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Lewis and Clark Caverns State Park is a 3,000-acre (1,200 ha) public recreation and nature preservation area located twelve miles (19 km) east of Whitehall in Jefferson County, Montana. The state park includes two visitor centers, ten miles of hiking trails, a campground, and its namesake limestone caverns . [ 2 ]
Postwar, jeep speeders were used as inspection cars, and jeep trains used for light service, including recreation. The Jeep train at Lewis and Clark Caverns claimed to be the shortest jeep railway. [8] Over time, hi-rail vehicles pushed dedicated speeders out of railroads; civilian jeeps were often used.
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The Lewis and Clark Caverns are named so after the idea that the explorers had passed by twice on their journies, not knowing it existed. The Natives in the area had stories about it as in the winter, steam would rise out of the cave mouth which is the phenomenon that produced its discovery in the first place.
The Caverns at Natural Bridge; Clarks Cave; Dixie Caverns; Endless Caverns; Gap Cave; Grand Caverns, formerly "Weyer's cave" Indian Jim's Cave; Luray Caverns; Melrose Caverns; Natural Tunnel; Ogdens Cave; Shenandoah Caverns; Skyline Caverns; Stay High Cave; Unthanks Cave
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Lewis and Clark Caverns, limestone caverns and associated sites in Montana; Lewis and Clark County, Montana, originally named Edgerton County; Lewis and Clark Lake, a reservoir on the border of Nebraska and South Dakota; Lewis and Clark National Forest, in central Montana; Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail, a trail from Illinois to Oregon
Lewis and Clark Caverns; M. Mackinac Island State Park; P. Platt National Park; S. Shasta–Trinity National Forest; W. White Horse Hill National Game Preserve