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Cross Timbers

The term Cross Timbers, also known as Ecoregion 29, Central Oklahoma/Texas Plains, is used to describe a strip of land in the United States that runs from southeastern Kansas across Central Oklahoma to Central Texas.[1] Made up of a mix of prairie, savanna, and woodland,[2][3] it forms part of the boundary between the more heavily forested eastern country and the almost treeless Great Plains,[2][3][4] and also marks the western habitat limit of many mammals and insects.[2]

Cross Timbers
The outline of the Cross Timbers as defined by the EPA
Ecology
RealmNearctic
BiomeCentral forest-grasslands transition
Borders
Geography
CountryUnited States
States
  • Texas
  • Oklahoma
  • Kansas

No major metropolitan areas lie wholly within the Cross Timbers, although roughly the western half of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex does, including the cities of Fort Worth, Denton, Arlington, and Weatherford.[3] The western suburbs of the Tulsa metropolitan area and the northeastern suburbs of the Oklahoma City metropolitan area also lie within this area.[2] The main highways that cross the region are I-35 and I-35W going north to south (although they tend to skirt the Cross Timbers' eastern fringe south of Fort Worth) and I-40 going east to west. Numerous U.S. Highways also cross the area.[2][3] I-35 means a portion of Austin and Travis County is also included in the Cross Timbers.[1]

As an ecoregion edit

The Cross Timbers are defined by the United States Environmental Protection Agency as Ecoregion 29, a Level III ecoregion. Some organizations and maps refer to the Cross Timbers ecoregion as the Central Oklahoma/Texas Plains.[4] The Cross Timbers are contained within the WWF central forest-grasslands transition ecoregion.

The woodland and savanna portions of the Cross Timbers are mainly post oak and blackjack oak on coarse, sandy soils;[4] fire suppression in recent years has increased forest density and allowed eastern redcedar to invade as well. The short, stout oaks that grow in the Cross Timbers were not usable as timber, and those that were not cleared for farmland constitute one of the least disturbed forest types in the eastern United States (MADISON), with some 890,000 acres (3,600 km2) of old-growth forest scattered throughout the region.[5] These old-growth forests contain millions of post oak from 200 to 400 years old and red cedar over 500 years old.[5] The prairie portions are chiefly tallgrass on finer, dry soils.[2] Overall, the Cross Timbers are not as arable as the surrounding ecoregions.[3] Today, land use is a mixture of rangeland, pastures, and farmland.[2] The area has also been an important site of oil extraction for over 80 years.[3]

Geologically speaking, the Cross Timbers are underlain by Pennsylvanian and Cretaceous-era sandstone and limestone that has been moderately dissected, giving the region a gently to moderately rolling topography,[3][4] including some cuestas.[2] Although local relief is relatively low, it is generally greater than that in the surrounding ecoregions, although this is not the case with the Flint Hills in Kansas.[4]

Ecologically, the EPA includes the Cross Timbers as part of the vast Great Plains, which comprise Level I Ecoregion 9.0, stretching from central Alberta in Canada to northern Mexico.[6] More specifically, the Cross Timbers fall into Level II Ecoregion 9.4, the smaller South Central Semi-Arid Plains.[7] In southern Oklahoma, the Cross Timbers are located on the very edge of the Great Plains, as they border directly parts of Level I Ecoregion 8.0, the Eastern Temperate Forests; elsewhere, the Cross Timbers are separated slightly from the Eastern Temperate Forests.[2] In turn, the Cross Timbers are themselves subdivided into nine Level IV Ecoregions:

29a: Northern Cross Timbers edit

This is a wide belt of land stretching from south-central Oklahoma into southeastern Kansas and is the only part of the Cross Timbers that extends into Kansas. In that state, it covers eastern Chautauqua and Elk counties and smaller portions of Greenwood, Woodson, Wilson, and Montgomery counties, while in Oklahoma, this region covers all of Seminole, Pottawatomie, and Okfuskee counties, large parts of Osage, Lincoln, Creek, Oklahoma, Cleveland, Pontotoc, Hughes, McIntosh, and Okmulgee counties, and smaller parts of Logan, Garvin, Murray, Pawnee, Tulsa, Wagoner, and Washington counties. The towns of Sand Springs, Sapulpa, Ada, and Shawnee, Oklahoma fall within this large area; Bartlesville and Okmulgee lie on the eastern edge.[2][4]

29b: Eastern Cross Timbers edit

In Oklahoma, this belt of woodland covers all of Marshall County and parts of Love, Carter, Johnston, and Bryan counties, but in Texas, this region exists as a long, very narrow strip of dense forest stretching from the Red River to just north of Waco, Texas. It passes through northwestern Grayson County, eastern Cooke, Denton and Tarrant counties, central Johnson County, western Hill County, and northern McClennan County. The city of Arlington, Texas lies within this zone, and Denton and Cleburne are on its eastern edge.[2][8]

29c: Western Cross Timbers edit

 
A landscape in eastern Jack County, Texas, typical of the Western Cross Timbers

A much wider band than the Eastern Cross Timbers, the Western Cross Timbers band extends from far southern Oklahoma, including parts of Love and Carter counties, into central Texas, where it covers large parts of Montague, Young, Jack, Wise, Stephens, Palo Pinto, Parker, Eastland, Erath, Brown, San Saba, and Mills counties, as well as smaller parts of Clay, Cooke, Callahan, Hood, Coleman, and McCulloch counties. In Texas, this area includes the towns of Weatherford and Mineral Wells; Stephenville lies on the eastern fringe, while Brownwood is on the western edge.[2][8]

The part of this region north of I-20 is sometimes colloquially referred to as the Palo Pinto Mountains;[9][10][11] the hills are isolated, rugged, and scenic, with spectacular bluffs along the Brazos River as it flows through the region.[9][10][12]

Coal mining has historically been an important activity, as bituminous coal deposits are found throughout the region;[13] indeed, the town of Newcastle in Young County was named after the English city of the same name due to the coal connection.[14]

In the mid-to-late 19th century, Comanche Indians occupied this area, and it became a flash point for conflict between various groups of white settlers, the Comanche, and the U.S. Cavalry; Forts Belknap and Richardson were built in the area to protect this part of the frontier.[15]

Numerous roads cross this region, including US 70 in Oklahoma and I-20, I-30, US 67, US 81, US 82, US 180, US 183, US 281, US 287, and US 380 in Texas.

29d: Grand Prairie edit

A fairly narrow strip dividing the Eastern and Western Cross Timbers, the Grand Prairie differs in physiography, topography, and land use from both of these, as it is much more nearly level and better suited to agriculture.[2] It includes a small part of Love County, Oklahoma (the only part of this region outside of Texas) and passes south through western Cooke County, eastern Wise County, and western Denton, Tarrant, and Johnson counties, and also includes parts of Parker, Erath, Hood, Somervell, Hill, and McLennan counties. This region contains the cities of Fort Worth, Granbury and Denton, although Denton lies on the border with the Eastern Cross Timbers.[8] I-35 and I-35W cross north to south, while US 82, US 380, I-30, I-20, US 377, and US 67 cross east to west; US 81 and US 287 also cross southwest to northeast.

29e: Limestone Cut Plains edit

A broader, southern extension of the Grand Prairie, found only in Texas; it is underlain by limestone rather than sandstone, and serves as a physiological and vegetational transition to the Edwards Plateau, which it borders to the south. All of Hamilton and Coryell counties, large parts of Bell, Lampasas, Mills, Erath, and Bosque counties, and smaller parts of Williamson, Burnet, Brown, Comanche, Hood, Somervell, and McLennan counties, including the towns of Killeen, Copperas Cove, and Lampasas as well as the Fort Cavazos Army base, fall within this region.[8] Among the few major roads that cross the Limestone Cut Plains are US 281 north to south and US 84 east to west.

29f: Carbonate Cross Timbers edit

This ecoregion exists as an enclave within the Western Cross Timbers, stretching from southern Jack County, Texas across northwestern Palo Pinto County into eastern Stephens County, as well as tiny parts of Young and Eastland counties. The region features a limestone substrate as opposed to sandstone, and has greater topographical relief and denser and different vegetation than other parts of the Cross Timbers. No towns of any size lie within this area, although Possum Kingdom Lake and State Park do;[8] the region is crossed by US 180 and Texas State Highway 16.

29g: Arbuckle Uplift edit

Covering a fairly small area in south-central Oklahoma and underlain by a unique mosaic of several different minerals, this region includes the town of Ardmore.[2]

29h: Northwestern Cross Timbers edit

An extension in two branches of the Cross Timbers into southwestern Oklahoma, this area features reduced tree density and height, but also small forests dominated by sugar maple, bur oak, and live oak in deeper river canyons. The towns of Duncan, Oklahoma and Walters, Oklahoma, lie in this region.[2]

29i: Arbuckle Mountains edit

The Arbuckle Mountains are located in a small area nestled in between regions 29g and h; it is made of folded, rather than dissected, limestone, sandstone, and dolomite, and features the greatest topographical relief of the entire Cross Timbers, though not the highest elevations. The landscape includes many caves, sinkholes, springs, and streams.[2] I-35 crosses this region north to south.

Climatology edit

Part of the difference in the Cross Timbers region and the surrounding regions west (drier) and east (wetter) has to do with the dry line which separates humid air from the Gulf of Mexico from the dry air of the Llano Estacado, the Texas Panhandle, and the High Plains.

History edit

The thick growth formed an almost impenetrable barrier for early American explorers and travelers. Washington Irving, in 1835, described it as "like struggling through forests of cast iron."[16] Rachel Plummer, while a captive of the Comanche in 1836, described it as "a range of timber-land from the waters of Arkansas, bearing a southwest direction, crossing the False Ouachita, Red River, the heads of Sabine, Angelina, Natchitoches, Trinity, Brazos, Colorado...the range of timber is of an irregular width, say 5 to 35 miles wide...abounding with small prairies, skirted with timber of various kinds — oak, of every description, ash, elm, hickory, walnut and mulberry...the purest atmosphere I ever breathed was that of these regions."[17] Josiah Gregg described the Cross Timbers in 1845 as varying in width from five to thirty miles and attributed their denseness to the continual burning of the prairies.[18]

The Cross Timbers vary in width from five to thirty miles, and entirely cut off the communication betwixt the interior prairies and those of the great plains. They may be considered as the "fringe" of the great prairies, being a continuous brushy strip, composed of various kinds of undergrowth; such as black-jack, post-oaks, and in some places hickory, elm, etc., intermixed with a very diminutive dwarf oak, called by the hunters, "shin-oak." Most of the timber appears to be kept small by the continual inroads of the "burning prairies;" for, being killed almost annually, it is constantly replaced by scions of undergrowth; so that it becomes more and more dense every reproduction. In some places, however, the oaks are of considerable size, and able to withstand the conflagrations. The Underwood is so matted in many places with grapevines, green-briars, etc., as to form almost impenetrable "roughs," which serve as hiding-places for wild beasts, as well as wild Indians; and would, in savage warfare, prove almost as formidable as the hammocks of Florida.

— Josiah Gregg

Robert Neighbors and Rip Ford reached the "Cross Timbers, two parallel strips of timber region that ran down the middle of Texas", in 1849 while blazing an emigrant trail from Austin to El Paso.[19]: 116 

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • Anderson, Roger C., James S Fralish, Jerry M. Baskin (eds.). Savannas, Barrens, and Rock Outcrop Plant Communities of North America. Cambridge University Press, 1999. ISBN 0-521-57322-X
  • Francaviglia, Richard V. The Cast Iron Forest: A Natural and Cultural History of the North American Cross Timbers. University of Texas Press, 2000. ISBN 0-292-72515-9
  • Gregg, Josiah. "". Commerce of the Prairies. 1845. V. II, Ch. 10, pp. 199–201. (accessed June 19, 2007: hosted by )
  • Irving, Washington. A Tour on the Prairies, Chapter XXI. 1835.
  • Johnson, Neil R. (ed. C. Neil Kingsley). The Chickasaw Rancher. , 2001. ISBN 978-0-87081-635-2
  • McLeran, Vic. The Cooper's Hawk: A Cross Timbers Chronicle. Philadelphia: Xlibris Corporation, 2000. ISBN 0-7388-5935-4 and ISBN 0-7388-5934-6[self-published source?]

Further reading edit

  • Dale, Edward Everett. The Cross Timbers: Memories of a North Texas Boyhood. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1966. ISBN 0-292-73611-8
  • Roach, Joyce. Wild Rose: A Folk History of a Cross Timbers Settlement, Keller, Texas. Denton, TX: University of North Texas Press, 1996. ISBN 0-89865-972-8

References edit

  1. ^ a b (Map). Environmental Protection Agency. Archived from the original on 2008-04-08. Retrieved 2008-09-24.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Ecoregions of Oklahoma (PDF) (Map). Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved 2008-09-24.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Ecoregions of Texas (PDF) (Map). Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved 2008-09-24.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Ecoregions of Nebraska and Kansas (PDF) (Map). Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved 2008-09-24.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ a b . University of Arkansas Tree-Ring Laboratory. Archived from the original on 2013-06-23. Retrieved 2009-02-01.
  6. ^ "Ecological Regions of North America Level I" (PDF). Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved 2008-10-07.
  7. ^ (PDF). Environmental Protection Agency. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-05-25. Retrieved 2008-10-07.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Descriptions of the Level IV Ecoregions of Texas" (PDF). Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved 2008-09-24.[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ a b Hodge, Larry; Syers, Ed (2000). "Backroads of Texas" (4th ed.). Lanham, MD: Lone Star Books. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. ^ a b "TPWD: An Analysis of Texas Waterways (PWD RP T-3200 1047) – Brazos River". Retrieved 2008-08-22.
  11. ^ "Mineral Wells, TX". Retrieved 2008-08-22.
  12. ^ Lively, Jeanne F. (June 15, 2010). Metcalf Gap, TX. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |work= ignored (help)
  13. ^ Garner, L. Edwin (June 15, 2010). Mineral Resources and Mining. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |work= ignored (help)
  14. ^ Hunt, William R. (June 15, 2010). Newcastle, TX. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |work= ignored (help)
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-09-04. Retrieved 2008-08-22.
  16. ^ Irving, A Tour on the Prairies, Ch. 21.
  17. ^ Plummer, R., Narrative of the Capture and Subsequent Sufferings of Mrs. Rachel Plummer, 1839
  18. ^ Gregg, Commerce of the Prairies, V. II, Ch. 10, p. 200
  19. ^ Ford, J.S., 1963, Rip Ford's Texas. Austin: University of Texas Press, ISBN 0292770340

External links edit

  • Texas counties map showing the ecoregion
  • Texas counties map showing the ecoregion; similar to the above map
  • This collection by wildflower.org lists native plants local to the Texas part of 29.
  • https://www.epa.gov/eco-research/ecoregion-download-files-state-region-6#pane-41 Under "Texas." 4 maps contain additional information on Cross Timbers, such as which plants grow in the level IV ecoregions. The maps have county borders but no names; however, they detail rivers, lakes, and major cities, and contain photographs. There is also a Texas ecoregion report PDF which describes Cross Timbers vegetation and other features in much more detail than the maps. Under "Oklahoma," there is no ecoregion report PDF yet but more details are contained in the 4 PDF maps.
  • https://www.epa.gov/eco-research/ecoregion-download-files-state-region-7#pane-14 Under "Kansas," there is no ecoregion report PDF yet but more details are contained in the 4 map PDFs.
  • https://www.plantmaps.com/ Entering a Zip code reveals which of the level IV ecoregions it falls under.
  • Cross Timbers Historic Images Project–Texas
  • Hoagland, Bruce W. (2009). "Cross Timbers". Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture (online ed.). Oklahoma Historical Society.

34°00′N 97°15′W / 34.000°N 97.250°W / 34.000; -97.250

cross, timbers, city, hickory, county, missouri, missouri, term, also, known, ecoregion, central, oklahoma, texas, plains, used, describe, strip, land, united, states, that, runs, from, southeastern, kansas, across, central, oklahoma, central, texas, made, pra. For the city in Hickory County Missouri see Cross Timbers Missouri The term Cross Timbers also known as Ecoregion 29 Central Oklahoma Texas Plains is used to describe a strip of land in the United States that runs from southeastern Kansas across Central Oklahoma to Central Texas 1 Made up of a mix of prairie savanna and woodland 2 3 it forms part of the boundary between the more heavily forested eastern country and the almost treeless Great Plains 2 3 4 and also marks the western habitat limit of many mammals and insects 2 Cross TimbersThe outline of the Cross Timbers as defined by the EPAEcologyRealmNearcticBiomeCentral forest grasslands transitionBordersList Central Great PlainsFlint HillsCentral Irregular PlainsArkansas Valley ecoregion Texas Blackland PrairiesGeographyCountryUnited StatesStatesTexasOklahomaKansasNo major metropolitan areas lie wholly within the Cross Timbers although roughly the western half of the Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex does including the cities of Fort Worth Denton Arlington and Weatherford 3 The western suburbs of the Tulsa metropolitan area and the northeastern suburbs of the Oklahoma City metropolitan area also lie within this area 2 The main highways that cross the region are I 35 and I 35W going north to south although they tend to skirt the Cross Timbers eastern fringe south of Fort Worth and I 40 going east to west Numerous U S Highways also cross the area 2 3 I 35 means a portion of Austin and Travis County is also included in the Cross Timbers 1 Contents 1 As an ecoregion 1 1 29a Northern Cross Timbers 1 2 29b Eastern Cross Timbers 1 3 29c Western Cross Timbers 1 4 29d Grand Prairie 1 5 29e Limestone Cut Plains 1 6 29f Carbonate Cross Timbers 1 7 29g Arbuckle Uplift 1 8 29h Northwestern Cross Timbers 1 9 29i Arbuckle Mountains 2 Climatology 3 History 4 See also 5 Bibliography 6 Further reading 7 References 8 External linksAs an ecoregion editThe Cross Timbers are defined by the United States Environmental Protection Agency as Ecoregion 29 a Level III ecoregion Some organizations and maps refer to the Cross Timbers ecoregion as the Central Oklahoma Texas Plains 4 The Cross Timbers are contained within the WWF central forest grasslands transition ecoregion The woodland and savanna portions of the Cross Timbers are mainly post oak and blackjack oak on coarse sandy soils 4 fire suppression in recent years has increased forest density and allowed eastern redcedar to invade as well The short stout oaks that grow in the Cross Timbers were not usable as timber and those that were not cleared for farmland constitute one of the least disturbed forest types in the eastern United States MADISON with some 890 000 acres 3 600 km2 of old growth forest scattered throughout the region 5 These old growth forests contain millions of post oak from 200 to 400 years old and red cedar over 500 years old 5 The prairie portions are chiefly tallgrass on finer dry soils 2 Overall the Cross Timbers are not as arable as the surrounding ecoregions 3 Today land use is a mixture of rangeland pastures and farmland 2 The area has also been an important site of oil extraction for over 80 years 3 Geologically speaking the Cross Timbers are underlain by Pennsylvanian and Cretaceous era sandstone and limestone that has been moderately dissected giving the region a gently to moderately rolling topography 3 4 including some cuestas 2 Although local relief is relatively low it is generally greater than that in the surrounding ecoregions although this is not the case with the Flint Hills in Kansas 4 Ecologically the EPA includes the Cross Timbers as part of the vast Great Plains which comprise Level I Ecoregion 9 0 stretching from central Alberta in Canada to northern Mexico 6 More specifically the Cross Timbers fall into Level II Ecoregion 9 4 the smaller South Central Semi Arid Plains 7 In southern Oklahoma the Cross Timbers are located on the very edge of the Great Plains as they border directly parts of Level I Ecoregion 8 0 the Eastern Temperate Forests elsewhere the Cross Timbers are separated slightly from the Eastern Temperate Forests 2 In turn the Cross Timbers are themselves subdivided into nine Level IV Ecoregions 29a Northern Cross Timbers edit This is a wide belt of land stretching from south central Oklahoma into southeastern Kansas and is the only part of the Cross Timbers that extends into Kansas In that state it covers eastern Chautauqua and Elk counties and smaller portions of Greenwood Woodson Wilson and Montgomery counties while in Oklahoma this region covers all of Seminole Pottawatomie and Okfuskee counties large parts of Osage Lincoln Creek Oklahoma Cleveland Pontotoc Hughes McIntosh and Okmulgee counties and smaller parts of Logan Garvin Murray Pawnee Tulsa Wagoner and Washington counties The towns of Sand Springs Sapulpa Ada and Shawnee Oklahoma fall within this large area Bartlesville and Okmulgee lie on the eastern edge 2 4 29b Eastern Cross Timbers edit In Oklahoma this belt of woodland covers all of Marshall County and parts of Love Carter Johnston and Bryan counties but in Texas this region exists as a long very narrow strip of dense forest stretching from the Red River to just north of Waco Texas It passes through northwestern Grayson County eastern Cooke Denton and Tarrant counties central Johnson County western Hill County and northern McClennan County The city of Arlington Texas lies within this zone and Denton and Cleburne are on its eastern edge 2 8 29c Western Cross Timbers edit nbsp A landscape in eastern Jack County Texas typical of the Western Cross TimbersA much wider band than the Eastern Cross Timbers the Western Cross Timbers band extends from far southern Oklahoma including parts of Love and Carter counties into central Texas where it covers large parts of Montague Young Jack Wise Stephens Palo Pinto Parker Eastland Erath Brown San Saba and Mills counties as well as smaller parts of Clay Cooke Callahan Hood Coleman and McCulloch counties In Texas this area includes the towns of Weatherford and Mineral Wells Stephenville lies on the eastern fringe while Brownwood is on the western edge 2 8 The part of this region north of I 20 is sometimes colloquially referred to as the Palo Pinto Mountains 9 10 11 the hills are isolated rugged and scenic with spectacular bluffs along the Brazos River as it flows through the region 9 10 12 Coal mining has historically been an important activity as bituminous coal deposits are found throughout the region 13 indeed the town of Newcastle in Young County was named after the English city of the same name due to the coal connection 14 In the mid to late 19th century Comanche Indians occupied this area and it became a flash point for conflict between various groups of white settlers the Comanche and the U S Cavalry Forts Belknap and Richardson were built in the area to protect this part of the frontier 15 Numerous roads cross this region including US 70 in Oklahoma and I 20 I 30 US 67 US 81 US 82 US 180 US 183 US 281 US 287 and US 380 in Texas 29d Grand Prairie edit A fairly narrow strip dividing the Eastern and Western Cross Timbers the Grand Prairie differs in physiography topography and land use from both of these as it is much more nearly level and better suited to agriculture 2 It includes a small part of Love County Oklahoma the only part of this region outside of Texas and passes south through western Cooke County eastern Wise County and western Denton Tarrant and Johnson counties and also includes parts of Parker Erath Hood Somervell Hill and McLennan counties This region contains the cities of Fort Worth Granbury and Denton although Denton lies on the border with the Eastern Cross Timbers 8 I 35 and I 35W cross north to south while US 82 US 380 I 30 I 20 US 377 and US 67 cross east to west US 81 and US 287 also cross southwest to northeast 29e Limestone Cut Plains edit A broader southern extension of the Grand Prairie found only in Texas it is underlain by limestone rather than sandstone and serves as a physiological and vegetational transition to the Edwards Plateau which it borders to the south All of Hamilton and Coryell counties large parts of Bell Lampasas Mills Erath and Bosque counties and smaller parts of Williamson Burnet Brown Comanche Hood Somervell and McLennan counties including the towns of Killeen Copperas Cove and Lampasas as well as the Fort Cavazos Army base fall within this region 8 Among the few major roads that cross the Limestone Cut Plains are US 281 north to south and US 84 east to west 29f Carbonate Cross Timbers edit This ecoregion exists as an enclave within the Western Cross Timbers stretching from southern Jack County Texas across northwestern Palo Pinto County into eastern Stephens County as well as tiny parts of Young and Eastland counties The region features a limestone substrate as opposed to sandstone and has greater topographical relief and denser and different vegetation than other parts of the Cross Timbers No towns of any size lie within this area although Possum Kingdom Lake and State Park do 8 the region is crossed by US 180 and Texas State Highway 16 29g Arbuckle Uplift edit Covering a fairly small area in south central Oklahoma and underlain by a unique mosaic of several different minerals this region includes the town of Ardmore 2 29h Northwestern Cross Timbers edit An extension in two branches of the Cross Timbers into southwestern Oklahoma this area features reduced tree density and height but also small forests dominated by sugar maple bur oak and live oak in deeper river canyons The towns of Duncan Oklahoma and Walters Oklahoma lie in this region 2 29i Arbuckle Mountains edit The Arbuckle Mountains are located in a small area nestled in between regions 29g and h it is made of folded rather than dissected limestone sandstone and dolomite and features the greatest topographical relief of the entire Cross Timbers though not the highest elevations The landscape includes many caves sinkholes springs and streams 2 I 35 crosses this region north to south Climatology editPart of the difference in the Cross Timbers region and the surrounding regions west drier and east wetter has to do with the dry line which separates humid air from the Gulf of Mexico from the dry air of the Llano Estacado the Texas Panhandle and the High Plains History editThe thick growth formed an almost impenetrable barrier for early American explorers and travelers Washington Irving in 1835 described it as like struggling through forests of cast iron 16 Rachel Plummer while a captive of the Comanche in 1836 described it as a range of timber land from the waters of Arkansas bearing a southwest direction crossing the False Ouachita Red River the heads of Sabine Angelina Natchitoches Trinity Brazos Colorado the range of timber is of an irregular width say 5 to 35 miles wide abounding with small prairies skirted with timber of various kinds oak of every description ash elm hickory walnut and mulberry the purest atmosphere I ever breathed was that of these regions 17 Josiah Gregg described the Cross Timbers in 1845 as varying in width from five to thirty miles and attributed their denseness to the continual burning of the prairies 18 The Cross Timbers vary in width from five to thirty miles and entirely cut off the communication betwixt the interior prairies and those of the great plains They may be considered as the fringe of the great prairies being a continuous brushy strip composed of various kinds of undergrowth such as black jack post oaks and in some places hickory elm etc intermixed with a very diminutive dwarf oak called by the hunters shin oak Most of the timber appears to be kept small by the continual inroads of the burning prairies for being killed almost annually it is constantly replaced by scions of undergrowth so that it becomes more and more dense every reproduction In some places however the oaks are of considerable size and able to withstand the conflagrations The Underwood is so matted in many places with grapevines green briars etc as to form almost impenetrable roughs which serve as hiding places for wild beasts as well as wild Indians and would in savage warfare prove almost as formidable as the hammocks of Florida Josiah Gregg Robert Neighbors and Rip Ford reached the Cross Timbers two parallel strips of timber region that ran down the middle of Texas in 1849 while blazing an emigrant trail from Austin to El Paso 19 116 See also editDry line History of Texas forestsBibliography editAnderson Roger C James S Fralish Jerry M Baskin eds Savannas Barrens and Rock Outcrop Plant Communities of North America Cambridge University Press 1999 ISBN 0 521 57322 X Francaviglia Richard V The Cast Iron Forest A Natural and Cultural History of the North American Cross Timbers University of Texas Press 2000 ISBN 0 292 72515 9 Gregg Josiah The Cross Timbers Commerce of the Prairies 1845 V II Ch 10 pp 199 201 accessed June 19 2007 hosted by The Kansas Collection Irving Washington A Tour on the Prairies Chapter XXI 1835 Johnson Neil R ed C Neil Kingsley The Chickasaw Rancher University Press of Colorado 2001 ISBN 978 0 87081 635 2 McLeran Vic The Cooper s Hawk A Cross Timbers Chronicle Philadelphia Xlibris Corporation 2000 ISBN 0 7388 5935 4 and ISBN 0 7388 5934 6 self published source Further reading editDale Edward Everett The Cross Timbers Memories of a North Texas Boyhood Austin TX University of Texas Press 1966 ISBN 0 292 73611 8 Roach Joyce Wild Rose A Folk History of a Cross Timbers Settlement Keller Texas Denton TX University of North Texas Press 1996 ISBN 0 89865 972 8References edit a b Level III Ecoregions of the Coterminous United States Map Environmental Protection Agency Archived from the original on 2008 04 08 Retrieved 2008 09 24 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Ecoregions of Oklahoma PDF Map Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved 2008 09 24 permanent dead link a b c d e f g Ecoregions of Texas PDF Map Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved 2008 09 24 a b c d e f Ecoregions of Nebraska and Kansas PDF Map Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved 2008 09 24 permanent dead link a b Map of the Ancient Cross Timbers University of Arkansas Tree Ring Laboratory Archived from the original on 2013 06 23 Retrieved 2009 02 01 Ecological Regions of North America Level I PDF Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved 2008 10 07 Ecological Regions of North America Level I II PDF Environmental Protection Agency Archived from the original PDF on 2017 05 25 Retrieved 2008 10 07 a b c d e Descriptions of the Level IV Ecoregions of Texas PDF Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved 2008 09 24 permanent dead link a b Hodge Larry Syers Ed 2000 Backroads of Texas 4th ed Lanham MD Lone Star Books a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b TPWD An Analysis of Texas Waterways PWD RP T 3200 1047 Brazos River Retrieved 2008 08 22 Mineral Wells TX Retrieved 2008 08 22 Lively Jeanne F June 15 2010 Metcalf Gap TX a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a work ignored help Garner L Edwin June 15 2010 Mineral Resources and Mining a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a work ignored help Hunt William R June 15 2010 Newcastle TX a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a work ignored help Brazos River Canyonlands The Brazos River Archived from the original on 2009 09 04 Retrieved 2008 08 22 Irving A Tour on the Prairies Ch 21 Plummer R Narrative of the Capture and Subsequent Sufferings of Mrs Rachel Plummer 1839 Gregg Commerce of the Prairies V II Ch 10 p 200 Ford J S 1963 Rip Ford s Texas Austin University of Texas Press ISBN 0292770340External links editThe Ancient Cross Timbers Consortium Map of Cross Timbers Texas counties map showing the ecoregion Texas counties map showing the ecoregion similar to the above map This collection by wildflower org lists native plants local to the Texas part of 29 https www epa gov eco research ecoregion download files state region 6 pane 41 Under Texas 4 maps contain additional information on Cross Timbers such as which plants grow in the level IV ecoregions The maps have county borders but no names however they detail rivers lakes and major cities and contain photographs There is also a Texas ecoregion report PDF which describes Cross Timbers vegetation and other features in much more detail than the maps Under Oklahoma there is no ecoregion report PDF yet but more details are contained in the 4 PDF maps https www epa gov eco research ecoregion download files state region 7 pane 14 Under Kansas there is no ecoregion report PDF yet but more details are contained in the 4 map PDFs https www plantmaps com Entering a Zip code reveals which of the level IV ecoregions it falls under Cross Timbers Historic Images Project Texas Hoagland Bruce W 2009 Cross Timbers Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture online ed Oklahoma Historical Society Oklahoma Digital Maps Digital Collections of Oklahoma and Indian Territory 34 00 N 97 15 W 34 000 N 97 250 W 34 000 97 250 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cross Timbers amp oldid 1184391450, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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