� Proclamation 7295-Establishment of the Giant Sequoia National
Monument
� April 15, 2000
� By the President of the United States of America
� A Proclamation
� The rich and varied landscape of the Giant Sequoia National
Monument holds a diverse array of scientific and historic resources.
Magnificent groves of towering giant sequoias, the world's largest
trees, are interspersed within a great belt of coniferous forest,
jeweled with mountain meadows. Bold granitic domes, spires, and
plunging gorges texture the landscape. The area's elevation climbs
from about 2,500 to 9,700 feet over a distance of only a few miles,
capturing an extraordinary number of habitats within a relatively
small area. This spectrum of ecosystems is home to a diverse array
of plants and animals, many of which are rare or endemic to the
southern Sierra Nevada. The monument embraces limestone caverns and
holds unique paleontological resources documenting tens of thousands
of years of ecosystem change. The monument also has many
archaeological sites recording Native American occupation and
adaptations to this complex landscape, and historic remnants of
early Euroamerican settlement as well as the commercial exploitation
of the giant sequoias. The monument provides exemplary opportunities
for biologists, geologists, paleontologists, archaeologists, and
historians to study these objects.
� Ancestral forms of giant sequoia were a part of the western North
American landscape for millions of years. Giant sequoias are the
largest trees ever to have live, and are among the world's
longest-lived trees, reaching ages of more than 3,200 years or more.
Because of this great longevity, giant sequoias hold within their
tree rings multimillennial records of past environmental changes
such as climate, fire regimes, and consequent forest response. Only
one other North American tree species, the high-elevation
bristlecone pine of the desert mountain ranges east of the Sierra
Nevada, holds such lengthy and detailed chronologies of past changes
and events.
� Sequoias and their surrounding ecosystems provide a context for
understanding ongoing environmental changes. For example, a century
of fire suppression has led to an unprecedented failure in sequoia
reproduction in otherwise undisturbed groves. Climatic change also
has influenced the sequoia groves; their present highly disjunct
distribution is at least partly due to generally higher summertime
temperatures and prolonged summer droughts in California from about
10,000 to 4,500 years ago. During that period, sequoias were rarer
than today. Only following a slight cooling and shortening of summer
droughts, about 4,500 years ago, has the sequoia been able to spread
and create today's groves.
� These giant sequoia groves and the surrounding forest provide an
excellent opportunity to understand the consequences of dif ferent
approaches to forest restoration. These forests need restoration to
counteract the effects of a century of fire suppression and logging.
Fire suppression has caused forests to become denser in many areas,
with increased dominance of shade-tolerant species. Woody debris has
accumulated, causing an unprecedented buildup of surface fuels. One
of the most immediate consequences of these changes is an increased
hazard of wildfires of a severity that was rarely encountered in
pre-Euroamerican times. Outstanding opportunities exist for studying
the consequences of different approaches to mitigating these
conditions and restoring natural forest resilience.
� The great elevational range of the monument embraces a number of
climatic zones, providing habitats for an extraordinary diversity of
plant species and communities. The monument is rich in rare plants
and is home to more than 200 plant species endemic to the southern
Sierra Nevada mountain range, arrayed in plant communities ranging
from low-elevation oak woodlands and chaparral to high-elevation
subalpine forest. Numerous meadows and streams provide an
interconnected web of habitats for moisture-loving species
� This spectrum of interconnected vegetation types provides essential
habitat for wildlife, ranging from large, charismatic animals to
less visible and less familiar forms of life, such as fungi and
insects. The mid-elevation forests are dominated by massive conifers
arrayed in a complex landscape mosaic, providing one of the last
refugia for the Pacific fisher in California. The fisher appears to
have been extirpated from the northern Sierra Nevada mountain range.
The forests of the monument are also home to great gray owl,
American marten, northern goshawk, peregrine falcon, spotted owl,
and a number of rare amphibians. The giant sequoias themselves are
the only known trees large enough to provide nesting cavities for
the California condor, which otherwise must nest on cliff faces. In
fact, the last pair of condors breeding in the wild was discovered
in a giant sequoia that is part of the new monument. The monument's
giant sequoia ecosystem remains available for the return and study
of condors.
� The physiography and geology of the monument have been shaped by
millions of years of intensive uplift, erosion, volcanism, and
glaciation. The monument is dominated by granitic rocks, most
noticeable as domes and spires in areas such as the Needles. The
magnificent Kern Canyon forms the eastern boundary of the monument's
southern unit. The canyon follows an ancient fault, forming the only
major north-south river drainage in the Sierra Nevada. Remnants of
volcanism are expressed as hot springs and soda springs in some
drainages.
� Particularly in the northern unit of the monument, limestone
outcrops, remnants of an ancient seabed, are noted for their caves.
Subfossil vegetation entombed within ancient woodrat middens in
these caves has provided the only direct evidence of where giant
sequoias grew during the Pleistocene Era, and documents substantial
vegetation changes over the last 50,000 or more years. Vertebrate
fossils also have been found within the middens. Other
paleontological resources are found in meadow sediments, which hold
detailed records of the last 10 millennia of changing vegetation,
fire regimes, and volcanism in the Sierra Nevada. The
multi-millennial, annual- and seasonalresolution records of past
fire regimes held in giant sequoia tree-rings are unique worldwide.
� During the past 8,000 years, Native American peoples of the Sierra
Nevada have lived by hunting and fishing, gathering, and trading
with other people throughout the region. Archaeological sites such
as lithic scatters, food-processing sites, rock shelters, village
sites, petroglyphs, and pictographs are found in the monument. These
sites have the potential to shed light on the roles of prehistoric
peoples, including the role they played in shaping the ecosystems on
which they depended.
� One of the earliest recorded references to giant sequoias is found
in the notes of the Walker Expedition of 1833, which described
"trees of the redwood species, incredibly large . . , ." The world
became aware of giant sequoias when sections of the massive trees
were transported east and displayed as curiosities for eastern
audiences. Logging of giant sequoias throughout the Sierra Nevada
mountain range began in 1856. Logging has continued intermittently
to this day on nonfederal lands within the area of the monument.
Early entrepreneurs, seeing profit in the gigantic trees, began
acquiring lands within the present monument under the Timber and
Stone Act in the 1880s. Today our understanding of the history of
the Hume Lake and Converse Basin areas of the monument is supported
by a treasure trove of historical photographs and other
documentation. These records provide a unique and unusually clear
picture of more than half a century of logging that resulted in the
virtual removal of most forest in some areas of the monument.
Outstanding opportunities exist for studying forest resilience to
largescale logging and the consequences of different approaches to
forest restoration.
� Section 2 of the Act of June 8, 1906 (34 Stat. 225, 16 U.S.C. 431)
authorizes the President, in his discretion, to declare by public
proclamation historic landmarks, historic and prehistoric
structures, and other objects of historic or scientific interest
that are situated upon lands owned or controlled by the Government
of the United States to be national monuments, and to reserve as a
part thereof parcels of land, the limits of which in all cases,
shall be confined to the smallest area compatible with the proper
care and management of the objects to be protected.
� Whereas it appears that it would be in the public interest to
reserve such lands as a national monument to be known as the Giant
Sequoia National Monument:
� Now, Therefore, I, William J. Clinton, President of the United
States of America, by the authority vested in me by section 2 of the
Act of June 8, 1906 (34 Stat. 225, 16 U.S.C. 431), do proclaim that
there are hereby set apart and reserved as the Giant Sequoia
National Monument, for the purpose of protecting the objects
identified in the above preceding paragraphs, all lands and
interests in lands owned or controlled by the United States within
the boundaries of the area described on the map entitled "Proposed
Giant Sequoia National Monument" attached to and forming a part of
this proclamation. The Federal land and interests in land reserved
consist of approximately 327,769 acres, which is the smallest area
compatible with the proper care and management of the objects to be
protected as identified in the above preceding paragraphs.
� All Federal lands and interests in lands within the boundaries of
this monument are hereby appropriated and withdrawn from entry,
location, selection, sale, leasing, or other disposition under the
public land laws including, but not limited to, withdrawal from
locating, entry, and patent under the mining laws and from
disposition under all laws relating to mineral and geothermal
leasing, other than by exchange that furthers the protective
purposes of the monument. Lands and interests in lands within the
boundaries of the monument not owned by the United States shall be
reserved as a part of the monument upon acquisition of title thereto
by the United States.
� The establishment of this monument is subject to valid existing
rights.
� Timber sales under contract as of the date of the proclamation and
timber sales with a decision notice signed after January 1, 1999,
but prior to December 31, 1999, may be completed consistent with the
terms of the decision notice and contract. No portion of the
monument shall be considered to be suited for timber production, and
no part of the monument shall be used in a calculation or provision
of a sustained yield of timber from the Sequoia National Forest.
Removal of trees, except for personal use fuel wood, from within the
monument area may take place only if clearly needed for ecological
restoration and maintenance or public safety.
� The Secretary of Agriculture shall manage the monument, along with
the underlying Forest, through the Forest Service, pursuant to
applicable legal authorities, to implement the purposes and
provisions of this proclamation. The Secretary of Agriculture shall
prepare, within 3 years of this date, a management plan for this
monument, and shall promulgate such regulations for its management
as deemed appropriate. The plan will provide for and encourage
continued public and recreational access and use consistent with the
purposes of the monument.
� Unique scientific and ecological issues are involved in management
of giant sequoia groves, including groves located in nearby and
adjacent lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management and the
National Park Service. The Secretary, in consultation with the
National Academy of Sciences, shall appoint a Scientific Advisory
Board to provide scientific guidance during the development of the
initial management plan. Board membership shall represent a range of
scientific disciplines pertaining to the objects to be protected,
including, but not necessarily limited to, the physical, biological,
and social sciences.
� The Secretary, through the Forest Service, shall, in developing any
management plans and any management rules and regulations governing
the monument, consult with the Secretary of the Interior, through
the Bureau of Land Management and the National Park Service. The
final decision to issue any management plans and any management
rules and regulations rests with the Secretary of Agriculture.
Management plans or rules and regulations developed by the Secretary
of the Interior governing uses within national parks or other
national monuments administered by the Secretary of the Interior
shall not apply within the Giant Sequoia National Monument.
� The management plan shall contain a transportation plan for the
monument that provides for visitor enjoyment and understanding about
the scientific and historic objects in the monument, consistent with
their protection. For the purposes of protecting the objects
included in the monument, motorized vehicle use will be permitted
only on designated roads, and nonmotorized mechanized vehicle use
will be permitted only on designated roads and trails, except for
emergency or authorized administrative purposes or to provide access
for persons with disabilities. No new roads or trails will be
authorized within the monument except to further the purposes of the
monument. Prior to the issuance of the management plan, existing
roads and trails may be closed or altered to protect the objects of
interest in the monument, and motorized vehicle use will be
permitted on trails until but not after December 31, 2000.
� Nothing in this proclamation shall be deemed to diminish or enlarge
the jurisdiction of the State of California with respect to fish and
wildlife management.
� There is hereby reserved, as of the date of this proclamation and
subject to valid existing rights, a quantity of water sufficient to
fulfill the purposes for which this monument is established. Nothing
in this reservation shall be construed as a relinquishment or
reduction of any water use or rights reserved or appropriated by the
United States on or before the date of this proclamation.
� Laws, regulations, and policies pertaining to administration by the
Department of Agriculture of grazing permits and timber sales under
contract as of the date of this proclamation on National Forest
System lands within the boundaries of the monument shall continue to
apply to lands within the monument.
� Nothing in this proclamation shall be deemed to affect existing
special use authorizations; existing uses shall be governed by
applicable laws, regulations, and management plans.
� Nothing in this proclamation shall be deemed to revoke any existing
withdrawal, reservation, or appropriation; however, the national
monument shall be the dominant reservation.
� Warning is hereby given to all unauthorized persons not to
appropriate, injure, destroy, or remove any feature of this monument
and not to locate or settle upon any of the lands thereof.
� In Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand this fifteenth day
of April, in the year of our Lord two thousand, and of the
Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and
twenty-fourth.
� William J. Clinton