Morgan–Monroe State Forest

Morgan–Monroe State Forest is a state forest in Morgan County and Monroe County of Indiana, and is the second largest state forest in Indiana. The 24,000 acres (97 km2) comprising this deciduous forest was abandoned farmland, as the previous residents realized that the land's rocky soil was very poor for agricultural purposes. In 1929 the state of Indiana purchased the land to prevent further erosion and to create the state forest.[1][2]

Morgan–Monroe State State Forest
Morgan-Monroe State Forest, June 2017
LocationMorgan County and Monroe County, Indiana, USA
Nearest cityMartinsville, Indiana
Coordinates39°19′16″N 86°24′48″W
Area24,000 acres (97.12 km2)
Established1929
Governing bodyIndiana Department of Natural Resources
www.in.gov/dnr/forestry/4816.htm

Indiana's first Civilian Conservation Corps camp was in Morgan–Monroe State Forest in May 1933.[3] The fire tower for the forest is no longer usable, but in 1999 was placed on the National Register of Historic Places.[4]

An AmeriFLUX/FLUXNET tower, for the purpose of measuring water, carbon dioxide, and heat levels in a mixed hardwood ecosystem, is located within the forest. This tower is maintained by Indiana University's Department of Geography.[5]

Recreation activities include four hiking trails. Hunting in the state forest is for deer, fox, ruffed grouse, raccoon, squirrel, and turkey. Another highlight is the Draper Cabin, which is one hundred years old and may be rented overnight.[6]

Cherry Lake is noted for its fishing. There are three lakes in the forest. One of the lakes, Beanblossum, is dry due to a dam failure in November 1993.

Morgan–Monroe State Forest, along with nearby Yellowwood State Forest, are among the very few places in Indiana where one can pan for gold, although a free permit is required first before doing any prospecting.[7]

Indiana University's Morgan-Monroe Observatory is located in the Morgan–Monroe State Forest.

Notes

gollark: They will switch to "constantly on at maximum power".
gollark: Except all this will inevitably offload to the C L O U D and fail when that goes down.
gollark: "It nanofabricates bread and toasts it before you even say you want bread!"
gollark: Especially if toasters later end up getting nanotech self repair mechanisms as well as, say, predictive toasting AI.
gollark: "What if we take this toaster... and make it *cloud*."

References

  • Kobrowski, Nicole Encyclopedia of Haunted Indiana 1st Ed. ISBN 978-0-9774130-2-7
  • Indiana DNR page
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