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The Cache Creek Wilderness is a 27,245-acre (11,026 ha) [1] wilderness area located in Lake County, California. The wilderness was added to the National Wilderness Preservation System when the United States Congress passed the Northern California Coastal Wild Heritage Wilderness Act in 2006 (Public Law 109-362).
Cache Creek Conservancy [22] has restored a 130-acre Cache Creek Nature Preserve area downstream in the watershed. Whitewater boating on Cache Creek includes kayaking, rafting, canoeing and innertubing which are popular in the summer using the water released from the dams for downstream agriculture. [23] [24]
For the last five years, Indigenous cultural practitioners have been burning at Cache Creek Conservancy. ‘Fire is living’: How this Woodland nature preserve uses cultural burning for regrowth ...
The Cache River National Wildlife Refuge is a 68,993 acre (223 km 2) (2014) wildlife refuge in the state of Arkansas managed by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS). [3] The refuge is one of the Ramsar wetlands of international importance under the Ramsar Convention signed in 1971.
Anderson Marsh is located at the head of Cache Creek on the southeast corner of Clear Lake, the largest natural lake completely within the borders of California. [2] The park is between the cities of Lower Lake and Clearlake on State Route 53, north of Calistoga in the wine country. [3] The park is open year-round. [4]
The new Bear Creek Nature Preserve in the Town of Clay Banks features a half-mile stretch of the waterway that lends its name to the preserve. The creek flows into Lake Michigan and supports the ...
The largest private preserve is the 93,000 acres (380 km 2) Wind Wolves Preserve owned by the aforementioned Wildlands Conservancy. [21] In total, there are many dozens of land trust and conservation organizations active in California, with thousands of acres preserved on public and private lands through their efforts. [ 22 ]
Indeterminate bird skeleton. Fossil plants from the same area as the McAbee fossil beds (Cache Creek and Kamloops B.C.) were first reported by G.M. Dawson. [8]Palaeontological and geological studies of the McAbee Fossil Beds first commenced in the 1960s and early 1970s by Len Hills of the University of Calgary and his students on the fossil palynology (spores and pollen) and leaf fossils, [9 ...