Jenny

There is a crescent shaped region called the black belt or blackland
prairies stretching across GA, Al, and Miss. This area of rich black
soils has since been heavily farmed, but supposedly it was originally
scattered woodlands and open grassland savannas. This area developed
over limestone and has deep sweet black soils. There are also areas up
in the region around NW GA, NE AL and Central TN where  thin soils
over limestone have resulted in extensive grasslands and shrublands
known as glades.

The Coastal plains in the deep south used to have grass savannas that
were maintained through frequent fire, but since fire control, most
have reverted back to pine.



On Apr 30, 11:50 pm, JennyNYC <[email protected]> wrote:
> ENTS,
>
> I'm curious about the history of meadows/grassland in the eastern US.
> I know on mountain summits and by the coast the nature of the soil and
> weather keep vegetation low to the ground, but do they ever occur in
> other areas that are not disturbed in some way? Would they all become
> forests if left alone?
>
> Thanks, Jenny
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