- July 1, 2022
Thanks to the hard work of over 50 Willamette students we’ve made great progress in the Oak Salvage Lab this year. We have collected over 249 samples from 92 community members, counted 17,168 tree rings and found the oldest tree in our collection lived nearby in Bush’s Pasture Park. We are currently working on measuring ring widths, creating tree ring chronologies, and updating our interactive map with information about the samples we’ve collected.
Our research is part of an exhibit, celebrating Oregon white oak, Bush’s Pasture Park’s Oregon White Oak Legacy at the Salem Art Association’s Bush Barn Art Center in Salem from July 1st - August 27th.
- April 5, 2022
Five undergraduate Willamette students are working in the Oak Salvage Lab during the spring semester. Leila Fischer, April Holland, Grace Shiffrin, Blake Carlile, and Sarah Menke have been working on various parts of sample processing including sanding, scanning, measuring, and categorizing the hundreds of cross sections we’ve collected.
If you are interested in hearing more from the students and learning about the project, please join us for our Student Scholarship Recognition Day on April 13, 2022 at 2pm. We will be holding a quick lecture in Collins Hall (Room 218) and having an open lab session where members of the public can view the samples, equipment, and ask questions in a more informal setting until 4pm.
- October 4, 2021
Now that the fall semester has begun, there are several classes in the Environmental Science/Biology departments that are actively supporting this project.
Dendrochronology: Prof. Karen Arabas, Environmental Science
Students are using cookies from Bush Park oaks to learn basic dendrochronology skills such as cross-dating and chronology building. The class will focus on using growth patterns identified in the tree rings to explore how external factors such as climate and local factors such as irrigation and urban development are reflected in tree growth.Oak Salvage Oral Histories: Prof. Karen Arabas, Environmental Science
While the dendrochronology class takes a more analytical perspective on the project, the Oral Histories class is examining the cultural significance of Oregon White Oaks to the people of the Willamette Valley. Students in the class are designing and implementing an Oral History project that will collect and archive the many stories our community members have to tell about oak trees, including their significance and importance.Forest Management & Policy: Prof. Joe Bowersox, Environmental Science
Students are using Oak Salvage project samples from Bush Park and other Willamette Valley sites to study ecosystem services and forest health. They will examine other factors such as carbon sequestration and climate that affected these trees and may have caused them to be more vulnerable during the ice storm. In contrast to the dendrochronology class, the students will be using information from individuals to make conclusions about larger-scale forest health. - September 20, 2021
We spent the summer collecting, labeling, logging, drying, reducing, and mounting the samples (cookies) so many of you have donated to the project, and we now have 211 officially in the database. We estimate that there are still another 40-50 cookies out there that we need to pick up - thanks for your patience if you are one of the folks waiting for us! We are still accepting samples from the Willamette Valley, so if you are interested please check out the ‘Contribute to this Project’ link on our website; we would be happy to have your oak cookie as part of this project!
Here are some photos of our process. drying in the lab (see photo!) we are testing several different ways to prepare them for analysis. This involves sanding and/or planing the cookie surface so that it can be photographed.
- May 28, 2021: Cookie Processing
We continue to collect, label, log, and dry all the samples (cookies) so many of you have contacted us about, and we now have 128 officially in the database. We estimate that there are still another 40-50 cookies out there that we need to pick up - thanks for your patience if you are one of the folks waiting for us!
As the cookies are drying in the lab (see photo!) we are testing several different ways to prepare them for analysis. This involves sanding and/or planing the cookie surface so that it can be photographed. We plan to use high-resolution digital images of the cookies in a web-based system to count and measure rings.
- April 2nd, 2021: The Oak Salvage Project is underway!
Professors Karen Arabas, Dave Craig, and Joe Bowersox are working with 6-8 students from Environmental Science and Biology to get the project off the ground. Since the ice storm in February, we have collected over 100 samples of Oregon White Oak from the Salem area and Willamette Valley. Currently, we are in the process of identifying, labeling and logging all of our samples. The samples need time to dry and will be prepared for analysis over the summer and students will begin analysis in the fall. Please check back for updates on our progress.
We are still accepting samples from the Willamette Valley, so if you are interested please check out the Contribute to this Project page on our website; we would be happy to have your oak cookie as part of this project!