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Alibates
Flint Quarries National Monument
c/o Lake Meredith
National Recreation Area
P.O. Box 1460
Fritch, Texas 79036
(806) 857-3151
www.nps.gov/alfl
For thousands
of years, people came to the red bluffs above the Canadian River. They
came for flint, vital to their existence. Demand for the high quality,
rainbow-hued flint is reflected in the distribution of Alibates Flint
through the Great Plains and beyond. Native Americans roamed the Plains
hunting large animals such as mammoth, bison, camel, and horses. Perhaps
these people sought the variegated flint as much for its beauty as its
utilitarian properties. Today, Alibates is the only national monument
in Texas and preserves over 550 archeological sites. The monument can
only be viewed by ranger-led guided tours.
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Amistad
National Recreation Area
HCR 3, Box 5J
Del Rio, Texas 78840
(830) 775-7491
www.nps.gov/amis
Amistad National Recreation
Area is located on the Unites States side of Lake Amistad, an international
reservoir straddling the U.S.-Mexican border. Amistad Dam, finished in
1969, backs water up the Rio Grande and the Pecos and Devils Rivers, creating
a lake of outstanding clarity with an 850-mile shoreline. Boating, fishing,
and camping are popular activities. The recreation area also protects
prehistoric Native American pictographs and other archeological sites.
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Big
Bend National Park
P.O. Box 129
Big Bend, Texas 79834
(915) 477-2251
www.nps.gov/bibe
Few national parks can match
the scenic variety of Big bend. A land graced with desert, mountain, and
river environments makes for a study in contrasts among the park's three
ecological zones. The Chihuahuan Desert, with its vastness and stark beauty,
is joined by the abrupt canyons of the Rio Grande and the forested peaks
of the Chisos Mountains. Here you may encounter black bears, mountain
lions, or roadrunners while enjoying a true wilderness experience.
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Big
Thicket National Preserve
3785 Milan Street
Beaumont, TX 77701
(409) 246-2337
www.nps.gov/bith
Big Thicket National Preserve
shelters remnants of the unique Big Thicket of Texas, protecting rare
endangered species and habitats. This unusual assemblage of animals and
plants includes mixed hardwood-pine forest, savannah, flatland palmetto
hardwoods, and floodplain forests-baygall-cypress sloughs. Species of
note are the hairy woodpecker, red-cockaded woodpecker, American swallow-tailed
Kite, black buffalo fish, paddlefish, speckled king snake, the marbled
salamander, and four of the five known carnivorous plants of North America.
Designated an International Biosphere Reserve by the United Nations Educational,
Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in 1981, the preserve is
one of 47 United States Man and the Biosphere Reserves.
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Chamizal
National Memorial
800 South San Marcial Street
El Paso, Texas 79905
(915) 532-7273
www.nps.gov/cham
Chamizal is a memorial to international
cooperation and goodwill commemorating the 1963 treaty settlement of a
century-long boundary dispute between the United States and Mexico. The
memorial includes the Los Paisanos Art Gallery and features a variety
of year-round multicultural programs in its 500-seat indoor theatre and
outdoor amphitheatre. The two mile-long Cordova Island Trail provides
access to the memorial's 55 acres and views of the Bridge of the Americas.
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Fort
Davis National Historic Site
P.O. Box 1456
Fort Davis, Texas 79734
(915) 426-3224
www.nps.gov/foda
A key link in the West Texas
defense system, Fort Davis is one of the best remaining examples of a
Southwestern fort. The post protected travelers on the San Antonio-El
Paso Road. African American soldiers, known as buffalo soldiers, were
posted here from 1867-1885, distinguishing themselves in confrontations
with Apaches and Comanches. Henry O. Flipper, the first black graduate
of West Point, served here in the early 1880s.
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Guadalupe
Mountains National Park
HC 60, Box 400
Salt Flat, TX 79847
(915) 828-3251
www.nps.gov/gumo
Geological marvels, the Guadalupe
Mountains draw visitors from around the world to see one of the finest
examples of an ancient marine fossil reef that formed about 265 million
years ago when an immense tropical ocean covered parts of Texas and New
Mexico. Now a mountain mass of Permian limestone rises majestically from
the surrounding desert. Special points of interest are McKittrick Canyon,
a fragile riparian environment and Guadalupe Peak - Texas' highest.
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Lake
Meredith National Recreation Area
P.O. Box 1460
Fritch, Texas 79036
(806) 857- 3151
www.nps.gov/lamr
Contrasting spectacularly with
its surroundings, Lake Meredith lies on the dry, windswept High Plains
of the Texas Panhandle in a region known as the Llano Estacado, or Staked
Plain. The Canadian River has cut and re-cut 200-foot canyons called breaks.
Sanford Dam created Lake Meredith on the Canadian River and now fills
many of the breaks whose walls are crowned with white dolomite caprock,
scenic buttes, pinnacles and red-brown, wind eroded coves. The 50,000-acre
recreation area includes a 10,000-acre reservoir where those who enjoy
the water can enjoy a remarkable day or an entire vacation.
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Lyndon
B. Johnson National Historical Park
P.O. Box 329
Johnson City, Texas 78636
(830) 868-7128
www.nps.gov/lyjo
In the heart of the Texas Hill
Country, our 36th president was born, reared, and died. Perhaps no other
president is more closely identified with one parcel of real estate -
including his birthplace, boyhood home, and ranch - as well as his ancestors'
pioneer settlement. In this "home place," the values and world
view of The Rancher President were formed, later to manifest themselves
in political arenas during 37 years of public service.
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Padre
Island National Seashore
P.O. Box 181300
Corpus Christi, Texas 78480
(361) 949-8068
www.nps.gov/pais
One of ten national seashores,
Padre Island is noted for its abundant bird and marine life, excellent
fishing, world-class windsurfing, and wide sandy beaches. This barrier
island embraces the Laguna Madre, a fertile nursery for saltwater fish,
and 65.5 miles of Gulf coastline including windswept dunes, wild landscapes
of coastal prairie grasslands, teeming tidal flats, and warm offshore
waters. It is both a place to experience nature at its best and a place
to relax and enjoy the peace and solitude of this natural playground.
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Palo
Alto Battlefield National Historic Site
1623 Central Boulevard, #213
Brownsville, Texas 78520
www.nps.gov/paal
The first major battle of the
U.S.-Mexican Was (1846-1848) was fought here on may 8, 1846. Despite the
Mexican advantage in numbers, United States artillery would make a difference
during the battle. The national historic site portrays the causes and
consequences of this battle and the entire war from the perspective of
both the United States and Mexico.
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Rio
Grande Wild and Scenic River
c/o Big Bend national Park
P.O. Box 129
Big Bend, Texas 79834
(915) 477-2251
www.nps.gov/rigr
Recognized as an international
boundary with Mexico, the Rio Grande Wild and Scenic River was designated
in 1978 doe its rugged canyons, fish and wildlife habitats, and Chihuahuan
Desert scenery. Extending for 69 miles along Big Bend National Park and
127 miles downstream, the river also offers unparalleled opportunities
for solitude and self-reliance, especially in its remote lower canyons.
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San
Antonio Missions National Historical Park
2202 Roosevelt Avenue
San Antonio, TX 78210
(210) 932-1001
www.nps.gov/saan
Four of the original six Spanish
colonial missions built along the San Antonio River make up the park.
The missions continue to be used as places of worship by parishioners
and can be toured daily by park visitors. Learning about the craftsmanship
of the architecture, the extensive acequia system (irrigation canals)
and the grist mill built in the 18th century take visitors beyond the
religious aspects and into the past life styles of the people who built
and lived in these missions. The visitor center at Mission San José
has museum exhibits and an all-encompassing film about the establishment
of the missions.
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