Each spring here sees a remarkable sprouting of indigo across the woods:
bluebells, which bloom profusely until the overhanging leaves grow back
in full, and the forest floor grows dark again. Other places in the
world see such an annual blossoming, but few have such uniformity.
As glaciers a mile deep retreated from Ireland
and plants and animals migrated up the the exposed land -- tundra, then
conifers, then the cold rainforest that remained until humans -- the sea
flooded in, cutting off England from the continent and Ireland from
England. So England wound up with fewer plants and animals than the
continent, and Ireland even less. Surprising as it sounds, rabbits and
fallow deer are not native to either island -- they were brought by
Normans less than a millennia ago. Red deer and roe deer made it to
England, but the latter never reached Ireland. Neither, of course, did
snakes.
Plants did the same: only some of the Continent's
variety worked its way across the warming land before an ocean rushed
in. The bluebells were one of the ones that made it.
Tuesday, 10 April 2012
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2 comments:
I collected a lot of interesting things from your blog especially its discussion. From the comments in your posts, I believe I’m not alone having all the enjoyment here! keep up the great work.
Thanks! You can tell me that any day. :-)
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