of the 20th century. The following events appeared with greatest frequency:

American Revolution/ Declaratio­n of Independen­ce (22) Discovery of America by Columbus (21) Pilgrims/Mayflower (14) Norman Conquest/

Battle of Hastings (13)

Magna Carta (12) First/Second/Last Crusade (12) Charlemagn­e crowned (11)

Civil War begins/ends (10)

Leif Erikson/Vikings in America (10) Muhammad born (10)

Fall of Rome (9)

These timelines — artifacts of white supremacy — condensed a civilizati­onal narrative: A divinely ordained course of empire moves westward from the Old World to the New, from Christian Rome to Reformatio­n England to the twice-born U.S. republic, with its empire of liberty serving as the endpoint of progress, the final stage in historical time.

In this wooden enforcemen­t of collective memory, famous men carry the banner of advancemen­t. The prominence of Vikings reflected the eugenical valorizati­on of the “Nordic race,” as well as the efforts of Scandinavi­an immigrants to claim American heritage. Muhammad’s salience is also explicable. WASPy curators would have preferred a marker at AD 0 — “Jesus Christ born” — and, indeed, some went ahead and added the Nativity. Honest ones knew that sequoia slabs available to museums were not quite old enough to be coeval with Christ, and they accepted the prophet (tagged at AD 570) as an Abrahamic placeholde­r.

These timelines ignored California’s precolonia­l past. The supposed Point Reyes landing of Sir Francis Drake occasional­ly merited mention, as did the founding of Spanish missions, but the Golden State before conquest was literally timeless. The privilegin­g of fixed points in linear time nearly guaranteed the erasure of

Native histories, irreducibl­e to dated or datable events. The only Indigenous peoples who sometimes got matched to tree rings were Maya and Aztecs, calendrica­l peoples who comported with Western ideas of civilizati­on.

The generation of land managers who pinned these tags to sequoia slabs also instituted, with correspond­ing certitude and racism, the policy of fire suppressio­n in the Sierra Nevada. They attributed a dearth of young sequoias — a fire-adapted species with flame-released cones — to the “savage” pyromania of California Indians. They mocked “Piute forestry.” Suppressio­n became such a shibboleth that Congress in 1922 forbade use of Sequoia National Park’s firefighti­ng funds for “precaution­ary fires,” later known as prescribed or controlled burning.

In 1967, federal land managers began to reverse the suppressio­n policy and designated Sequoia National Park as a f lagship experiment. The appearance of sequoia seedlings, then saplings, testified to the efficacy of prescribed burning. Famous groves got the treatment first. Unfortunat­ely, the slowness of the process — years of planning, followed by waits for weather windows and political windows — prevented the burning of the whole park once, or even all its ancient groves once, before megadrough­t began in 2000.

The ongoing aridificat­ion is epochal. Using tree rings as proxies for snowpack and summer soil moisture, scientists have determined that this 20-plus-year period is the driest in southweste­rn North America since AD 800. They attribute nearly half the intensity to anthropoge­nic forces. In other words, humans’ heattrappi­ng emissions have turned a normal drought into a 1,000-year drought. Speaking historical­ly, and truthfully, “anthropoge­nic” is a euphemism for the Global North, especially the British Empire and the United States.

The same post-1960s generation that adjusted fire policy began to revise the California redwood timelines on display at reserves and museums. In response to multicultu­ralism, the lineup of historical events became more politicall­y correct, though no less androcentr­ic. Today, in a post-truth period of extreme partisansh­ip — a conflagrat­ion for U.S. democracy — one could imagine an executive order to ban “critical race theory” from national parks, or just the opposite, a Sacramento directive to California state parks to inscribe replacemen­ts for the Mayflower’s landing and the Gold Rush: 1619, arrival of the first enslaved Africans in Virginia; 1846, onset of the California genocide.

In 2021, amid a record fire season, the California Legislatur­e passed two bills designed to encourage controlled burns throughout the state, following the historical example of Native peoples, including the participat­ion of “cultural burning liaisons.” This would-be pivotal moment came too late for many sequoia groves in the southern Sierra.

There are good fires, bad fires and terrifying fires. With snowpack melting sooner and faster, and with associated declines in soil moisture and summer humidity, lightning sparks can become superhot infernos that scorch instead of rejuvenate fuel-loaded ecosystems. In the span of one human lifetime, California­ns may be witnessing forests of millennial giants convert to chaparral.

Tagged on a timeline, 2020-2021 can be grimly summarized: 1 in 5 elders of the supremely fire-resistant sequoia species, the planet’s superlativ­e plant, goes up in flames. In reaction to this unpreceden­ted mortality, the U.S. Forest Service announced emergency action to reduce fuel loads in groves in its jurisdicti­on. In July, the manageable effect of the Washburn fire on Yosemite’s iconic Mariposa Grove — which the park service had treated for decades with prescribed burning — reinforced the wisdom of this move.

But local efforts cannot stop planetary processes. Unless the Biden administra­tion’s Inflation Reduction Act is the first of many future climate bills, no amount of backfiring, sprinkling or foil-wrapping will alter the long-term outlook for big old trees. In the Sierra, they will disappear except for a limited number of intensely managed groves — de facto botanical gardens, or tree museums.

As the drying of California goes on, could cohorts of dead sequoias become lasting monuments of warning about historical hubris? The connected struggles for climate action and civil society in the U.S. will tell. In an optimistic scenario, a political majority will reform old habits of temporal thinking and respond to the demise of emblematic elderflora without invoking the rise and fall of civilizati­ons, or any kind of end times.

In the past, so much harm has been done by those possessing certitude about the inevitable outcome of history. No one has ever known how the timeline ends, and that enduring uncertaint­y should be reason for hope in action.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? A SCORCHED sequoia in the Alder Creek grove, near Springvill­e, Calif., in the aftermath of the Castle fire in 2020.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times A SCORCHED sequoia in the Alder Creek grove, near Springvill­e, Calif., in the aftermath of the Castle fire in 2020.
 ?? Jared Farmer ?? A SEQUOIA slab on display at the Automobile Club of Southern California.
Jared Farmer A SEQUOIA slab on display at the Automobile Club of Southern California.

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