Interstate Park

45°23′30″N 92°39′55″W / 45.39167°N 92.66528°W / 45.39167; -92.66528Area1,628 acres (6.59 km2)Elevation886 ft (270 m)[1]Established1895Governing bodyMinnesota Department of Natural Resources, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
United States historic place
Interstate State Park WPA/Rustic Style Historic District
1939 Refectory built by the WPA, now the Minnesota park's visitor center
LocationOff U.S. Hwy. 8, Shafer Township
Nearest cityTaylors Falls, Minnesota
Coordinates45°24′0″N 92°39′4″W / 45.40000°N 92.65111°W / 45.40000; -92.65111
Area6 acres (2.4 ha)
Builtc. 1920–1939
Architectural styleNational Park Service rustic
MPSMinnesota State Park CCC/WPA/Rustic Style MPS
NRHP reference No.89001664
Added to NRHPJune 11, 1992
United States historic place
Interstate State Park CCC/WPA/Rustic Style Campground
1938 Shelter/Refectory built by the WPA
LocationOff US 8 SW of Taylors Falls, Shafer Township
Nearest cityTaylors Falls, Minnesota
Coordinates45°23′33″N 92°40′8″W / 45.39250°N 92.66889°W / 45.39250; -92.66889
Area22 acres (8.9 ha)
Built1938, 1941
Architectural styleNational Park Service rustic
MPSMinnesota State Park CCC/WPA/Rustic Style MPS
NRHP reference No.92000638
Added to NRHPJune 11, 1992

Interstate Park comprises two adjacent state parks on the Minnesota–Wisconsin border, both named Interstate State Park. They straddle the Dalles of the St. Croix River, a deep basalt gorge with glacial potholes and other rock formations. The Wisconsin park is 1,330 acres (538 ha) and the Minnesota park is 298 acres (121 ha). The towns of Taylors Falls, Minnesota and St. Croix Falls, Wisconsin are adjacent to the park. Interstate Park is within the Saint Croix National Scenic Riverway and the Ice Age National Scientific Reserve. The western terminus of the Ice Age National Scenic Trail is on the Wisconsin side. On the Minnesota side, two areas contain National Park Service rustic style buildings and structures that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Geology

Rocks or sediment from three short intervals of geologic time, each from three different geological eras, Precambrian, Paleozoic, and Cenozoic, are exposed at the surface within Interstate Park. The oldest strata are of the Keweenawan Supergroup, which is a 2.5 miles (4.0 km) thick sequence of volcanic and sedimentary strata that fill a segment of the Midcontinent Rift System. During the formation of the Midcontinent Rift System, these strata accumulated about 1.1 billion years ago as a series of basaltic lava flows and alluvial fans filled an ancient rift valley to depth of over 2.5 miles (4.0 km). At least ten separate lava flows are exposed within the region of Interstate Park. Since their accumulation, these strata within Interstate Park area have undergone very low to low-grade metamorphism.[2][3][4]

Paleozoic Era - Cambrian Period

In the Cambrian period of the Paleozoic Era, between 530 and 470 million years ago, the region was covered by a shallow sea which deposited sandstone and siltstone atop the basalt. This epoch of the Cambrian, the Furongian, was originally called the Croixian in North America because the layers exposed in this area were its type locality.[5]

Cenozoic Era - Quaternary Period

The presence of older glacial deposits south of the Interstate Park demonstrates that the Laurentide Ice Sheet repeated glaciated it and surrounding areas over the Pleistocene Epoch. Within Wisconsin, these older glacial deposits consist of remnants of, highly weathered dark-gray loam till and lake sediment with reversed magnetic polarity and a deeply weathered, pre-Sangamonian Stage, reddish-brown, sandy loam till with normal magnetic polarity. Both the landforms and deposits related to these earlier glaciations have been either eroded or buried by the latest advance of the Laurentide Ice Sheet over this area of the Last Glacial Maximum.[6]

The region of Interstate Park was deglaciated sometime between about 19,000 and 14,000 BP calibrated (16,000 and 12,000 14C uncalibrated). During this time, the Superior Lobe had retreated from the St. Croix Moraine northeastward to the Thompson Moraine. Between 14,000 and 11,500 BP calibrated (12,000 and 10,000 14C uncalibrated), an extensive set of ice marginal channels drained meltwater from the Thompson Moraine by way of the Brule channel into the newly formed St. Croix River.[7]

The glacial landforms and sediments of Interstate Park were largely created during the retreat of the Superior Lobe from this region and periodic outburst flood events from proglacial lakes, e.g. Lake Duluth, since the Last Glacial Maximum. First, the retreat of the Superior lobe into the Lake Superior basin created proglacial lakes. Initially, these lakes consisted of small, proglacial lakes. Later, these lakes coalesced to form a large proglacial lake called glacial Lake Duluth, which was confined to the western Superior basin. The most prominent of multiple lake levels of glacial Lake Duluth is known as the Duluth level. There also was an older epi-Duluth level that lay above the Duluth level. The epi-Duluth level and a smaller precursor proglacial lake, named Lake Nemadji, drained through the higher Moose Lake (Portage) outlet into the Kettle River and into the St. Croix River. As the Lake Superior Lobe retreated, the Brule outlet opened and the higher Moose Lake was abandoned as a lower Duluth level was quickly established by massive and sudden outflow through the lower Brule outlet and down St. Croix River. The Brule outlet was abandoned when Lake Superior Lobe retreated from the Keweenaw Peninsula and opened lower eastward draining outlets. This caused the Duluth level to drop abruptly to post-Duluth levels and water to cease flowing into lower Brule outlet and down the St. Croix River.[7]

It was during the regional retreat of the Lake Superior Lobe and glacial meltwater flow from deglaciation and glacial Lake Nemadji and Lake Duluth caused the entrenchment of the St. Croix River and the formation of the deep gorge of the St. Croix River of the St. Croix River valley and its famous potholes occurred. In and surrounding Polk County, Minnesota, geomorphic and stratigraphic relationships evidence exists for at least two drainage events.[6]

A strath terrace, known as the Chengwatana surface provides evidence for the occurrence of the first drainage event. The Chengwatana surface is a scoured surface marked by distinct lemniscate landforms; bar-shaped lndforms composed of sand; and a lag layer of cobbles and boulders. This lag layer overlies an unconformity eroded into older glacial till, lake sediment, or bedrock. This surface extends from the lower reaches of the Kettle River valley as far south as Sunrise, Minnesota. The Chengwatana surface likely was cut by water flowing down the Kettle River from the Moose Lake outlet of glacial Lake Nemadji and the Epi-Duluth level of glacial Lake Duluth.[6] The association of the Chengwatana surface with glacial Lake Nemadji and the Epi-Duluth level of glacial Lake Duluth would make it most likely range in age from before 12,100 to about 11,700 BP calibrated.[8]

The deep inner channel, which includes the Dalles, that forms the modern St. Croix River valley was excavated by a second drainage event. This inner channel is incised as a narrower valley cut into, and hence younger than, the Chengwatana surface. This demonstrates that the St. Croix valley is slightly younger than the Kettle River valley and Moose Lake outlet and was cut by water flowing out of the lower and younger Brule outlet of the Duluth level of glacial Lake Duluth. Because the trace of the Chengwatana surface grades to a terrace level higher than the potholes in International State Park, they were eroded by spillway water from Duluth level of glacial Lake Duluth.[6] The association of the Duluth level of glacial Lake Duluth with the second discharge event and creation of the St. Croix valley and the potholes indicates that they were created between 10,800 and 10,600 BP calibrated.[8]

The before-mentioned potholes were created starting with sand and gravel caught in eddies or whirlpools. Within the eddies, the sand and gravel were swirled around with such force that they drilled holes straight down into the rock. Larger rocks caught in the spin would polish the shafts smooth.[9] The Glacial Gardens area on the Minnesota shore contains more than 80 of these glacial potholes, the greatest concentration in the world.[5][10] When the massive flow of water through the Brule outlet and down the St. Croix River ceased, the potholes became exposed to the air. Dirt, vegetation, and rainwater have collected in them, disguising their true depths. Some have been excavated; one, the Bottomless Pit, is 10 feet (3.0 m) wide and 60 feet (18 m) deep, the deepest explored pothole in the world.[10] Other unexcavated potholes in the park are even wider, suggesting that they may be deeper as well.[9]

Stereoscopic image of the Old Man of the Dalles

Weathering has created other rock formations. The Old Man of the Dalles on the Wisconsin shore resembles a human face. Another formation resembling a Maltese cross has been erroneously claimed as the origin of the name St. Croix ('holy cross' in the French language).[11] A former formation on the Minnesota side called the Devil's Chair looked like a high-backed throne.

Biology

Several habitats are found within the parks. Originally most of the land was forested with large eastern white pines, but was denuded by loggers.[12] Most of the vegetation today is second-growth forest, with some sections dominated by maples and basswoods and others by eastern white pines.[10] Drier areas support oak savanna while wetter areas bear floodplain forest. The driest hilltops even support the brittle prickly pear cactus, the only cactus species native to Wisconsin. Early successional species take hold on the exposed basalt rocks. Over 400 species of ferns and flowering plants have been catalogued in the Wisconsin park.[13]

Mammals found in the parks include white-tailed deer, foxes, raccoons, gray squirrels, river otters, minks, skunks, muskrats, and beavers, and 150 species of birds have been identified in the park,[12] of which at least 75 species are known to nest in the area.[13]

Cultural history

The St. Croix River was an important transportation route for Native Americans. Prehistoric tools have been found in the park, but no village sites.[14] The first Europeans to pass through the Dalles were Daniel Greysolon, Sieur du Lhut, and his 1680 expedition, though he made no particular mention of the site Fur traders used the river extensively, and a French fort was located near the Minnesota campground in the early 18th century.[12]

Logging era

During the logging era from 1837 to 1898, logs were rafted down the St. Croix River. By 1857 a sawmill was operating near what is now the Minnesota campground, joined in 1867 by a boat-building yard.[12] Both were owned by a leading citizen of Taylors Falls, W.H.C. Folsom, after whom an island in the park is named. The narrow gorge and the sharp turn at Angle Rock caused severe logjams in 1865, 1877, 1883, and 1886.[14] The 1886 St. Croix River log jam is believed to have been the worst in history; at least 150 million board feet of logs were backed up for three miles (4.8 km).[13] Neither dynamite nor steamboats with tow ropes were able to budge the jam. A crew of 175 men working 24 hours a day under electric lights took six weeks to break the jam, during which time several mills downstream went out of business.[14][15] To control the water flow and prevent further catastrophic jams, the Nevers Dam was built upstream in 1890 in what is now Wild River State Park.[9] The walls of the Dalles rise from 50 to 250 feet (76 m) above the river.[12]

During this same period, the Dalles of the St. Croix became a popular visitor attraction. Steamboat service to Taylors Falls began in 1838, and a railroad connection was finished in 1880.[10] The catastrophic logjams drew tourists in droves, as many as a thousand a day.[15]

Park creation

In the 1860s businessmen from St. Paul proposed mining the basalt of the Dalles to make gravel, a plan which galvanized interest in protecting the area.[15] Locals had also been growing concerned by encroaching buildings and vandalism of the rock formations.[16] A travel agent named George Hazzard became the leading advocate for a park, and gained the support of newspapers, several landowners in the area, influential people like W.H.C. Folsom, and ultimately the state senator and representative. These last two introduced a bill to the Minnesota Legislature calling for the creation of the State Park of the Dalles of the St. Croix and urging cooperation with Wisconsin to protect both sides of the Dalles.[16] The bill passed in 1895, creating the second state park in Minnesota.[17] Hazzard and his allies had a more difficult time lobbying the Wisconsin Legislature, but succeeded in 1900 with the creation of the first state park in Wisconsin,[15] resulting in the first interstate parkland collaboration in the United States.[18]

In 1906 the commissioner of the Minnesota park asked a family from Stillwater to conduct boat tours of the Dalles. Beginning with a small powerboat, this concession business grew quickly. In 1910 they began renting canoes and rowboats, and offered tours on progressively larger boats. Today they are still in business, family-owned for four generations.[19]

New Deal development

U.S. Route 8 descends through the Minnesota park in a road cut blasted in 1931.[20] The Minnesota Department of Transportation built stone overlooks and guardrails along the highway in the mid-1930s.[21] Civilian Conservation Corps Company 633 arrived in 1935, building roads, trails, picnic grounds, plumbing, the beach and beach house on Lake O' the Dalles, and retaining walls.[14] The CCC camp departed in December 1937 and were replaced by the 4610th Company of the Works Progress Administration in July 1938.[21] Using basalt quarried in the park by the CCC, they built restrooms, picnic shelters, water fountains, and retaining walls. These historical structures are clustered in two separate areas of the Minnesota park: in the campground and near the Glacial Gardens.[20] The two areas were listed as separate historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992.[18] They are considered significant as examples of New Deal federal work relief, early state park development, National Park Service rustic design, and—in separating the intensive use of camping and picnicking from the open-air museum of the Glacial Gardens—landscape architecture.[22]

The c. 1920 women's rest room influenced later park facilities

The 6-acre (2.4 ha) Interstate State Park CCC/WPA/Rustic Style Historic District at the northeast end of the Minnesota park contains six contributing properties. These consist of three buildings, two structures, and an object. Noteworthy are the women's rest room (built c. 1920) and men's rest room (built 1928), which predate the federal developments and influenced the WPA's use of rustic style in the park. These two buildings are situated at the north end of the parking lot; the men's rest room is noted for its placement relative to the rock outcroppings and the women's rest room was modified by the WPA in 1941. The third contributing building is the 1939 Refectory, originally a concession building renovated in 1981 with restrooms and office space to become the current visitor center. The two contributing structures are the 1937 stone curb in the parking lot and a 150-foot-long (46 m) retaining wall built in 1938 at the south end of the Glacial Gardens. The contributing object is a 1938 water fountain at the south end of the parking lot.[22]

The 22-acre (8.9 ha) Interstate State Park CCC/WPA/Rustic Style Campground at the southwest end of the Minnesota park contains six contributing properties as well. These consist of three buildings—the 1938 Sanitation Building (restrooms at the west end of the picnic area), 1938 Shelter/Refectory (in the center of the picnic area), and 1941 Combination Building (restrooms in the campground)—and three objects (the drinking fountains scattered in the picnic area) also built in 1938. The Combination Building was based on a design also used in Whitewater State Park in 1938, though the use of different local materials gives them a very different appearance. An open-sided picnic shelter with a free-standing metal fireplace was actually built in 1980 and is considered a non-contributing property to the district.[23]

Devil's Chair vandalism

Devils Chair in 1918

In April 2005 a landmark rock formation called the Devil's Chair collapsed. An investigation found that the basalt pinnacle was toppled by vandals using crowbars and possibly a hydraulic spreader. Despite a reward for tips, the culprits have never been identified.[24]

Recreation

The Dalles of the St. Croix River seen from the Minnesota bank

Located an hour's drive from Minneapolis–Saint Paul, Interstate Park has received annual visitation comparable to many U.S. national parks since the 1930s.[18][20]

The two parks are administered separately and require separate vehicle permits. In 1987 each park began honoring the other state's permit on weekdays,[16] but the practice has since ceased. It is possible to walk between the parks by crossing the U.S. Route 8 bridge. Both parks have a visitor center with interpretive displays and a gift shop.

The Wisconsin park has two campgrounds with 85 sites. A group campsite accommodates up to 60 people. There are nine miles (14 km) of trail.[25]

The Minnesota park has a campground with showers and 37 sites, 22 of which have electrical hookups. A group campsite accommodates up to 100 people. There are four miles (6.4 km) of trail.[10] A long-standing concession offers scenic boat cruises and canoe and kayak rentals with shuttle service back from near Osceola, Wisconsin, and William O'Brien State Park.

There is a swimming beach on Lake O' the Dalles, in the Wisconsin park. Swimming in the river is dangerous because of strong currents. Rock climbing is permitted on many of the cliffs on either side of the river. In addition to the cliffs, there are many boulders on both sides of the river that are open to climbing.[26] Certain sensitive areas, as well as all potholes, are off limits to climbing.[27]

References

  1. ^ "Interstate State Park". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. January 11, 1980. Retrieved February 25, 2011.
  2. ^ Cavaleri, M.E., Mossler, J.H. and Webers, G.F., 1987. The geology of the St. Croix River valley. Field trip guidebook for the Upper Mississippi Valley, Minnesota, Iowa, and Wisconsin. Minnesota Geological Survey Guidebook Series, 15, pp.23-43.
  3. ^ Wirth, K.R., Naiman, Z.J. and Vervoort, J.D., 1997. The Chengwatana Volcanics, Wisconsin and Minnesota: petrogenesis of the southernmost volcanic rocks exposed in the Midcontinent rift. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 34(4), pp.536-548.
  4. ^ "Interstate State Park". Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. 2008. Retrieved June 24, 2008.
  5. ^ a b Sansome, Constance J. (1983). Minnesota Underfoot: A Field Guide to the State's Outstanding Geologic Features. Stillwater, MN: Voyageur Press. ISBN 0-89658-036-9.
  6. ^ a b c d Johnson, M.D., 2000. Pleistocene geology of Polk County, Wisconsin, vol. 92). Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey. 70 pp.
  7. ^ a b Hobbs, H.C., Breckenridge, A., Miller, J.D., Hudak, G.J., Wittkop, C. and McLaughlin, P.I., 2011. Ice advances and retreats, inlets and outlets, sediments and strandlines of the western Lake Superior basin. The Geological Society of America Field Guide, 24, pp.299-315
  8. ^ a b Breckenridge, A., 2013. An analysis of the late glacial lake levels within the western Lake Superior basin based on digital elevation models. Quaternary Research, 80(3), pp.383-395.
  9. ^ a b c Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. Interstate State Park interpretive signage.
  10. ^ a b c d e State of Minnesota, Department of Natural Resources. Interstate State Park. July 2008 [1]
  11. ^ Dunn, James Taylor (1979). The St. Croix: Midwest Border River. St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press. ISBN 0-87351-141-7.
  12. ^ a b c d e Dunn, James Taylor (1982). State Parks of the St. Croix Valley. The Minnesota Parks Foundation.
  13. ^ a b c Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. Interstate Park Visitor . April 2004.
  14. ^ a b c d Pond, Alonzo W. (1937). Interstate Park and Dalles of the St. Croix. St. Croix Falls, Wis: The Standard-Press.
  15. ^ a b c d McMahon, Eileen M.; Theodore J. Karamanski (October 17, 2002). "Time and the River: A History of the Saint Croix". National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior. Retrieved September 6, 2008.
  16. ^ a b c Meyer, Roy W. (1991). Everyone's Country Estate: A History of Minnesota's State Parks. St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press. ISBN 0-87351-265-0.
  17. ^ The first in Minnesota was Itasca State Park, 1891.
  18. ^ a b c "List of Rustic Style Resources in Minnesota State Parks: Interstate State Park". Minnesota Historical Society. 2008. Retrieved June 24, 2008.
  19. ^ "Taylors Falls Scenic Boat Tour History". Wild Mountain & Taylors Falls Recreation. Archived from the original on September 21, 2008. Retrieved September 7, 2008.
  20. ^ a b c Benson, David R. (2002). Stories in Log and Stone: The Legacy of the New Deal in Minnesota State Parks. St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. ISBN 0-9657127-1-0.
  21. ^ a b "MnDOT Historic Roadside Development Structures Inventory" (PDF). Minnesota Department of Transportation. 1998. Retrieved September 6, 2008.
  22. ^ a b Anderson, Rolf T. (March 22, 1992). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Interstate State Park CCC/WPA/Rustic Style Historic District" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved May 20, 2013. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  23. ^ Anderson, Rolf T. (March 22, 1992). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Interstate State Park CCC/WPA/Rustic Style Campground" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved May 20, 2013. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  24. ^ Bauer, Mary. "'Devil's Chair' lives on after destruction — community clings to rock-formation symbol a year after vandalism." St. Paul Pioneer Press May 31, 2006.
  25. ^ "Interstate State Park". Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. 2008. Retrieved June 24, 2008.
  26. ^ Cargill; Oklobzjia; et al. (2016). Minnesota and Wisconsin Bouldering. Minnesota: Carvonzija. pp. 75–85. ISBN 9780692819814.
  27. ^ Farris, Mike (2000). Rock Climbing Minnesota and Wisconsin. Helena, Montana: Falcon Publishing, Inc. ISBN 1-56044-984-5.

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  • Goose Lake Drumlins
  • Gotham Jack Pine Barrens
  • Grand Island
  • Grandma Lake
  • Grassy Lake
  • Great River Trail Prairies
  • Hagar Mountain
  • Haley Creek Swamp
  • Half Moon Bottoms
  • Hanson Lake Wetlands
  • Hardscrabble Prairie
  • Haskell Noyes Memorial Woods
  • Hawkins Hemlock-Hardwood Forest
  • Hawkinson Creek Wet Prairie
  • Haymeadow Creek
  • Haymeadow Flowage
  • Headwater Lakes
  • Hedmark Pines
  • Hemlock Draw
  • High Cliff Escarpment
  • Highway K Woods
  • Hiles Wetlands
  • Hog Island Tamaracks
  • Hogback Prairie
  • Holland Red Maple Swamp
  • Holland Sand Prairie
  • Holmboe Conifer Forest
  • Honey Creek
  • Hook Lake Bog
  • Hortonville Bog
  • Houghton Falls
  • Hub City Bog
  • Huiras Lake
  • Hulburt Creek Woods
  • Hunting River Alders
  • Inch Lake
  • Interstate Lowland Forest
  • Ipswich Prairie
  • Island Lake Hemlocks
  • Jackson Creek Woods
  • Jackson Harbor Ridges
  • Jackson Marsh
  • Jay Creek Pine Forest
  • Jean Brunet Woods
  • Jefferson Tamarack Swamp
  • Johnson Falls
  • Johnson Hill Kame
  • Johnson Lake Barrens
  • Jones Lake
  • Jump River Woods
  • Jung Hemlock-Beech Forest
  • Kamrath Creek Forest and Fen
  • Kangaroo Lake
  • Karcher Springs
  • Karner Blue Meadow
  • Keller Whitcomb Creek Woods
  • Kelly Lake Hemlocks
  • Kelly Lynn Bog
  • Kentuck Lake
  • Kessler Railroad Prairie
  • Ketchum Creek Pines
  • Kettle Hole Woods
  • Kettle Moraine Low Prairie
  • Kettle Moraine Oak Opening
  • Kettle Moraine Red Oaks
  • Kewaskum Maple-Oak Woods
  • Kickapoo Valley Reserve
  • Kickapoo Wild Woods
  • Kidrick Swamp
  • Kieper Creek
  • Kingston Pines
  • Kinnickinnic River Gorge and Delta
  • Kinnickinnic Wet Prairie
  • Kirby Lake Hardwoods
  • Kissick Alkaline Bog Lake
  • Kohler Park Dunes
  • Kohler-Peet Barrens
  • Koro Prairie
  • Koshkonong Corners
  • Kroenke Lake
  • Krueger Pines
  • Kurtz Woods
  • La Crosse River Trail Prairie
  • LaFave Swamp
  • Lake Alva Birch-Hemlock
  • Lake Evelyn
  • Lake Helane
  • Lake Lackawanna
  • Lake Laura Hardwoods
  • Lake Noquebay Sedge Meadow
  • Lake of the Pines Conifer-Hardwoods
  • Lake Owen Hardwoods
  • Lake Two Pines
  • Lampson Moraine Pines
  • LaSage Bottoms
  • Lauterman Lake
  • Lawin Sedge Meadow
  • Lawrence Creek
  • Lawrence Lake
  • Lawrence Prairie
  • Lawrence Lake
  • Lemonweir Bottomland Hardwood Forest
  • Lily Lake
  • Lima Bog
  • Limery Ridge Savanna
  • Little Bear Hemlocks
  • Little Lake
  • Little Willow Drumlin
  • Little Wolf River
  • Lodde's Mill Bluff
  • Lodi Marsh
  • Logan Creek
  • Loon Lake Woods
  • Lost Canoe
  • Lost Creek Bog
  • Lost Lake
  • Lost Lake Esker
  • Lower Chippewa River
  • Lower Narrows
  • Lower Tomahawk River Pines
  • LTC Old Growth Forest
  • Lulu Lake
  • Lunch Creek Wetlands
  • Magnolia Bluff
  • Maiden Rock Bluff
  • Marinette County Beech Forest
  • Marsh Miller Cedars
  • Marshall's Point
  • Martin's Woods
  • Mary Lake
  • Mayville Ledge Beech-Maple Woods
  • Mazomanie Bottoms
  • Mazomanie Oak Barrens
  • McCarthy Lake and Cedars
  • McCaslin Mountain
  • McGilvra Woods
  • Mead Conifer Bogs
  • Meadow Valley Barrens
  • Mecan River Pine-Oak Forest
  • Mecan Springs
  • Memorial Grove Hemlocks
  • Meridian Park
  • Midway Railroad Prairie
  • Mill Bluff
  • Millston Sand Barrens
  • Millville Oak Woodlands
  • Milwaukee River and Swamp
  • Milwaukee River Floodplain Forest
  • Milwaukee River Tamarack Lowlands and Dundee Kame
  • Minito Lake
  • Mink River
  • Mirror Lake Pine Oak Forest
  • Miscauno Cedar Swamp
  • Mondeaux Hardwoods
  • Moonlight Bay Bedrock Beach
  • Moose Lake
  • Moose River Cedar Hills
  • Moquah Barrens
  • Morgan Coulee Prairie
  • Motts Ravine
  • Mount Pisgah Hemlock-Hardwoods
  • Mountain Lake
  • Mud Lake
  • Mud Lake - Radley Creek Savanna
  • Mud Lake Bog
  • Mud Lake Fen and Wet Prairie
  • Mud Lake Forest and Ponds
  • Muddy Creek Sedge Meadow
  • Muehl Springs
  • Muir Park
  • Mukwa Bottomland Forest
  • Mukwonago River
  • Mullet Creek White Cedar Wetland
  • Muralt Bluff Prairie
  • Muskego Park Hardwoods
  • Myklebust Lake
  • Namekagon Barrens
  • Namekagon Fen
  • Natural Bridge and Rockshelter
  • Navarino Cedar Swamp
  • Navarino Sedge Meadow
  • Necedah Oak-Pine Forest
  • Necedah Oak-Pine Savanna
  • Neda Mine
  • Nell Lake
  • Nelligan Lake
  • Nelson-Trevino Bottoms
  • Nemadji River Floodplain Forest
  • New Auburn Sedge Meadow
  • New Hope Pines
  • New Munster Bog Island
  • New Observatory Woods
  • Newark Road Prairie
  • Newport Conifer-Hardwoods
  • Nichols Creek Cedars and Springs
  • Nichols Creek East Cedars
  • Nine Mile Island
  • Nipissing Swamp
  • Nixon Lake
  • No Name Lake
  • North Bay
  • North Bend Wet Prairie
  • North Branch Bottoms
  • North Country Trail Hardwoods
  • North Fork Eau Claire River
  • North Fork Pines
  • North of North Shattuck Lake
  • North Otter Creek
  • North Pikes Creek Boreal Forest
  • North Pikes Creek Boreal Forest
  • Northeast Lake
  • Norway Point Bottomlands
  • Nourse Sugarbush
  • Oakfield Ledge
  • Oakfield Railroad Prairie
  • Observatory Hill
  • Ohmart Wetlands
  • Oliver Prairie
  • Olson Oak Woods
  • One Stone Lake Hemlocks
  • Orion Mussel Bed
  • Osceola Bedrock Glades
  • Oshkosh-Larsen Trail Prairies
  • Ottawa Lake Fen
  • Otter Creek Oak Barrens
  • Owl Creek Fen Savanna
  • Oxbo Pines
  • Oxbow Rapids
  • Page Creek Marsh
  • Pan Hollow
  • Papoose Creek Pines
  • Parfrey's Glen
  • Parrish Oak Savanna
  • Pat Shay Lake
  • Patterson Hemlocks
  • Pea Creek Sedge Meadow
  • Peat Lake
  • Pecatonica River Woods
  • Peninsula Niagara Escarpment
  • Peninsula Park Beech Forest
  • Peninsula Park White Cedar Forest
  • Perkinstown Hemlocks
  • Peshtigo Brook Meadow & Woods
  • Peshtigo Harbor Lacustrine Forest
  • Peshtigo River Delta Marshes
  • Pewit's Nest
  • Pickerel Lake
  • Pickerel Lake Fen
  • Pine Cliff
  • Pine Hollow
  • Pine Island Savanna
  • Pirus Road Swamp
  • Plagge Woods
  • Plainfield Tunnel Channel Lakes
  • Pleasant Valley Conservancy
  • Plover River Woods
  • Plum Creek Woods
  • Plum Lake Hemlock Forest
  • Point Beach Ridges
  • Pokegama Carnegie Wetlands
  • Pope Lake
  • Popple River Corridor
  • Poppy's Rock
  • Port Wing Boreal Forest
  • Portland Maples
  • Powers Bluff Maple Woods
  • Priest Rock
  • Princeton Prairie
  • Puchyan Prairie
  • Putnam Park
  • Quincy Bluff and Wetlands
  • Rainbow Wetlands
  • Rat Lake Swamp and Popple River Headwaters
  • Red Banks Alvar
  • Red Cedar Lake
  • Red Cedar River Savanna
  • Red Oak Bottoms
  • Reed Lake Meadow
  • Renak-Polak Maple Beech Woods
  • Rhine Center Bog
  • Rib Mountain Talus Forest
  • Rice Creek
  • Rice Lake
  • Richter Lake Hemlocks
  • Richwood Bottoms
  • Ridgeway Pine Relict
  • Riley Lake
  • Riveredge Creek and Ephemeral Pond
  • Robinson Creek Pines
  • Roche-A-Cri Mound
  • Roche-A-Cri Woods
  • Rock Creek Felsenmeer
  • Rock Island Woods
  • Rock Lake
  • Rock River Prairie
  • Rocky Run Oak Savanna
  • Romance Prairie
  • Rose Lake
  • Rush Creek
  • Rush Lake
  • Rush River Delta
  • Sajdak Springs
  • Sand Creek Pines
  • Sander's Park Hardwoods
  • Sapa Spruce Bog
  • Savage Lake
  • Schluckebier Prairie
  • Schmidt Maple Woods
  • Scott Lake and Shelp Lake
  • Scuppernong Prairie
  • Seagull Bar
  • Shaky Lake
  • Shallow Lake
  • Silver Creek and Mondeaux River
  • Silver Lake Bog
  • Sister Islands
  • Skinner Creek Hardwoods
  • Skunk and Foster Lakes
  • Skunk Creek Woods
  • Smith Drumlin Prairie
  • Smith Slough and Sand Prairie
  • Snake Creek Fen
  • Snapper Prairie
  • Snoose Creek
  • Snow Bottom
  • Snow Falls Creek
  • Sohlberg Silver Lake
  • Solon Springs Sharptail Barrens
  • South Bluff/Devil's Nose
  • South Branch Beech Grove
  • South Fork Barrens
  • Spaulding Fen
  • Spider Lake
  • Spread Eagle Barrens
  • Spring Brook Drumlins
  • Spring Green Preserve
  • Spring Lake
  • Springstead Muskeg
  • Springvale Wet Prairie
  • Spruce Grouse Swamp
  • Spruce Lake Bog
  • Spur Lake
  • Squirrel River Pines
  • St. Croix Ash Swamp
  • St. Croix Islands
  • St. Croix Seeps
  • St. Peter's Dome
  • Standing Cedars
  • Starlight Wetlands
  • Sterling Barrens
  • Stockbridge Ledge Woods
  • Stone Lake Pines
  • Straight Lake Tamarack Fen
  • Sugar Camp Hemlocks
  • Sugar Creek Bluff
  • Sugar River Wetlands
  • Suk Cerney Peatlands
  • Summerton Bog
  • Sunrise Lake
  • Swamp Creek Fen
  • Swamp Lake
  • Swan Lake Sedge Meadow and Barrens
  • Swan Lake Tamaracks
  • Swan Lake Wet-mesic Prairie
  • Swenson Wet Prairie
  • Tamarack Creek Bog
  • Tar Dam Pines
  • Tealey Creek Cedars
  • Tellock's Hill Woods
  • Texas Island Woods
  • The Ridges Sanctuary
  • Thornapple Hemlocks
  • Thorp Pond
  • Thunder Mountain
  • Thunder River Swamp
  • Tichigan Springs and Fen
  • Tiffany Bottoms
  • Toft Point
  • Tomahawk Lake Hemlocks
  • Totagatic Highlands Hemlocks
  • Totogan Pines
  • Tower Hill Bottoms
  • Town Corner Cedars
  • Town Line Lake and Woods
  • Toy Lake Swamp
  • Trade River Forest and Wetlands
  • Tranus Lake
  • Trempealeau Mountain
  • Trempealeau River Meadow
  • Trenton Bluff Prairie
  • Trout Lake Conifer Swamp
  • Trout River
  • Tucker Lake Hemlocks
  • Tula Lake
  • Tunnel Channel Woods
  • Tunnelville Cliffs
  • Turtle Flambeau Peatlands
  • Twin Lakes Bog
  • Two Creeks Buried Forest
  • Two Lakes Pine-Oak Forest
  • Upper Black River
  • Upper Brunet River
  • Upper Buckatabon Springs
  • Upper Fox Headwaters
  • Upper Kaubashine Creek
  • Upper Little Wolf
  • Upper Nemadji River Floodplain Forest
  • Upper Tomahawk River Pines
  • Van Loon Floodplain Forest
  • Van Loon Floodplain Savanna
  • Van Vliet Hemlocks
  • Vosse Coulee
  • Wabikon Lake
  • Ward/Swartz Decatur Woods
  • Warnimont Bluff Fens
  • Washburn Marsh
  • Waterloo Prairie
  • Waterloo Quartzite Outcrops
  • Waubesa Wetlands
  • Waupee Lake Swamp
  • Waupun Park Maple Forest
  • Wauzeka Bottoms
  • Wedde Creek Savanna
  • Weir White Oaks
  • Wheeler Lake
  • White Cliff Fen and Forest
  • White River Boreal Forest
  • White River Breaks
  • White River Prairie Tamarack
  • White River Sedge Meadow
  • Whitefish Dunes
  • Whitman Bottoms Floodplain Forest
  • Wildcat Ridge
  • Wilson Lake
  • Winchester Meadow
  • Wind Pudding
  • Wisconsin Slough
  • Wolf River Bottoms
  • Woodland Dunes
  • Woodman Lake Sand Prairie & Dead Lake
  • Woods Creek
  • Wyalusing Hardwood Forest
  • Wyalusing Walnut Forest
  • Yellow River Floodplain Forest
  • Yellow River Ice-walled Lake Plain
  • Yellow River Oxbows
  • Yellowstone Savanna
  • York Prairie
  • Young Prairie
State Recreation Areas
State Forests
State Historical Sites
State Wildlife Areas
  • Ackley
  • Adell
  • Albany
  • Allenton
  • Amberg
  • Amsterdam Sloughs
  • Augusta
  • Avon Bottoms
  • Badfish Creek
  • Balsam Branch
  • Barker Creek
  • Bear Lake
  • Beaver Brook
  • Bierbrauer
  • Big Beaver Creek
  • Big Muskego Lake
  • Big Swamp
  • Bill Cross
  • Blackhawk Lake
  • Bloomfield
  • Borst Valley
  • Brillion
  • Brooklyn
  • Brusky
  • Buckhorn
  • Buena Vista
  • Burlington
  • C.D. Besadny
  • Casey Lake
  • Chief River
  • Chimney Rock
  • Clam Lake
  • Clay Corners
  • Clover Valley
  • Colburn
  • Collins Marsh
  • Crex Meadows
  • Cylon Marsh
  • Cylon
  • Deansville
  • Deer Creek
  • Dell Creek
  • Deppe
  • Dewey Marsh
  • Dike 17
  • Douglas County
  • Dover
  • Dunnville
  • Eau Galle River
  • Eldorado
  • Emerald Valley
  • Evansville
  • Fish Lake
  • Flat Creek
  • Footville
  • French Creek
  • Galbraith
  • Gardner Swamp
  • Germania Marsh
  • Gilbert Creek
  • Goose Lake (Burnett County)
  • Goose Lake (Dane County)
  • Goose Pond
  • Grand River Marsh
  • Grassy Lake (Barron County)
  • Grassy Lake (Columbia County)
  • Green Bay West Shores
  • Greenwood
  • Hacker Drive
  • Hay Creek
  • Hay Creek-Hoffman Lake
  • Hay River
  • Highway 144
  • Highway T
  • Holland
  • Honey Creek Streambank
  • Honey Creek
  • Hook Lake Bog-Grass Lake
  • Hoosier Creek
  • Horicon Marsh
  • Jackson Marsh
  • Jaeger's Island
  • Jefferson Marsh
  • Jennings Creek
  • Joel Marsh
  • Johnson
  • Karcher
  • Kickapoo River Bell Center
  • Kickapoo River Wauzeka Unit
  • Kiel Marsh
  • Killsnake
  • Kimberly Clark
  • Kinnickinnic River Oscar Lee
  • Kinnickinnic River Potton
  • Kinnickinnic River Headwaters
  • Kinnickinnic River South Fork
  • Kissick Swamp
  • Knapp Creek
  • Koshkonong
  • Lake Mills
  • Lake Noquebay
  • Lake Pepin
  • Lakes Coulee
  • Lambs Creek
  • Lawrence Creek
  • Leola Marsh
  • Liberty Creek
  • Lightning Creek
  • Lima Marsh
  • Little Rice
  • Lodi Marsh
  • Loon Lake
  • Lundy Pond
  • Lyons
  • Mack
  • Maine
  • Manion
  • Mashek Creek
  • McAdams
  • McKenzie Creek
  • McMillan Marsh
  • Mead
  • Meadow Valley
  • Morgan Marsh
  • Mount Hope
  • Mud Lake (Columbia County)
  • Mud Lake (Dane County)
  • Mud Lake (Dodge County)
  • Muddy Creek
  • Mukwa
  • Mullet Creek
  • Nagel
  • Namekagon Barrens
  • Navarino
  • New Auburn
  • New Munster
  • New Wood
  • Nichols Creek
  • North Bend Bottoms
  • North Branch Milwaukee River
  • Oakridge
  • Oden
  • Omer Springs
  • Otter Creek
  • Outagamie
  • Paradise Marsh
  • Paradise Valley
  • Paul J. Olson
  • Pershing
  • Peshtigo Brook
  • Peter Helland
  • Peters Marsh
  • Pierce County Islands
  • Pine Island
  • Pleasant Valley
  • Potato Creek
  • Powell Marsh
  • Poygan Marsh
  • Prince's Point
  • Quaderer's Creek
  • Rat River
  • Ray
  • Ray Morrison Memorial
  • Rice Beds Creek
  • Ridgeville
  • Rock Falls
  • Rome Pond
  • Rush River
  • Sampson
  • Sandhill
  • Schmit
  • Scuppernong River
  • Sette
  • Shaw Marsh
  • Sheboygan Marsh
  • Silvernail
  • South Beaver Creek
  • Spring Creek
  • St. Croix Islands
  • Star Prairie Seed Farm
  • Storrs Lake
  • Straight Lake
  • Swan Lake
  • Sweeny Pond
  • Swinging Gate
  • Tamarack Creek
  • Ten Mile Creek (Rusk County)
  • Ten Mile Creek (Saint Croix County)
  • Theresa Marsh
  • Thunder Lake
  • Tichigan
  • Tiffany
  • Tollefson Marsh
  • Tom Lawin
  • Totagatic Lake
  • Totogatic
  • Town Corner
  • Troy
  • Turtle Creek
  • Turtle Valley
  • Ulrich
  • Underwood
  • Van Loon
  • Vermillion River
  • Vernon
  • Vosse Coulee
  • Washington Creek
  • Waterloo
  • Waunakee Marsh
  • Weirgor Springs
  • West Taylor
  • Whalen Creek
  • White River
  • White River Marsh
  • Whitman Dam
  • Willow River
  • Wind Lake
  • Wolf River Bottoms Herb Behnke
  • Wolf River Bottoms LaSage
  • Wolf River
  • Wood County
  • Woodboro Lakes
  • Yellow River
  • Yellowstone
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