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EVERGLADES SAFARI PARK EarthCache

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Hidden : 6/29/2010
Difficulty:
1 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   not chosen (not chosen)

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Geocache Description:




GC 2AZXA




GC 2AZXA  

Everglades  

Everglades Safari Park  

- Where the clouds meets the water 




















The original Everglades extended from the headwaters of the Kissimmee River,
south through Lake Okeechobee to the tip of Florida peninsula, just to the coastal ridge, and west
to Immokalee Ridge.

Everglades National Park:

Everglades National Park is a national park in the U.S. state of Florida
that protects the southern 25 percent of the original Everglades. It is the largest subtropical
wilderness in the United States, and is visited on average by one million people each year.
- It is the third-largest national park in the lower 48 states after Death Valley and Yellowstone.
- It has been declared an International Biosphere Reserve, a World Heritage Site, and a Wetland of
International Importance, only one of three locations in the world to appear on all three lists.

The Everglades National Park covers 1,509,000 acres and was created to protect a fragile ecosystem
instead of safeguarding a unique geographic feature. The Everglades are wetlands created by a
slow-moving river originating in Lake Okeechobee, fed by the Kissimmee River, and flowing southwest
at about 0.25 miles per day into Florida Bay.

The park protects an interconnected network of marshland and forest ecosystems that are maintained
by natural forces. Thirty-six species designated as threatened or protected live in the park,
including the Florida panther, the American crocodile, and the West Indian manatee.

The park contains the largest mangrove ecosystem in the western hemisphere.
All of South Florida's fresh water, which is stored in the Biscayne Aquifer, is recharged in the park.
The Evergaldes Safari Park itself is in the heart of the Evergaldes.


For many early pioneers, the Everglades was a vast wasteland whose potential could only be achieved by draining
the wetlands and covering them to more "usable" acreage. More than 700,000 acres of the original Everglades
immediately south of Lake Okeechobee were drained for agricultural usa and, later, urban and residential
development. What was once part of the Everglades now contains farmland.


Although humans have lived in the Everglades for thousands of years, not until 1882 did the region
begin to be drained for agricultural or residential use.
In the 20th century the natural water flow from Lake Okeechobee was controlled and diverted to the
explosive growth of the South Florida metropolitan area. 



Geology:  


The terrain of South Florida is relatively and consistently flat.
Although rock formations are not a central draw to Everglades National Park, the limestone that underlies
the Everglades is integral to the formation of the diverse ecosystems within the park.
Florida was once part of the African portion of the supercontinent Gondwana.
After it separated, conditions allowed a shallow marine environment to deposit calcium carbonate in sand,
shells, and coral to be converted into limestone.Tiny bits of shell, sand, and bryozoans compressed over
multiple layers forming unique structures in the limestone called ooids which created porous and permeable
conditions to hold water.

To explain:
Limestone is the porous, sedimentary rock you see in the Everglades.
These rocks are made of calcium and contain fossils of sea life, evidence of ancient seas that once covered
the area. The limestone aquifer under the Everglades acts as the principal water recharge area for all of
south Florida.

The Florida peninsula appeared above sea level between 100,000 and 15,000 years ago.
As sea levels at the end of the Wisconsin ice age rose, the water table appeared closer to land.
Lake Okeechobee began to flood and convection thunderstorms were created.
Vast peat deposits south of Lake Okeechobee indicate that regular flooding had occurred about 5,000 years
ago. Plants began to migrate, subtropical ones from the northern part of Florida, and tropicals carried as
seeds by birds from islands in the Caribbean.

Although the limestone shelf appears to be flat, there are slight rises—called innacles—and depressions
caused by the erosion of limestone by the acidic properties of the water.
The amount of time throughout the year that water is present in a location in the Everglades determines
the type of soil, of which there only two in the Everglades:

peat, created by many years of decomposing plant matter,

and

marl, the result of dried periphyton, or chunks of algae and microorganisms that create a grayish mud.

Portions of the Everglades that remain flooded for more than nine months out of the year are usually
covered by peat. Areas that are flooded six months or less are covered by marl. Plant communities are
determined by the type of soil and amount of water present.


The Ecosystems fresh water:

First: Freshwater Slough
A slough is a low-lying area of land that channels water through the Everglades.
These marshy rivers are relatively deep and remain flooded almost year-round.
Though they are the main avenue of waterflow, the current remains leisurely, moving only about 100 feet per day.
Dotted with tree-islands, the vast Everglades landscape channels life-giving waters from Lake Okeechobee southward.
Everglades National Park contains two distinct sloughs. On the west is the larger Shark River Slough,
also known as the "River of Grass."
The smaller, narrower Taylor Slough lies to the east of Shark River Slough.
Both sloughs discharge into Florida Bay. A series of other sloughs that flow through the Big Cypress Swamp supply
freshwater to western Florida Bay and the Ten Thousand Islands.


Second: Freshwater Marl Prairie

Large areas of freshwater marl prairie border the deeper sloughs of the Everglades.
These relatively short-hydroperiod marshes are typified by a diverse assemblage of low-growing vegetation.
A complex mixture of algae, bacteria, microbes, and detritus that is attached to submerged surfaces, periphyton
serves as an important food source for invertebrates, tadpoles, and some fish.
Periphyton is conspicuous and is the basis for the marl soils present.
The marl allows slow seepage of the water but not rapid drainage.
Though the sawgrass is not as tall and the water is not as deep, freshwater marl prairies look a lot like
freshwater sloughs. 











You can see several types of Mangrooves in the Everglades. 





There are only two seasons in the Everglades.

In the one every day it could give a thunderstorm




 


 


 


 


 



 



To log this cache 


1. To prove that you were at the everglades, take a picture of you or your gps in front of the sign
at the posted coords and upload this with your log. The posted coords are next to route 41 through the Everglades.
 





2. Send me an E-Mail with the answers of following questions: 


2.1 Where does the name "Everglades" comes from? 




2.2 Type the several types of mongrooves you can see in the Everglades and which types of them can live in salt water? 




2.3 What are the only two seasons that the Everglades experiences?


2.4 Look at the Alligator on the sign which has an hammer in its hand, please take your measuring tape scale it and tell me the messure of that hammer.


2.5 Look behind the big sign and tell me what difference you can see in that analogy.

2.6 From which kind of stone is the base of the sign? 


 



Waypoints: 


BG parking N 49° 45.651 / W 080° 37.547 




 



Additional Hints (No hints available.)