When I first moved out to Lubbock, Texas I wasn't sure what I was getting myself in for. I knew that the terrain would be flat but I had also heard stories that there is nothing to do here. While I have been living out here I have found plenty of things to do, including visits to the
Museum of Texas Tech and the
American Windpower Center (among others) within the city and trips further west to visit
several national parks. One of the places in Lubbock that came as a surprise to me was the
Lubbock Lake Landmark (LLL) (
Wikipedia article) [Photo at left of
Short Faced Bear, Arctodus simus, statue at the LLL]. The LLL is a primarily archaeological site that shows evidence of at least 12000 years of human civilization from
Clovis time to present. Well
an article in today's
Daily Toreador, the Texas Tech University student paper, talks about a new exhibit at the LLL that shows the animals that have been found at, or near, the site through time.
The exhibit includes surprising animals once living in Lubbock. The Hub City once was home to many exotic animals no longer found anywhere near Lubbock.
“Short-faced bears, sloths and camels all lived in Lubbock at one time or another,” [Susan] Rowe [education program manager of the LLL] said. “Many visitors are very surprised about camels once living in our area.”
I saw the exhibit a few weeks ago and while it is small it is really well done. Most of the animals they show are from the site itself but some of them have not been found on site but at a nearby site, about an hours drive, and a formation that underlies most of the landmark, the
Blancan Formation (yes the type locality for the
Blancan Land Mammal Age). Overall worth a couple of hours of your time if you are in Lubbock.
ok so I was removing dead flowers out of our garden when I pulled up a rock and I noticed it was strangely round. when I turned it over I was surprised to see some kind of star fish looking thing that still had a green pigment to it. I don't know who to show it to any suggestions.
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