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What makes the Great Smoky Mountains smoky?

Makinig/Video/VOX/What makes the Great Smoky Mountains smoky?

What makes the Great Smoky Mountains smoky?

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0:00The US is home to 63 stunning national parks. But  the most visited one, the Great Smoky Mountains.  
0:06The Smokies are amazing, particularly because of  their beautiful landscapes and biodiversity.  
0:11I particularly love "Smoky streams,"  which are these cascading, tumbling,  
0:15beautiful bits of water. We get a lot of  folks who come here for the leaf season,  
0:21but the colors are vibrant all year round, and  we're so fortunate to be in this beautiful  
0:27place. These mountains are widely called  shaconage, which is a Cherokee word meaning  
0:32blue. People often embellish the translation to  say the land of blue smoke or the place of blue  
0:38smoke. There's a Dolly Parton song that's  famous that uses that word. But what gives  
0:44these mountains their iconic blue hazy effect? And  what is their significance to the Cherokee people?
0:54The Smoky Mountains are located on the borders  of Tennessee and North Carolina. In 1926,  
0:59President Calvin Coolidge signed a bill authorizing  the creation of the Great Smoky Mountains National  
1:05Park. It's over 500,000 acres and home to over  20,000 documented species. The Smokies' location  
1:11and landscape contribute to its temperate climate.  My name is Stephanie Kyriazis and I'm the chief of  
1:16resource education here at Great Smoky Mountains  National Park. I think the landscape is much  
1:21more dramatic in person. You get on some of the  ridges or some of the overlooks and there's just  
1:26layer after layer of mountains that  you can see. This helps to create the weather  
1:31pattern called orographic precipitation or relief  rainfall. It's a temperate rainforest. We do get  
1:37a significant amount of precipitation the  difference from the rainforest you may think  
1:41about. It's not as warm and humid, but we do  get a significant amount of rain in the Smokies.  
1:46Warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico is forced  up by the mountains. As the air rises, it cools,  
1:52causing the water vapor to condense into water  droplets and forming clouds. And when the clouds  
1:57grow larger and can no longer hold the condensed  water, rainfall occurs. This rainfall is part of  
2:02the reason why the Smokies appear smoky. But the  direct cause of this blue smoke is something a  
2:09little more green. Smokies are also smoky because  all of that vegetation does sort of release a kind  
2:15of a gas that that leads to a little bit of haze  under some conditions. This gas is known as  
2:21VOC's, volatile organic compounds. The trees and  vegetation expelling water vapor are part of what  
2:28creates this haze. You can think of it as the  forest breathing. The molecules from this haze  
2:33scatter light from the sky, making a blueish  hue. The Great Smoky Mountains, lush forest,  
2:38and natural resources made it the perfect place  for new settlers to begin their lives in the  
2:43Americas. But as you can imagine, they were not  the first people to be enchanted by the Smokies.  
2:49So, I don't know if you can tell by the video yet,  but the Great Smoky Mountains are more than just a  
2:54place you read about. It's something you have to  experience for yourself. From the acres of misty  
2:59forest to the tiniest of critters, the Smokies  are truly alive. And that sense of wonder and  
3:05adventure doesn't have to stop there. Beyond  the Blue Ridge Mountains where the Smokies are  
3:09in North Carolina, you'll find quiet towns,  museums like the Museum of Cherokee people,  
3:14beautiful hiking trails, and restaurants that  feel distinctly North Carolina. There's really  
3:19a little bit of something for everyone there.  So, for real, visit North Carolina. And now,  
3:25let's get back to the video because  there is so much more I want you to see.
3:33My name is Shana Bushyhead Condill. I'm a citizen  of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians and I'm  
3:38honored to serve as the executive director of the  Museum of the Cherokee People. As Cherokee people,  
3:44we know that we are of this place. And when  we say that, what we're saying is that since  
3:50time immemorial, we know that we have been  here. The Smoky Mountains are in the heart  
3:55of historic Cherokee homeland, and their presence  in this region dates back thousands of years. The  
4:01Cherokees' territory covered much of what we know  today as West Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia, North  
4:07Carolina, Tennessee, South Carolina, Georgia, and  Alabama, which means that by the time Europeans  
4:13reached the Smokies in the 1500s, Cherokee  settlements were already established throughout  
4:18the region. There were townships that span that  whole ancestral territory. And there would have  
4:24been areas and land that would have been more  contested or even shared with other tribes for  
4:32like hunting and that kind of a thing. But with  the arrival of European settlers came smallpox,  
4:37raids, and destruction of Cherokee villages, and  forced displacement of native people from their  
4:42homes. The US government passed the Indian Removal  Act of 1830, which in time led to ethnic cleansing  
4:49and displacement of nearly 100,000 native people.  This decade of massacre and capture is known as  
4:56the Trail of Tears. Several hundred Cherokee  people hid in the Smoky Mountains to evade  
5:01their captors. Some were able to use the law  to reacquire their lands, and others managed to  
5:07return after the forced removal. Today, their  descendants are known as the Eastern Band of  
5:12Cherokee Indians. The story of how we came to be  the Eastern Band and how we came to be in this  
5:19place is a story that started immediately after  removal in 1838 and continues today. We are still  
5:26working to acquire land back. We all hold  ties to this place. So, we have generation upon  
5:33generation of folks who also call these mountains  home. Today, the Cherokee people are continuing  
5:38to advocate for the restoration of their history  in the Smokies and other parts of the US. One of  
5:44the big wins in recent memory about a year ago  now is that the highest peak in the Great Smoky  
5:50Mountains was named after a Confederate  general. And we had two Cherokee women who  
5:57worked tirelessly to get the name restored back to  Kuwohi, which is our name for that sacred space.  
6:05The Great Smoky Mountains are not just one of the  most magical national parks you can visit in the  
6:10US, they're also a testament to the enduring  link between land and identity. It's home to  
6:16an abundance of biodiversity and remains a place  where terrain served as protection for indigenous  
6:21people. But preservation of this land is an  active endeavor. So when a lot of people come  
6:27to the Smokies, they see this beautiful forested  landscape and imagine that it's been that way  
6:31forever. However, in the late 19th and early  20th century, the park was almost completely  
6:37clear-cut by logging companies that were working  in the mountains. It really took the last hundred  
6:42years for that forest to recover. And so today,  you know, most people think of the the Smokies as  
6:48a very forested landscape, but there are really  only a handful of patches where we have true old  
6:53growth trees that still remain. For a forest  biologist, our landscape will still look  
6:59like it's in its adolescence, maybe. Most people  when they come to the Smokies can't tell that it  
7:03ever was a practically barren landscape. Coupled  with pollution and the effects of climate change,  
7:09there's still plenty to be done to look after  this treasure in southern Appalachia. To come  
7:15and actually experience these mountains  and these views and the expanses, I mean,  
7:21I will always believe that it is the most  beautiful place I've ever seen in the world.