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How “Natural” are inland wetlands? an example from the trail wood audubon sanctuary in Connecticut, USA

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Abstract

We examined the geology of a small inland wetland in Hampton, Connecticut to determine its postglacial history and to assess the severity of human impact at this remote wooded site. Using stratigraphic evidence, we dernonstrate that the present wetland was created when sediment pollution from a 19th-century railroad filled a preexisting artificial reservoir, and that the prehistoric wetland was a narrow drainage swale along Hampton Brook. This same, severely impacted wetland was interpreted by the Pulitzer Prize-winning naturalist Edwin Way Teale as a beautiful wilderness area of particular interest. These conflicting perceptions indicate that artificial wetlands can be naturally mitigated in less than a century of healing, even in the absence of deliberate management. We also point out that the “wilderness” value of the Teale wetland was in the eye of the beholder and that unseen human impacts may have improved the aesthetic experience.

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Thorson, R.M., Harris, S.L. How “Natural” are inland wetlands? an example from the trail wood audubon sanctuary in Connecticut, USA. Environmental Management 15, 675–687 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02589626

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