In the 19th and 20th centuries, plows destroyed most of America’s tallgrass prairie to make way for crops, wiping out a richly biodiverse ecosystem. In this piece, Christian Elliott explores the last pockets of Iowa prairie, especially the grassland that survives in Rochester Cemetery. He uncovers an extraordinary place where a rare ecosystem and a rural burial ground overlap, causing tensions between those focused on the land itself and those devoted to preserving the graves of the pioneers who cultivated it.
I think of the postage-stamp perfect square cemetery I grew up visiting on Memorial Day in nearby Wapello, Iowa, with its close-cropped turfgrass, ornamental bushes and stones in lines straight as the corn rows that box them in on all sides. With manicured lawns and trimmed trees as the blueprint for cemeteries, I can see why some less well acquainted with prairie plants — including other township trustees here — complain this place looks “overgrown” with weeds and in need of a good mow. But at the same time, it strikes me that if one of the pioneers buried here suddenly rose from the dead, these hills are about the only part of the Iowa landscape they’d recognize.
More picks from Noēma
The Last Days of Social Media
“Social media promised connection, but it has delivered exhaustion.”
The Unseen Fury of Solar Storms
“Lurking in every space weather forecaster’s mind is the hypothetical big one, a solar storm so huge it could bring our networked, planetary civilization to its knees.”
How To Build A Thousand-Year-Old Tree
“A set of experimental techniques and technologies that might seem harmful to trees is actually helping ancient forests survive.”
The Sex Lives Of Common Vegetables
“Nature is full of species for which sex and gender are more fluid than the heterosexual gender binary that is commonly accepted in Western societies.”
Trespassing For The Common Good
“In England, a movement is growing to defy enclosure by trespassing on private land.”
The Powerful Potential Of Tiny Conservation Plots
“Making space for environmental conservation in our densest concrete jungles.”
