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How the Woolly Devil, Member of a New Plant Genus, Was Discovered on a Hike in Big Bend

How the Woolly Devil, Member of a New Plant Genus, Was Discovered on a Hike in Big Bend

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Dylan Thuras: Hey, everybody. It is the first week of June. It means Memorial Day is behind us. I think that means it is truly, for real, it is summer. Summer is here. For many of us in the U.S., myself included, summer is the season of the national park.

National parks in America are in some ways a relatively new idea. The oldest national park, Yellowstone, was protected only in 1872. And the larger national park system only started in 1916, making it 109 years old. There are people alive today older than the national park system.

But what made this experiment so profound is that this idea of creating spaces of permanent wild beauty, of celebrating the American landscape, it brought together this coalition across enormous divides. Hunters, fishermen, conservationists, but also poets, philosophers, naturalists, all of them saw the value of both protecting the most beautiful and most unusual natural landscapes across the country—but maybe more importantly, of making them accessible to everyone to go and revel in the awe and wonder and beauty of the natural environment.