Highway 24-18 Junction Orientation

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Highway 24-18 Junction Orientation

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The following press release was published by the U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service on March 10. It is reproduced in full below.

Quick Facts

Amenities

3 listed

Benches/Seating, Cellular Signal, Trailhead

Five trails of varying length and difficulty start at the Trailhead.

Waco Mammoth National Monument is a new park, but its environment dates back thousands of years before the 1978 discovery of the Columbian Mammoth nursery herd. Within the park’s 108 acres, visitors can catch a glimpse of a Texas Ice Age that was not very cold, a habitat for numerous species such as roadrunners and raccoons, and a river that was used by Columbian mammoths, saber-toothed cats, and camels for thousands of years. The natural resources that exist in the park today are only a glimpse of a world that flourished with life during the Ice Age.

Once visitors step onto the park’s hiking paths, each step takes them back in time. These easy paths will lead visitors past honey locust plants that were here during the ice age, a Texas Live Oak tree that is as old as America’s constitution, and few rambunctious roadrunners or elusive deer. If you want to enjoy nature, join a nature walk with one of our rangers or become a citizen scientist by creating an online inventory with the park’s iNaturalist application, Mammoth Trackers, and a

Remember that central Texas can get very hot! Bring plenty of water, a good sun hat, and sunscreen.

Waco Mammoth National Monument

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* waco mammoth national monument

* trailhead

Source: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service

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