Quick stats:
32,690 acres496,651 annual visits
Naturalist:
Naturalist programs are available
year-round.
Wildlife
Wildlife. The diversity of vegetation in
the park supports many wildlife species. Birding is excellent and
visitors are encouraged to help spot and record the bird life they see
in the park. Some birds you can expect to see include loons, grebes,
cormorants, herons, ducks, owls, hummingbirds, woodpeckers, chickadees,
nuthatches, kinglets, vireos, tanagers, finches, and warblers. Trails
in the park are shared with deer, chipmunks, and squirrels. Beaver,
porcupine, black bears, and wolves also reside in the park.
History
Some 8,000 years ago, Indian hunters
pursued wild animals for food in the Itasca State Park region. These
early people ambushed bison, deer, and moose at watering sites and
killed them with stone-tipped spears. The Bison Kill Site along
Wilderness Drive in the park gives visitors more history about this
period.
A few thousand years later, a group of people of the Woodland Period
arrived at Lake Itasca. They lived in larger, more permanent
settlements and made a variety of stone, wood, and bone tools. Burial
mounds from this era can be seen today at the Itasca Indian Cemetery.
In 1832, Anishinabe guide Ozawindib, led explorer Henry Rowe
Schoolcraft to the source of the Mississippi River at Lake Itasca. It
was on this journey that Schoolcraft, with the help of an educated
missionary companion, created the name Itasca from the Latin words for
"truth" and "head" by linking adjoining syllables: verITAS CAput,
meaning "true head."
In the late 1800s, Jacob V. Brower, historian, anthropologist and land
surveyor, came to the park region to settle the dispute of the actual
location of the Mississippi Headwaters. Brower saw this region being
quickly transformed by logging, and was determined to protect some of
the pine forests for future generations. It was Brower's tireless
efforts to save the remaining pine forest surrounding Lake Itasca that
led the state legislature to establish Itasca as a Minnesota State Park
on April 20, 1891, by a margin of only one vote. Through his
conservation work and the continuing efforts of others throughout the
decades, the splendor of Itasca had been maintained.
Geology
The landscape region in which the park
is located was formed at the leading edge of repeating glacial
advances. This northern pine moraine forms ranges of hills containing
coarse, gravelly materials and boulders pock-marked with countless
lakes, ponds and bogs. This terrain is sometimes referred to as "knob
and kettle." The knobs are mounds of debris deposited directly by the
ice near the glacier's edge or by melt-water streams flowing on or
under the glacier surface. The kettles are depressions, usually filled
with water, formed by stagnant ice masses buried or partially buried
under glacial debris. The retreat of the ice left many lakes of varying
size.
Landscape
At Itasca State Park, the mighty
Mississippi River begins its 2,552-mile journey to the Gulf of Mexico.
Established in 1891 to preserve remnant stands of virgin pine and to
protect the basin around the Mississippi's source, this park has become
a famous natural and cultural landmark in North America.