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Mount Rushmore National MemorialSample of Honeycomb rock on display in the Lincoln Borglum Museum at Mount Rushmore National Memorial
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Mount Rushmore National Memorial
Nature & Science
 

There is more to Mount Rushmore than meets the eye, use all five of your senses to discover the little known wonders hidden below the sculpture of the four presidents. Mount Rushmore is located in the scenic Black Hills of South Dakota. The Black Hills are also called the "Island in the Prairie," because they are an island of granitic hills surrounded by a prairie sea.

Take your time and view the great biological diversity that Mount Rushmore offers. On a typical day you might see several different species of wildflowers, deer, mountain goats, chipmunks and turkey vultures.

You can learn more about nature's diversity at Mount Rushmore by clicking on the above links.

Want to learn more about Nature and Science in your National Parks? more...

Mount Rushmore Chipmunk
Park Wildlife Information
(881 kb pdf)
more...
Rock Block Monitoring System
Caring for a Monumental Sculpture
(1.78 mb pdf)
more...
Did You Know?  

Did You Know?
Mountain Goats are not native to the Black Hills? The population can be traced back to six goats, a gift to Custer State Park by Canada in 1924, that escaped from their pens and found their home among the Black Hills granite peaks. There are now approximately 200 mountain goats in the area.

Last Updated: December 10, 2006 at 16:47 EST