Green Mountain

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Green Mountain, Ascension Island
Green Mountain1.JPG
Entrance to Green Mountain (2011)
Highest point
Elevation 859 m (2,818 ft) [1]
Prominence 859 m (2,818 ft)
Isolation 1,842 km (1,145 mi)  OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
Coordinates 7°57′S14°21′W / 7.950°S 14.350°W / -7.950; -14.350
Geography
Location Ascension Island, South Atlantic Ocean
Geology
Age of rock Holocene
Mountain type Stratovolcano
Last eruption Unknown
Climbing
Easiest route aircraft, then road, then hike

Green Mountain is a common name for "The Peak", the highest point and a stratovolcano on Ascension Island, which has gained some fame for claims that it is one of very few large-scale artificial forests. Green Mountain is ranked 38th by topographic isolation.

Contents

History and vegetation

Many early 19th-century accounts, including Charles Darwin's (July 1836), described the volcanic island as barren with very few plants, some of them endemic to the island, not to be found anywhere else. Scientists estimate the island's native vascular plants to be between 25 and 30 species, 10 of them endemic to Ascension. [2] [3] This impoverished flora is a consequence of the age of the island (only 1 million years old) and isolation (over 1,500 kilometres (930 mi) from any major landmass). [1] In 1843 the British plant collector, Joseph Dalton Hooker, visited the island with Sir James Clark Ross's Antarctica expedition. Hooker proposed a plan to plant the island with vegetation to attempt to increase rainfall and make life more bearable for the garrison that was stationed there. [4] Crucially, he saw the appointment of a farm superintendent as being the key to success.

From that time on, many plants have been introduced, and Hooker's plan can be seen from one angle as an overwhelming success. An 1865 Admiralty report stated on the subject of Green Mountain that "(the island) now possesses thickets of 40 kinds of trees, besides numerous shrubs; through the spreading of vegetation, the water supply is now excellent". By the early 1900s many crops such as bananas and guavas were growing naturally. It is unlikely that this success led to an increase in rainfall, however, but has probably resulted in increased capture of occult deposition (mist) by the greater amount of vegetation.

The resulting cloud forest [5] [6] is a mosaic of plants from a variety of habitats, including woodland, grassland, and shrubland. The ecosystem that has emerged is almost entirely artificial in nature as a result of the interactions between the introduced species from a variety of disparate climates and locations. [7] The resulting ecosystem created by the British introductions has threatened several of the few endemic Ascension island species. Because of this, Green Mountain is now a national park where endemic species are actively conserved.

The mineral dalyite  [ it ] was first found at Green Mountain in 1952. [8]

Geography and access

The Mountain, situated within the national park zone, can be accessed via the main road from Georgetown. However, vehicle access does not extend to the top of the mountain. A footpath exists up to the old barracks and disused water catchment area. This continues to an observation station, where there is also a Dew Pond, formed by the collection of water on top of the mountain. The area is maintained for visitors to a certain extent, and a passage is provided through the dense vegetation. The highest point of the mountain is marked by an anchor chain, which is just up from the Dew Pond.

See also

Related Research Articles

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References

  1. 1 2 "Ascension Island database". Department of Plant Sciences. Archived from the original on 2010-07-10.
  2. Ashmole & Ashmole 2000
  3. Gray, Alan (September 2004). "The parable of Green Mountain: massaging the message". Journal of Biogeography . 31 (9): 1549–1550. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2699.2004.01118.x . ISSN   1365-2699. A comment on Wilkinson 2004
  4. Duffey, Eric (Nov 1964). "The Terrestrial Ecology of Ascension Island". The Journal of Applied Ecology . 1 (2): 219–251. doi:10.2307/2401310. ISSN   0021-8901. JSTOR   2401310.
  5. Wilkinson, David M. (January 2004). "The parable of Green Mountain: Ascension Island, ecosystem construction and ecological fitting" (PDF). Journal of Biogeography. 31 (1): 1–4. doi:10.1046/j.0305-0270.2003.01010.x. ISSN   1365-2699. S2CID   59332510. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-07-17.
  6. Stroud, Stedson; Pelembe, Tara; Gray, Alan (October 2005). "The conservation of the endemic vascular flora of Ascension Island and threats from alien species". Oryx . 39 (4): 449–453. doi: 10.1017/S0030605305001092 . ISSN   0030-6053.
  7. Ashmole & Ashmole 2000 , p. 250
  8. "Dalyite: Mineral information, data and localities". www.mindat.org. Retrieved 2018-12-13.

Sources