Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument America’s Best Idea: National Park Getaway

National Service Release

Wendy Janssen, Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument, Wendy_Janssen@nps.gov, 208-933-4110 Elise Cleva, NPS Headquarters, Elise_M_Cleva@nps.gov, 202-208-6843

November 4, 2009

Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument

’s Best Idea: National Getaway

HAGERMAN, – You might not believe it at first, but time travel is possible. Here in southern , you can find yourself back in the Pliocene Epoch, 3 to 4 million years from the current day. It’s right before the Ice Age, and you’re wandering in the midst of one-toed horses, sabertooth cats, mastodons, ground sloths, and camels. These and other creatures survive as fossils in the ’s collection.

You can view fossils at the visitor center in the town of Hagerman and then drive to the site where they were found. The trip into the moves you through millennia to the 19th century, when American pioneers headed west on the Trail. Traces of that famous route survive in the , which also offers a presentation on pioneers’ experiences.

Visiting the fossil beds themselves represents a little more chronological wayfaring. Entering the 20th century, you can imagine yourself in the shoes of the rancher who, in 1929, came across “bones” poking out of the desert. You can put yourself in the role of the paleontologists who arrived from the Smithsonian Institution to conduct digs—fruitful ones—for more “bones.”

After journeying in time, let the timeless landscape refresh you. Bluffs loom hundreds of feet above the River. Flat bluff-top trails and “bumpy” fields studded with melon gravels spread out before you. You can take a deep breath of clean desert air, savor the present moment, and reflect on the natural and human history in which you’ve sojourned at Hagerman Fossil Beds.

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