www.outdoors.chicago.il.us >> The Unofficial Cook County Forest Preserve District Page >>

Fire and ice created the landscape of Swallow Cliff Woods. The glaciers retreated north about 12,000 years ago, leaving behind a varied landscape of morainal hills and pothole lakes and marshes. Meltwater from the ice scoured out the Sag Valley whose steep southern wall forms the Swallow "Cliffs".
The fires started sometime after the ice left. Some fires were started by lightning, some by Native Americans who used fire to drive animals in the hunt and to improve forage for big grazing animals like bison and elk.
Driven by the wind and shaped by the terrain, fires swept into Swallow Cliff from the southwest. On level land like the southern end of Swallow Cliff Woods, grass fires would burn with ferocious intensity. Trees and shrubs had a difficult time invading the resulting lush prairies. Where streams had cut valleys into the landscape, the steep slopes formed obstacles to the fires. Less intense ground fires permitted other plant communities, including a variety of woodlands, to develop and flourish.
Swallow Cliff Woods became a landscape shaped by fire. From south to north, the flowery meadows of the tall grass prairies gave way to sunny groves of white and bur oak, then to denser woodlands of red oak. In the cool, moist ravines, forests of sugar maple and basswood flourished. The wetlands hosted marsh plants and sedge meadows. Each of these natural plant communities supported its own distinctive group of animals.
Many Native Americans used Swallow Cliff Woods seasonally for hunting and gathering, and as a place to take shelter from the long winters. More recently, settlers took timber from the woodlands and hay from the prairies. They hunted here, and grazed cattle on the native grasses.
In recent decades, the natural biodiversity of Swallow Cliff Woods has been threatened by the suppression of fire and by the invasion of exotic plants, especially shrubs such as buckthorn and smooth arrow-wood. These shrubs form dense thickets, whose deep shade prevents native plants from reproducing. Eventually, even the oaks will be lost because the brush prevents the growth of new generations of trees.
Restoration at Swallow Cliff Woods is helping to reestablish the ecological forces that created the natural biodiversity. By removing invading exotics, reintroducing native plants, and bringing back fire, the beauty and variety of our native landscape will be enjoyed by future generations.
The Swallow Cliff Woods restoration project is the largest ever undertaken by the Forest Preserve District in some 30 years of restoration work. It is a cooperative project whose partners include the USDA Forest Service, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, The Nature Conservancy, and the USDI Fish and Wildlife Service.
Enjoy a pleasant walk along the loop trail shown on the map and use this brochure to help interpret what you see along the way. The numbers in the descriptions that follow are keyed to the numbers on the map. Start your walk by following the trail immediately across the drive from the small stone shelter. The total walking time on this easy trail is less than an hour. Please stay on the main trails, since traffic on small side trails creates serious erosion problems.
Forest Preserve District of Cook County
536 N. Harlem Ave., River Forest, IL 60305
312-261-8400 708-366-9420
1-800-870-3666 TDD# 708-771-1190
Board of Forest Preserve Commissioners
The Forest Preserve District of Cook County does not discriminate on the basis of disability in admission or access to, or treatment or employment in District programs and services.
Persons believing they have been discriminated against on the basis of color, race, national origin, sex, or disabilty. may file a complaint alleging discrimination with either the Forest Preserve District of Cook County or the Office of Equal Opportunity, U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Washington, D.C.
This page is based on a publication of the Forest Preserve District of Cook County, Illinois, adapted for the web as a public service by CLONK. This web site is unofficial, and not associated in any way with the Forest Preserve District of Cook County. CLONK is not responsible for any errors, either in the original publication or in this web version. The information presented here follows the original Forest Preserve District publication as closely as possible, with minor variations such as choice of typeface and added web links. CLONK cautions that items such as names of public servants and telephone numbers are subject to change! This web version was completed Spring, 2000.
Back to Clonk's home page
Back to Clonk's Cook County Forest Preserve Page