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Home » Academics » Academic Catalogs » 2012-13 Catalog » Academics » Institutes, Centers and Programs » Center for Sustainability and the Environment » Field Trips » Appalachians 2006

Other Trip Details

An experiment aimed at understanding the growth and carbon sequestration under elevated CO2 is explained at Oak Ridge National Lab

On the trip, we also explored other issues and visited other relevant places. At the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Labs, we visited the environmental section, where experiments ranging from ways to lessen fish kills from hydroelectric turbines to studies of the potential effects of elevated global CO2 on forest growth were explained.

Early morning mists shroud Fontana Dam, built to provide power to war industries, including Oak Ridge, in the 1940's

On another day we visited the TVA headquarters and the nearby Norris Dam, first of many hydroelectric projects which forever altered both the economy and the riparian ecology of the region.

 Students stroll amid the gardens of Eco-village residents

We ended the trip with a quick visit to Berea College's Eco-village. This complex of apartments uses 75% less water and energy than conventional housing. The progressive environmental and social innovations shown by a sister College provided inspirational and up end to our trip.

 

Tiles created by children in the complex adorn the base of a demonstration straw bale pavilion in the complex

Alternate Land Uses

Lisa discussed management with U.S. Forest Service Manager Rex Mann in Daniel Boone National Forest, Kentucky.

There were several themes in the rest of the trip. Much of the time was spent in issues relating to forest management. We were able to see four different approaches. Appalachian Sustainable Development, an N.G.O., strives to facilitate economic and sustainable uses of the land. It provides landowners an opportunity to sustain ably harvest forest products by operating a sawmill and solar powered kiln and by developing markets for their products.

Wes and Lindsay hiking in the Smokies. Students inspecting the forest products at Appalachian Sustainable Development's mill. One effort is to market as "character wood" material that otherwise would be considered waste.

We also visited private land under a sustainable harvest rotation, and the Boone National Forest where different ways to protect the forest from an anticipated gypsy moth infestation were being tested. Finally, we visited Great Smokey Mountain National Park, to see forest largely unaffected by humans. In contrast to the first part of the trip, this was quite hopeful, as we met interesting people with interesting ideas.

 

The solar powered kiln used to dry wood.  The daily heating cycles cause the wood to dry more evenly that it does in a conventional gas fired kiln, allowing more of the wood to be utilized Foresters explain how the Tuuk's private property is managed to provide habitat and sustainable income from the land.

Coal Mining

A view of Kayford Mountain, West Virginia.  The top of this mountain is being stripped away and dumped in adjacent valleys.  The result is a permanently altered landscape and an ecosystem degraded for hundreds of years.

The trip began with a look at one of the most efficient...and environmentally disruptive...ways of mining. By literally peeling away the mountains of West Virginia layer by layer, coal companies can extract all the layers of coal within the mountain, including layers too thin to be mined by other techniques. Unfortunately, this process requires the bulk of the mountain to be piled elsewhere, always in an adjacent stream valley.

Larry recounts his childhood on Kayford Mountain Looking from Larry's remaining property out over the landscape altered by mining

Coal washing operations create a heavy-metal-rich sludge, which is also impounded in the stream valleys. Some impoundments have failed, releasing sludge into streams and communities. The continuous blasting required to literally move mountains shakes nearby homes. If concern for global warming does not make you want to turn from coal, a visit to a mountaintop removal site just might.

Mike, Lindsay, and Wes prepare for their Southwings flight A valley filled with coal washing sludge.  Photo courtesy of Southwings

On our trip, we were taken on flights over mountaintop mines by volunteer pilots with Southwings an organization dedicated to raising awareness of environmental problems by flying people over areas affected.

A mountain drilled off for blasting.  Trucks in the foreground stand about 20 feet tall. Image courtesy of Southwings.

The aerial view is really the only way to comprehend the magnitude of this problem. We also visited West Virginia native Larry Gibson at his historic family home on Kayford Mountain. Larry has resisted lucrative offers to sell his land to coal interests, and instead accepted the role of environmental activist that fate has forced on him. We count him among the true heroes of the environmental movement.

 

 

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