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Harvard Forest Data Archive

HF087

Witness Tree Data in Southern New England and Long Island 1640-1999

Related Publications

Data

  • hf087-01: tabular data (preview)
  • hf087-02: zip file contains an ArcView point shapefile for colonial witness trees (GIS)

Overview

  • Lead: Brian Hall, Glenn Motzkin, John Burk
  • Investigators: Matthias Burgi, Charles Cogbill, Erin Largay
  • Contact: Information Manager
  • Start date: 1640
  • End date: 1999
  • Status: complete
  • Location: Southern New England, Long Island NY
  • Latitude: +40.5 to +42.9 degrees
  • Longitude: -73.8 to -69.9 degrees
  • Elevation:
  • Datum: WGS84
  • Taxa:
  • Release date: 2023
  • Language: English
  • EML file: knb-lter-hfr.87.20
  • DOI: digital object identifier
  • EDI: data package
  • DataONE: data package
  • Related links:
  • Study type: historical
  • Research topic: historical and retrospective studies; regional studies
  • LTER core area: disturbance patterns, land use and land cover change
  • Keywords: geographic information systems, history, land use, landscape, vegetation dynamics
  • Abstract:

    Early surveyors' witness-tree records from initial land divisions are often used to reconstruct the vegetation at the time of European settlement and before extensive Euro-American land use. The following description of methods comes from the published paper (Hall, B., G .Motzkin, D. R. Foster, M. Syfert and J. Burk. 2002. Three hundred years of forest and land-use change in Massachusetts, USA. Journal of Biogeography 29, 1319-1335):

    "Following methods described more fully in Cogbill et al. (2002), we used early surveyors' tree records from initial land divisions in each town to reconstruct the vegetation at the time of European settlement and before extensive Euro-American land use. All available original 17th - early 19th century survey records located at the state archives and individual town halls were examined and colloquial or common names of marker trees were noted... With few exceptions, only surveys that occurred within 80 years of town settlement were gathered in order to limit the potential influence of European land use on species composition."

  • Methods:

    Tabular Data

    The data file contains information collected from town offices, state archives, and state libraries. Witness trees are listed using 17th-19th century colloquial names. Note that towns with more than one type of data (see below) may have more than one row of data.

    GIS Data

    Data are provided as an ArcView point shapefile (town centroids) in latitude/longitude, NAD 1927 datum. The values in the table are the percent of total trees for each taxa (number of individuals in a taxa divided by the total number of trees).

    Variables:

    Code = Definition. Town = town name. N_trees = number of witness trees. Acer = % maples. Betula = % birches. Carya = % hickories. Casden = % chestnut (Castanea dentata). Cedar = % trees listed as “cedar”. Faggra = % beech (Fagus grandifolia). Fraxinus = % ash. Jugcin = % butternut (Juglans cinerea). Larlar = % tamarack (Larix laricina). Nyssly = % black gum (Nyssa sylvatica). Pinus = % pine. Populus = % poplar. Prunus = % cherry. Quercus = % oak. Sasalb = % sassafras (Sassafras albidum). Tilame = % basswood (Tilia americana). Tsucan = % hemlock (Tsuga canadensis). Ulmus = % elm. Other = % others. Picea = % spruce.

  • Organization: Harvard Forest. 324 North Main Street, Petersham, MA 01366, USA. Phone (978) 724-3302. Fax (978) 724-3595.

  • Project: The Harvard Forest Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) program examines ecological dynamics in the New England region resulting from natural disturbances, environmental change, and human impacts. (ROR).

  • Funding: National Science Foundation LTER grants: DEB-8811764, DEB-9411975, DEB-0080592, DEB-0620443, DEB-1237491, DEB-1832210.

  • Use: This dataset is released to the public under Creative Commons CC0 1.0 (No Rights Reserved). Please keep the dataset creators informed of any plans to use the dataset. Consultation with the original investigators is strongly encouraged. Publications and data products that make use of the dataset should include proper acknowledgement.

  • License: Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal (CC0-1.0)

  • Citation: Hall B, Motzkin G, Burk J. 2023. Witness Tree Data in Southern New England and Long Island 1640-1999. Harvard Forest Data Archive: HF087 (v.20). Environmental Data Initiative: https://doi.org/10.6073/pasta/944199f2497a20ff7ca1346509e7d2f4.

Detailed Metadata

hf087-01: tabular data

  1. state: state
  2. town: town
  3. location.county: county or other description of location
  4. lat: latitude of the town’s centroid (geographic projection, NAD27) (unit: degree / missing value: NA)
  5. long: longitude of the town’s centroid (geographic projection, NAD27) (unit: degree / missing value: NA)
  6. source: location of the data source
  7. type: type of survey record. It has been shown that different types of surveys may have different proportions of species (see: Burgi, M., Russell, E.W.B., 2000. Evaluating accuracy of two types of early land survey records in the northeastern Unites States. Jounal of the Torrey Botanical Society 127, 94-98).
  8. dates: dates of the data recorded
  9. surveyor: name of surveyor, only recorded for a few towns
  10. settlement: approximate year of European-American settlement
  11. notes: any relevant notes
  12. ntrees: total number of individual trees recorded (unit: number / missing value: NA)
  13. tree: tree species
  14. count: number recorded (unit: number / missing value: NA)

hf087-02: zip file contains an ArcView point shapefile for colonial witness trees (GIS)

  • Compression: zip
  • Format: Esri shapefile
  • Type: vector GIS