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Effigy Mounds National MonumentMarching Bear Mound Group
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Effigy Mounds National Monument
Plants
Nature and Science
Goat prairie overlooking Mississippi River Valley
The monument is in a transition zone of several vegetation communities. The microclimates produced from the north-facing slopes and the influence of the river valley provide habitat for a mixture of plants found nowhere else in Iowa. The prehistoric vegetation on the monument’s uplands was a forest dominated by sugar maple and basswood, with scattered prairie openings on the ridgetops and bluff edges. Current vegetation types are probably similar to those of the mound-building period, with the majority of the uplands and bluffs being forested. However, exotic grasses and pockets of prairie species now dominate openings, and pioneer species of shrubs, saplings, and small trees are gradually encroaching into the openings. The monument was created from the acquisition of private land that had been farmed and logged altering the native vegetation mosaic. Results of monument vegetation surveys combined with information from federal land surveys show that a mosaic of forest, savanna, and prairie covered the monument. Prairie and savanna dominated ridges and south facing slopes. Forests dominated the north facing slopes and the river floodplains.
Great Bear Effigy Mound Group  

Did You Know?
In 1880, Alfred J. Hill and Theodore H. Lewis formed the Northwestern Archeological Survey for the purpose of surveying mounds in the Upper Mississippi Valley. Lewis spent eleven field seasons in Iowa and was the first to map mounds in the present Effigy Mounds National Monument.

Last Updated: July 31, 2006 at 10:56 EST