Winter
1998
[TEXT ARCHIVE WEB-PUBLISHED
AUGUST 2001.
ORIGINAL PRINT PUBLICATION DATE: WINTER 1998.]

Fire
and Ice
Some
say the world will end in fire, Some say in ice...
Robert Frost
The
end of the world? Far from it. For us, fire and ice are
the progenitors. The wonderfully rich nature and our own
rich lives in this region today began when the glaciers
gouged the land and left fertile young soils. Then fires
sweeping across the evolving prairies and woods helped to
shape the characteristic ecosystems of the North American
middle west: our wilderness.
Yet, as the colossal waves of ice scraped our landscape
and then retreated, so has the ambitious hand of man sought
to make its mark. How much do we create and how much
destroy? The jury is still out. Today the skyscrapers of
Chicago tower as tall as the crest of the former glacier.
Imagine as artist Bobby Sutton does standing
in downtown Chicago and gazing up and up and up at the Wisconsonian
ice sheet, one-quarter mile thick. The Sears Tower might
thrust above the surface, but only by a few feet.
What a marvel that our monuments challenge the power of
ice! Still, our achievements even expressed in a
structure one-quarter mile high are impermanent too.
Consider the biblically-named Zion nuclear power plant in
Lake County that sits on 250 acres of former sand savanna
between the north and south sections of Illinois Beach State
Park. Recently, the Commonwealth Edison Company announced
its plans to close the plant permanently. It had seemed
like it would be there forever. Now the prairie and woods
of the park look timeless and real, and the power plant
looks like trivia.
Permanence? For nature, now and in the future, permanence
implies active and informed stewardship. Perhaps when today's
youth have grandchildren, nature will be treasured more
than gems and gold. Perhaps our times will be most respected
as the period of history when an irreplaceable inheritance
was saved by a culture that learned to live in harmony with
it. Will this optimistic vision succeed? What are the major
challenges, the solutions, the institutions, and the people
who are making the difference? Chicago
Wilderness Magazine intends to explore these questions
and find answers that will last.
Thanks to your generous support, we are off to a great start.
As of Groundhog Day, an impressive 1,746 people throughout
the region had already subscribed. Help us make this magazine
a sustaining enterprise. Share this issue with friends and
colleagues. Give subscriptions to neighbors, schools, and
libraries. Spread the word. Scatter the seeds. From fire
and ice, to the richness of life. Chicago Wilderness.
Debra
Shore may be reached at editor@chicagowildernessmag.org.
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