Neha Patil (Editor)

Falls of the Ohio State Park

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Nearest city
  
Clarksville, Indiana

Visitors
  
327,092 (in 2003-2004)

Established
  
1990

Area
  
165 acres (67 ha)

Phone
  
+1 812-280-9970

Falls of the Ohio State Park

Location
  
Clark County, Indiana, US

Governing body
  
Indiana Department of Natural Resources

Address
  
201 W Riverside Dr, Clarksville, IN 47129, USA

Hours
  
Open today · 7AM–11PMThursday7AM–11PMFriday7AM–11PMSaturday7AM–11PMSunday7AM–11PMMonday7AM–11PMTuesday7AM–11PMWednesday7AM–11PM

Similar
  
McAlpine Locks and Dam, Clifty Falls State Park, Ohio River, Spring Mill State Park, Louisville Waterfront Park

Profiles

Falls of the ohio state park


Falls of the Ohio State Park is a state park in Indiana. It is located on the banks of the Ohio River at Clarksville, Indiana, across from Louisville, Kentucky. The park is part of the Falls of the Ohio National Wildlife Conservation Area. The exposed fossil beds of the Jeffersonville Limestone dated from the Devonian period are the main feature of the park. The Falls was the site where Lewis & Clark met for the Lewis and Clark Expedition.

Contents

The park includes an interpretive center open to the public. In 1990 the Indiana state government hired Terry Chase, a well-established exhibit developer, to design the center's displays. Building started in September 1992, costing $4.9 million with a total area of 16,000 sq ft (1,500 m2). The center functions as a museum with exhibits that concentrate on the natural history related to findings in the nearby fossil beds as well as the human history of the Louisville area, covering pre-settlement, early settlement, and Louisville and southern Indiana history all the way up through the 20th century.

Unlike at other Indiana state parks, annual entrance permits do not allow unlimited free access (rather, only five people per pass per visit) to the interpretive center, as fees are still needed to reimburse the town of Clarksville for building the center.

The Woodland Loop Trail has ten new stainless steel markers denoting the plant life of the trails, thanks to an Eagle Scout project.

Strange wildlife has a habit of showing up in the park. Living alligators and crocodiles have also been seen in the park. In August 2006 a fisherman hooked a dead octopus. Zachary Treitz, a 21-year-old Louisville college student, admitted he had put the octopus there after purchasing it dead from a local seafood shop for a film project.

My sunny side falls of the ohio state park


References

Falls of the Ohio State Park Wikipedia


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