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The Big Thicket is the name of a heavily forested area in Southeast Texas. While no exact boundaries exist, the area occupies much of Hardin, Tyler, and Polk Counties and is roughly bounded by the Trinity River, Neches River, and Pine Island Bayou.
The Big Thicket has been described as one of the most biodiverse areas in the world, and a National Preserve was established there to attempt to protect the many plant and animal species within.
Geography
- "One's fondness for the area is hard to explain. It has no commanding peak or awesome gorge, no topographical feature of distinction. Its appeal is more subtle." - Big Thicket Legacy, University of Texas Press, 1977.
The terrain in the Big Thicket is unremarkable and offers none of the impressive views that many other National Parks and Preserves contain. The area lies on the flat coastal plain of Texas, and is crossed by numerous small streams.
The Big Thicket's geographical features are believed to have their origins with the Western Interior Seaway, an inland sea that covered much of North America during the Cretaceous period. Over time, water smoothed out the land along what is now Texas's coastline.
Many small towns are contained within the Big Thicket. Most of these towns developed in the late 19th century in support of the lumber industry, as evidenced by names like Lumberton and Woodville. As transportation through the area improved (including the construction of US 69 and 96), may of the towns slowly became suburbs of the much larger city of Beaumont to their south.
Biology
What the Big Thicket lacks in geography is made up for by the biodiversity contained within. During the most recent ice age, plant and animal species from many different biomes were found. Before their extinction, the Big Thicket was home to most species of North American megafauna.
Today the Big Thicket retains numerous species, and has been described as the "biological crossroads of North America" or the "American Ark". The area contains over 100 species of trees and shrubs, and is dominated by Longleaf Pine, which reaches heights of over 30 m (100 ft). One thousand species of flowering plant can also be found in the thicket, including 20 orchids and four types of carnivorous plant.
Animal life includes 300 species of migratory and nesting birds, many endangered or threatened. The thicket is also home to numerous reptile species, including all four groups of venomous North American snakes and alligators.
National Preserve
The Big Thicket National Preserve is also located there, highlighting the area's natural resources. The 97,000 acre (390 km²) preserve boasts a varied ecology piney woods , swamps, and coastal prairies. Includes extremely diverse plant communities like, orchids, cactus, baldcypress, and pine in close proximity to each other. About 65,000 people visit it each year.
The preserve was established October 11, 1974, and was designated a Biosphere Reserve by UNESCO in 1981.
Ghost Road
A dirt road leading north out of the town of Saratoga is the core of the area's predominant ghost story. Bragg Road, as it is more formally known, was constructed in 1934 on the bed of a former railroad line that had serviced the lumber industry.
In the 1940s, stories began to circulate about a mysterious light that could be seen on and near the road at night. No adequate explanation of the light has been offered. The various ghost stories include reference to the Kaiser Burnout, long-dead conquistadors looking for their buried treasure, a decapitated railroad worker, and a lost night hunter eternally searching for a way out.
Less paranormal explanations include swamp gas, and automobile headlights filtering through the trees.
External links
Bragg Road - The Ghost Road of Hardin County]
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