When the Land Turned Green: The Maine Discovery of the First Land Plants

When the Land Turned Green: The Maine Discovery of the First Land Plants

When the Land Turned Green: The Maine Discovery of the First Land Plants

When the Land Turned Green: The Maine Discovery of the First Land Plants

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Overview

Deep in the wilderness of northern Maine in the mid-1950s, a Harvard PhD student is wading down a mountain stream into a remote valley. He is taking his first steps to map the geology of 300 square miles of Baxter State Park. He soon discovers a series of unusually shaped rock outcrops—part of an unknown geologic formation, hundreds of millions of years old, still mystifying today because of its relative lack of change despite nearby volcanic activity and massive land movement. Wading on, he has another surprise. In a thin layer of black shale beside the stream, he finds a small fossil of a plant.

Little does he know, but his discovery of Perticaquadrifaria will help scientists unlock the details of a major event in the history of our planet—the transition of plants to land, an occurrence that continues to have a critical influence on the Earth’s life-supporting processes, including climate.

The 400-million-year-old, Devonian Era Pertica fossils have been found nowhere else on Earth but that enigmatic rock formation deep in the Maine woods. Pertica was one of the very first land plants and is thought to have been the tallest of the time. Today, the site of the fossil’s discovery lies in the shadow of an Eastern White Pine, which now takes the ancient plant’s place as the tallest plant on the land in the eastern United States.

This fascinating story explores the work of geologists and paleobotanists as they attempt to demystify the land and reveal the ancient life forms that settled on it. It explores the hypothesis that these two tall plants (Pertica and White Pine) are related and asks: What can these two plants, one ancient, and one modern, tell us about the past and perhaps hint at the future?


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781684750320
Publisher: Down East Books
Publication date: 08/15/2022
Pages: 178
Product dimensions: 6.36(w) x 9.36(h) x 0.66(d)

About the Author

Dean Bennett, Professor Emeritus at the University of Maine at Farmington, has written and illustrated numerous books about nature, wilderness, and human relationships with the natural world.

Sheila K. Bennett is Professor Emeritus at the University of Maine at Augusta where she taught in the science department for 36 years.

They live in Hallowell, Maine.

Table of Contents

Preface vii

Acknowledgments xi

Prologue xv

1 A Fateful Meeting 1

2 Wading into the Devonian 11

3 Preparing to Pursue a Passion 25

4 Facing a Peopled Wilderness 31

5 Mapping a Wildland 41

6 A Curious Formation 51

7 The Fossil Hunters 61

8 The Discovery 73

9 The Maine State Fossil 91

10 New Revelations 99

11 The Descendent 111

12 A Perspective on Science and Nature 121

Epilogue 127

Notes 129

Index 141

About the Authors 153

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