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Beaver Creek Valley State Park
IUCN Category V (Protected Landscape/Seascape)
East Beaver Creek, a spring-fed a trout stream, has carved the narrow Beaver Creek Valley.
East Beaver Creek, a spring-fed a trout stream, has carved the narrow Beaver Creek Valley.
Location Minnesota, USA
Nearest city Caledonia, Minnesota
Area 1187 acres (4.8 km²)
Established 1937
Visitors 45,474 (in 2000)
Governing body Minnesota DNR

Beaver Creek Valley State Park is a 1,187 acre (4.8 km²) Minnesota state park near the town of Caledonia. The park features a steep, narrow valley carved by East Beaver Creek, a spring-fed trout stream. In places the valley is 250 feet deep. The historic Schech Mill, a working nineteenth century gristmill, is privately owned and operated within the state park.

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[edit] Natural history

Between 500 and 450 million years ago shallow inland seas covered the region. Sediment built up into a layer called Oneota dolomite followed by a layer called Jordan sandstone, followed by a second layer of dolomite.[1] Today the Jordan sandstone forms the walls of the valley while the upper layer of dolomite caps the ridges. Both types of rock are water-permeable, resulting in numerous springs.

The deep valley of East Beaver Creek is indicative of the Driftless Area. Whereas most of the American Midwest was blanketed with till, or drift, by three successive ice ages, the Driftless Area remained ice-free. Therefore streams and rivers have had a longer time to cut into their beds, eroding deep valleys and leaving high ridges.

East Beaver Creek, which joins with West Beaver Creek at the north end of the park, is in the drainage system of the Root River. Flash flooding can occur after heavy rainfall. The creek supports a naturally-occurring population of brown trout (unlike those trout streams which are created by fish stocking).

Within the valley the vegetation is comprised of bottomland hardwoods such as black ash, willow, box elder, cottonwood, and elm. Higher on the valley walls and on the flat ground beyond the the forest is a mix of maple, walnut, basswood, and oak. Some south and west-facing slopes bear remnant prairie patches.[1]

The park attracts some uncommon bird species, such as the Acadian flycatcher and the Louisiana waterthrush.

[edit] Cultural history

A Native American village was once located in Beaver Creek Valley, as indicated by archaeological field surveys. Some prehistoric stone tools have been found.[1]

Later Europeans homesteaded the area, attracted by rich farming soil, hardwood lumber, and streams conducive to milling.[2] One mill, the Schech Mill was built in 1876.

Beaver Creek Valley was proposed as a state park in the 1930s, and acquisition of the privately-owned lots began in 1936. The park was authorized by the Minnesota Legislature the following year. Over the next decade workers built the entrance road, flood control structures, a picnic ground, trails, and the campground. The boundaries of the park were extended in the late 1960s out of concern that landowners along the blufftops might cut the timber, causing erosion. However few owners were willing to sell these lots, as most of it was good farmland which, moreover, wouldn't be easily accessible to parkgoers on the valley floor. In the face of anti-expansion sentiment, the 1978 state legislature redrew the statutory boundaries of the park to include only state-owned land. A provision remains by which additional acreage could be acquired from willing sellers.[3]

[edit] Recreation

Fishing for brown trout is a popular activity in Beaver Creek Valley State Park. Trophy specimens of 16 inches or more have been caught.[1] Because the valley is so narrow, the campground sites are staggered on either side of the park road. There are 42 drive-in sites (16 with electrical hookups), 6 walk-in sites, a camper cabin, and at the end of the park road 3 group camp sites. There are 8 miles of hiking trails.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Beaver Creek Valley State Park. State of Minnesota, Department of Natural Resources (April 2006). Retrieved on 2008-01-16.
  2. ^ Beaver Creek Valley State Park. Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (2008). Retrieved on 2008-01-23.
  3. ^ Meyer, Roy W. Everyone's Country Estate: A History of Minnesota's State Parks. Minnesota Historical Society Press: St. Paul, 1991.

[edit] External links