
What"s So Special About This Place
The Big Bend has been a home to people for many
centuries, but knowledge of the Rio Grande among non-Indians dates
back less than 150 years. Spanish people crossed the Rio Grande in
the 16th and 17th centuries searching for gold, silver, and fertile
land. Comanche Indians crossed the river in the 19th century,
traveling to and from Mexico with their raiding parties. Mexican
settlers began farming on both banks of the river’s floodplain
around 1900. Anglo-Americans joined in the farming after 1920, when
boundary unrest ended. Cotton and food crops were grown around
Castolon and what is now Rio Grande Village even after the park was
established.
Big Bend National Park also marks the northernmost
range of many plants and animals, such as the Mexican long-nosed
bat. Ranges of typically eastern and typically western species of
plants and animals come together or overlap here. Here many species
are at the extreme limits of their ranges. Latin American species,
many from the tropics, range this far north, while northern-nesting
species often travel this far south in winter. Contrasting
elevations create additional, varied micro-climates that further
enhance the diversity of plant and animal life and the park’s wealth
of natural boundaries. |