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Campgrounds

Campgrounds in Palo Pinto Mountains Sp

A CANYON VIEW

Palo Pinto Mountains Sp

B RUSSELL CREEK

Palo Pinto Mountains Sp

C WARBLER RIDGE

Palo Pinto Mountains Sp

D PAINTED STICK

Palo Pinto Mountains Sp

E BRISTOL BACKCOUNTRY

Palo Pinto Mountains Sp

Overview

A brief introduction to Palo Pinto Mountains Sp

The Big Thicket is the name given to a somewhat imprecise region of a heavily forested area of Southeast Texas in the United States. This area represents a portion of the mixed pine-hardwood forests or "Piney Woods" of the Southeast US. The National Park Service established the Big Thicket National Preserve (BTNP) within the region in 1974 and it is recognized as a biosphere reserve by UNESCO. Although the diversity of animals in the area is high for a temperate zone with over 500 vertebrates, it is the complex mosaic of ecosystems and plant diversity that is particularly remarkable. Biologists have identified at least eight, and up to eleven, ecosystems in the Big Thicket area. More than 160 species of trees and shrubs, 800 herbs and vines, and 340 types of grasses are known to occur in the Big Thicket, and estimates as high as over 1000 flowering plant species and 200 trees and shrubs have been made, plus ferns, carnivorous plants, and more. The Big Thicket has historically been the most dense forest region in Texas.
Existing literature states that Native Americans were known to have lived and hunted in the area nomadically, but did not establish permanent settlements there before the Alabama–Coushatta settled in the northeast about 1780. However, there is insufficient archaeological evidence to support this claim. What records that do exist could suggest human occupation dating back to the Clovis culture 13,400–12,700 years ago, with numerous era diagnostic points being found in all but one of the counties commonly considered to be in the Big Thicket. Spanish explorers and missionaries had a sporadic presence in the region, however colonization and settlement was not their aim, preferring to establish forts outside of the Region where the French were encroaching from the east (namely around Natchitoches, Nacogdoches, and the lower Trinity river valley). Logging in the late 19th and 20th centuries dramatically reduced the forest concentration. Efforts to save the Big Thicket from the devastation of oil and lumber industries started as early as the 1920s with the founding of the East Texas Big Thicket Association by Richard Elmer Jackson.
Conservatively the area occupies all of Hardin County, most of Polk, and Tyler Counties, and parts of Jasper, Liberty and San Jacinto Counties, including areas between the Neches River on the east, the Trinity River on the west, Pine Island Bayou on the south, to the higher elevations and older Eocene geological formations to the north. Broader interpretations have included the area between the Sabine River on the east and the San Jacinto River on the west including much of Montgomery, Newton, Trinity, and Walker Counties, as well. Several attempts to define the boundaries of the Big Thicket have been made, including a biological survey in 1936 which included over 3,350,000 acres (13,600 km2) covering 14 counties. A later botanical based study in 1972 included a region of over 2,000,000 acres (8,100 km2). This same habitat extends into Louisiana and eastward.

Read more about Palo Pinto Mountains Sp at Wikipedia

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