Lilley Cornett Woods

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Lilley Cornett Woods
USA Kentucky location map.svg
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Map of Kentucky
Location Whitesburg, Kentucky
Coordinates 37°05′16″N82°59′33″W / 37.0879°N 82.9925°W / 37.0879; -82.9925 [1]
Area659 acres (267 ha) [1]
Established1969 [1]
Governing body Eastern Kentucky University [1]
Designated1971

Lilley Cornett Woods is a 659-acre forested land parcel within Letcher County, Kentucky. Of the overall parcel, 252 acres are classified as old growth forest and listed as a National Natural Landmark (NNL). The overall parcel is owned by the State of Kentucky, and the NNL is protected by the parcel's operator, Eastern Kentucky University. [1] [2]

Description

The Lilley Cornett Woods are a surviving example of the forest growth of the Cumberland Mountains. Dominant large trees include beech, hickory, white oak, and chestnut oak. [2] Eastern Kentucky University, which operates the Appalachian Ecological Research Station within the parcel, reports that the parcel contains 72 woody plant species and 468 other plant species. [1] This diversity affirms the old-growth status of the central wooded area within the parcel. Prior to 1969, the old-growth area was disturbed by (i) longtime livestock-forestry interactions typical of Appalachian human ecology, [1] and (ii) 20th-century salvage logging of the blight-struck, dead and dying American chestnuts that used to live in the old-growth woods. [2]

Surviving large trees in the old-growth section of the Lilley Cornett Woods include a white oak that has been tree-ring-dated to 1669, more than 350 years before the present. [1] The Woods are named in honor of the parcel's longtime owner and guardian, a private citizen who is reported to have refused all offers from loggers. As a surviving old-growth woodland, the Woods were celebrated by local environmental advocate Harry M. Caudill. [2] The state of Kentucky purchased the old-growth section of the land parcel from Cornett's heirs in 1969. [1]

The Lilley Cornett Woods are managed with minimal additional human disturbance for scientific purposes. Researchers have a bunkhouse/laboratory station to maintain their research projects. [2] Non-scientist access to the old-growth segment of the Woods is by guided tour only. A self-guided 0.5-mile loop trail invites unsupervised access to a verge section of the Woods adjacent to the old growth. [2] The Woods were named as a National Natural Landmark in 1971. They were initiated into the Old-Growth Forest Network in 2023. [1]

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Lilley Cornett Woods Appalachian Research Station Initiated into the Old-Growth Forest Network". Eastern Kentucky University . Richmond, Kentucky. June 13, 2023. Retrieved December 20, 2024.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Honeycutt, Scott (November 28, 2023). "Lilley Cornett Woods: The Hill Country's Legacy". applachianplaces.org. East Tennessee State University . Retrieved December 20, 2024.