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Lost Maples State Natural Area

Lost Maples State Natural Area is a state park in the Edwards Plateau of Texas, United States.

Contents

Location

Lost Maples State Natural Area is located about 5 miles (8 km) north of Vanderpool, Texas and 71 miles (114 km) west of San Antonio. The park sits along the Sabinal River in western Bandera County and far eastern Real County.

History

The land for Lost Maples State Natural Area was acquired by the state of Texas in 1973 and 1974, and the park was opened to the public in 1979. In 1980, the Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service made the park a national natural landmark.

This area along the upper Sabinal River was inhabited in prehistoric times. The recorded history of the area, beginning with Spanish explorations in the 17th century, identified a number of Indian groups, including the Apache, Lipan Apache and Comanche.

Origin, bedrock, soils and vegetation

Evidence suggests that the maples that give the park its name are relicts: remnants of a larger, more widespread population that flourished during the cooler and wetter climate of the last ice age. Today, soils and microclimate control their present distribution.[1]

Much of the park's limestone bedrock is exposed on elevated terrain, which has a shallow, discontinuous cover of dark gray stony clay (Eckrant series). Most valley bottoms have deep, dark brown silty clay (Krum series) or clay loam (Pratley series). Deposits of gravel, sand, and loam (Orif-Boerne association) lie within a few hundred feet of the Sabinal River. All of these soils are well drained, have free calcium carbonate throughout their profiles, and are moderately alkaline. Among the trees are American Sycamore, Black Walnut, Pecan, Green Ash, Black Willow, Chinkapin Oak, Lacey Oak, Texas Red Oak, Juniper, Florida Basswood and Bigtooth Maple (the latter of which was discovered far removed from any maple forest, and thus gave the area the name "lost maples").[2] The maple colors well in some autumns; the Texas red oak gives an impressive autumn display almost every year. This park is most crowded when the fall colors peak in November.

Recreation

Lost Maples has been developed only enough to protect its resources while providing access to visitors. The 2,174-acre (880 ha) park contains 11 miles (18 km) of hiking trails, 30 campsites, and 8 primitive camping areas, some of which have outhouses. In the center of the park are the ponds, two small lakes along Can Creek.

References

  1. ^ http://www.npsot.org/Boerne/newsletters/BigtoothPOM.pdf
  2. ^ TPWD: Park of the Month

External links

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vdProtected Areas of Texas
Federal
National Parks Big BendGuadalupe Mountains
National Monuments and Memorials Alibates Flint Quarries National MonumentChamizal National Memorial
National Historical Parks and Historic Sites El Orcoquisac Archeological DistrictFort Davis National Historic SiteLyndon B. Johnson National Historical ParkPalo Alto Battlefield National Historical ParkSan Antonio Missions National Historical Park
National Historic Trails El Camino Real de los Tejas National Historic Trail
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National Wildlife Refuges AnahuacAransasAttwater Prairie ChickenBalcones CanyonlandsBig BoggyBrazoriaBuffalo LakeGrullaHagermanLaguna AtascosaLower Rio Grande ValleyMcFaddinMuleshoeSan BernardSanta AnaTexas PointTrinity River
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National Grasslands CaddoLyndon B. JohnsonMcClellan CreekRita Blanca
Other Protected Areas Big Thicket National PreservePadre Island National SeashoreRio Grande Wild and Scenic River
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State Forests E.O. Siecke • I.D. Fairchild • John Henry Kirby • Masterson • W. Goodrich Jones
State Wildlife Trails Great Texas CoastalHeart of TexasPanhandle PlainsPrairies and Pineywoods
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Categories: Texas geography stubs | Texas state parks | Bandera County, Texas | Real County, Texas | National Natural Landmarks in Texas

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