1. Introduction (from Carbondale)

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No matter how you get there, the road to Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge is unexceptional. Along Illinois Route 13, billboards for discount Lasik surgery, car dealerships, urologists, and community colleges sprout from the flat, rural landscape. It’s one long strip mall between the Interstate and the Refuge. The buildings are farther apart and have bigger lawns than they would in the suburbs, but they’re more or less the same. A few brown signs are all that show that you’re coming close to one of the Fish and Wildlife Service’s most unique sites.

Part of this walk

America Ponds: a counter-tour of Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge

America Ponds: a counter-tour of Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge

Carbondale
Despite the sparkling clarity of Devil’s Kitchen Lake, the seasonal influx of wintering geese, and the hushed serenity of its wilderness area, Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge is anything but unspoiled nature. Located in southernmost Illinois, the Refuge is the result of a half-century of economic development efforts directed at this sparsely populated, rural part of the state. Its three lakes were designed and built by the Works Progress Administration in the 1930s, and the Refuge itself was established in 1947 on the site of a shuttered US Army munitions plant. To help prop up the region’s economy, Crab Orchard’s mission includes playing host to industrial facilities, and companies producing everything from highlighters to high-caliber ammunition have taken up residence in the wildlife refuge. Fifty years of heavy manufacturing have taken a heavy toll on the place. Since the 1980s, Crab Orchard has been on the Environmental Protection Agency’s National Priorities List — better known as Superfund — which outlines and monitors a clean-up process for the most severely contaminated sites in the United States. Rather than concealing Crab Orchard’s resolutely cultural and political existence, this tour highlights it. Crab Orchard is a place where our most romantic feelings about nature collide with the reality of near-total human engineering, where long-forgotten histories are rediscovered through uncanny coincidence, and where the peace we feel on the trail is belied by the wars this place has helped to fight. Traveling here is an invitation to think through complexity, to feel our way through contradiction, and to come up with a concept more honest and useful than ‘nature’ to describe the myriad ways we exist with and within the non-human world.
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