Caddo Lake State Park
Caddo Lake State Park.[1] is a state park located in east Texas. Caddo Lake, the lake that the state park encompasses, is one of only a handful of natural lakes in Texas.[2] The park consists of 8,253 acres (3,340 ha). The lake and surrounding area was drilled for petroleum in the 1900s.[3] The lake was created by a gigantic log jam known as the Great Raft.[4]
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History
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Natural Features
Caddo Lake [5][6] State Park is named for Caddo Lake, a sprawling maze of bayous and sloughs covering 26,810 acres (10,850 ha) acres of cypress swamp. The average depth of the lake is 8•10 ft (2.4•3.0 m), with the deep water in the bayou averaging about 20 ft (6.1 m). An angler's delight, the lake contains 71 species of fish. It is especially good for crappie, largemouth bass, and white bass. Naturalists can enjoy stately cypress trees, American lotus, water lilies, waterfowl, alligators, turtles, frogs, snakes, raccoons, mink, coypu, beavers, squirrels, armadillos, and white-tailed deer.
Cities on Caddo Lake
- Jefferson, Texas
- Karnack, Texas
- Mooringsport, Louisiana
- Oil City, Louisiana
- Swansons Landing, Texas
- Uncertain, Texas
Image gallery
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Channel in Caddo Lake |
Caddo Lake during winter. |
Entrance to Caddo Lake State Park. |
Caddopie.jpg |
| Water Meadow.jpg |
References
| This Texas state location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. v • d • |
Categories: Texas geography stubs | Texas state parks
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