{"id":74040,"date":"2021-08-12T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2021-08-13T06:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/pine-grove-near-yakutat-is-farthest-north\/"},"modified":"2021-08-12T22:30:00","modified_gmt":"2021-08-13T06:30:00","slug":"pine-grove-near-yakutat-is-farthest-north","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/pine-grove-near-yakutat-is-farthest-north\/","title":{"rendered":"Pine grove near Yakutat is farthest north"},"content":{"rendered":"\n\t\t\t\t
By Ned Rozell <\/strong><\/ins><\/p>\n\t\t\t\t YAKUTAT — “There they are,” Ben Gaglioti said, after a short hike off a gravel road leading away from this small fishing town.<\/p>\n\t\t\t\t Gaglioti walked in rubber boots on a green, squishy carpet of muskeg — a wild garden of water-loving plants growing on acidic soil that has for centuries prevented the encroachment of giant rainforest trees.<\/p>\n\t\t\t\t He spotted the lime-green shade of a few lodgepole pine trees here, at their farthest-north location in Alaska. The trees’ tint was a bit darker than the needles of hemlock and Sitka spruce to which the eye grows accustomed around this Southeast Alaska town. The bottle-brush branches of the pines curved upward, like fingers on a hand poised to catch a ball.<\/p>\n\t\t\t\t I followed Gaglioti, a paleoecologist with UAF’s Water and Environmental Research Center through an enchanted forest, a landscape I had never seen in Alaska.<\/p>\n\t\t\t\t We were on the Yakutat Forelands — a sweep of forested lowlands left behind after glaciers retreated from the landscape hundreds of years ago.<\/p>\n\t\t\t\t Taking steps that felt like walking on a trampoline, we moved through a pine grove in a few-acre spread of open green muskeg.<\/p>\n\t\t\t\t