Brooks Bluff State Natural Area

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Brooks Bluff lies on the south-facing slope of an east-west tending mesa and contains oak barrens, an exceedingly rare community in Wisconsin. The bedrock is near the surface and is composed primarily of sandstone, although there is also a thin limestone cap. The bluff summit is mostly open with scattered oaks, white birch, and oldfield juniper. The oak barrens is dominated by grasses such as big and little blue-stem, Indian grass, needle grass, and grama grasses, and typical dry prairie forbs such as azure aster, four species of milkweed, prairie coreopsis, alumroot, sunflowers, rough blazing-star, wild lupine, wood betony, and goldenrods. The area also harbors four rare plants including the state-endangered Hudson Bay anemone (Anemone multifida var. hudsoniana). The remainder of the slope is forested with a relatively open oak woods. Brooks Bluff is owned by the DNR and was designated a State Natural Area in 1990.
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Coordinates:   43°49'40"N   89°42'54"W
This article was last modified 13 years ago