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Ice Age Fossils State Park -- Las Vegas Wash Trail
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Hiking Around Las Vegas; Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument
Big Dig Trail
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Trailhead at the Monumental Mammoth (view N)

Overview

Ice Age Fossils State Park was established in 2017 and opened to the public in 2024. This small (315 acre) state park is tucked up against the much larger (22,650 acres) Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument. Together, they protect the paleontologically rich Upper Las Vegas Wash, but in particular, the State Park protects the major paleontological excavation sites.

The Las Vegas Wash Trail doesn't explicitly visit paleontological sites; rather, it explores the environment and presents geologic evidence showing how the landscape has changed over the millennia. As described by the State Park, "hikers will experience the natural forces that created and reshaped this landscape."

The Las Vegas Wash Trail is a 1.5-mile, partial-loop trail that begins and ends at the Monumental Mammoth and loops out through the Upper Las Vegas Wash. The wash is dry most of the year, but it can be muddy after rainstorms. Two structures provide three shade-stops along the trail.

Presented here is a description of the trail, but doing the loop in reverse. For a more detailed description of the trail, see Las Vegas Wash Trail.

Link to Trail Map or State Park Map.

Las Vegas Wash Trail
The trail continues out past the Monumental Mammoth (view N)

To appreciate this trail, it is useful to understand the basic geologic history of this area (adapted from the State Park website):

At the coldest time during the last Ice Age, some 25,000 years ago, the Las Vegas area was wet and green with marshlands covering much of the valley. On this well vegetated landscape, herds of ancient bison, horses, camels, Columbian mammoths, and other large creatures, collectively referred to a megafauna (i.e., big animals), roamed across Las Vegas. All of these creatures are now extinct.

Over time, the climate changed to become warmer and dryer. The wetlands began drying up, leaving behind spring-fed streams and riparian corridors with desert vegetation in dry areas. By the end of the last Ice Age, roughly 12,000 years ago, the megafauna were disappearing. Around this time, humans arrived, or at least began to leave their marks, in the Las Vegas Valley. These early humans walked among the remaining megafauna.

The land continued to warm and dry as time moved on. The riparian corridors were replaced by the desert washes and desert plant and animal communities that we see today. Larger streams carved into the valley floor, creating deep washes, like the Las Vegas Wash, with pockets of badlands along the banks. The land continued slowly being shaped by nature for several thousand years before it became a State Park.

Las Vegas Wash Trail
The trail continues past the kiosk to a "trail rules" sign (view N)

Watch Out

Other than the Standard Warnings about hiking in the desert, this trail is fairly safe and short, but there are stairs and other places where hikers could trip and fall, so alway watch your footing. If the weather is stormy, watch for flashfloods in the wash.

While visiting the area, please Respect the land and the other people out there, and try to Leave No Trace of your passage. Also, even though this area is not remote, be sure to bring what you need of the 10 Essentials. Please pay attention to the special State Park trail rules.

Getting to the Trailhead

Ice Age~ Fossils State Park is located on the north edge of the Las Vegas urban area. From downtown, drive north on Highway 95 towards Reno. Towards the northwest edge of town, take Exit 91A onto Clark County 215 (Northern Beltway). Now driving east, continue 3 miles to Exit 41 (Decatur Blvd). Turn left onto Decatur and drive north about 3.2 miles to Ice Age Fossils State Park, on the right. There is no big entrance sign, but watch for the Monumental Mammoth, which is big enough to be seen from a distance. Turn right into the parking lot. Park here; this is the trailhead.

Las Vegas Wash Trail
Trail Rules (view SE)

The Hike

From the trailhead (Table 1, Waypoint 10) at the edge of the parking lot adjacent to the Monumental Mammoth, the Las Vegas Wash Trail starts by heading due north around the east (right) side of the Monumental Mammoth. Trail runs out into the desert a few yards to the trailhead information kiosk and a few 10s of yards to a Trail Rules sign. The trail continues northeast past an information sign to shade structure.

The shade structure sits at the edge of bluffs overlooking Upper Las Vegas Wash, and just beyond, an information sign provides information about Ice Age Tule Springs. There is no trail junction sign, but adjacent to the sign, the Las Vegas Wash Trail splits (Wpt. 11) to begin the loop. In the official clockwise direction, the trail continues by dropping over the edge of the bluffs to wind down a canyon.

However, some hiker might want to walk the trail in the counter clockwise direction. In this case, hikers should turn right onto a trail well marked with stones that runs along the top of the bluffs.

Las Vegas Wash Trail
Trail continues past the Trail Rules sign (view NE)

Staying right atop the bluffs, the trail runs northeast with views down into a badlands area of eroding mud hills. Before long, the trail arrives at the edge of Las Vegas Wash with grand view to the north. The trail passes another information sign, then arrives at a second shade structure (Wpt. 15) with two information signs.

At this shade structure, the trail turns north and descends over the edge of the bluffs following an old road. Now following the south bank of Las Vegas Wash, the trail soon arrives at a trail junction (Wpt. 06) with a large sign. Here, the Las Vegas Wash Trail intersects the Big Dig Trail. The Big Dig Trail comes down Trench K, from the right, then turns right to run east along the banks of Las Vegas Wash (straight in this view). In contrast, the Las Vegas Wash Trail turns left to head out into the bottom of Las Vegas Wash.

Turning north, the Las Vegas Wash Trail crosses Las Vegas Wash to the north bank (Wpt. 14), then turns left to head upstream (west). The trail runs along the north back, passing two information signs, and comes to three short steps (Wpt. 13) where it drops into and crosses the North Branch of Las Vegas Wash.

Just across the narrow North Branch, the trail continues southwest across Las Vegas Wash, crossing the Main Branch, and finally climbing out of the wash onto the south bank at another information sign (Wpt. 12).

Las Vegas Wash Trail
Ghosts of Ice Age megafauna on the landscape (view E)

Passing the sign, the trail begins winding up a side canyon through a landscape of eroded badlands where layers of tufa and gravel are eroding out of the bluffs.

After winding up the canyon, the trail steeply climbs out of the canyon to arrive back at the shade structure (Wpt. 11) where the trail forked to start the loop.

At the shade structure, the Las Vegas Wash Trail passes a sign seen before (Ice Age Tule Springs), and turns left. The trail crosses the service road seen before and continues southwest over mud flats and through grassy swales to the Monumental Mammoth to end at the trailhead parking lot (Wpt. 10).

Las Vegas Wash Trail
The trail drops into a shallow swale
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Trail approaching an information sign (view E)

Fossil Streams: algae causes calcium carbonate to accumulate
Las Vegas Wash Trail
The trail continues past the Fossil Streams sign
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Approaching the first shade structure (view NE)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Just beyond the shade structure, trail forks at information sign (view NE)

Sign: Ice Age Tule Springs (view NE)

From under the shade structure, the trail heads out and right (view NE)

Most of the trail is very well marked (view E)

Traversing rolling mud hills (view NE)

Approaching the edge of Las Vegas Wash (view E)

Approaching the edge of Las Vegas Wash (view N)

Trail arriving atop bluffs overlooking Las Vegas Wash (view E)

Turns out to be a side canyon that flows into LV Wash (view E)

Approaching another information sign (view E)

Sign: An Enduring Drainage (view N)

Now the trail really runs atop bluffs overlooking LV Wash (view E)

The trail parallels a service road for a short distance (view E)

Las Vegas Wash (view NE)

Looking across the wash to an excavation trench with a sign (view NE)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Looking back: grand view down into Las Vegas Wash (view NE)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Grand view down into Las Vegas Wash (view NNW)

Approaching the second shade structure (view E)

Arriving at the second shade structure (view E)

Information sign on the edge of the bluffs (view NE)

Sign: An Enduring Drainage (view NE)

The shade structure has a fence around it (view S)

Sign by the shade structure: Drilling into the Past (view NW)

Sign: Drilling into the Past

After resting in the shade, trail drops down into the wash (view N)

Trail departs shade structure following old road (view N)

Trail descending the old road (view NE)

Entering Las Vegas Wash (view E)

Trail runs along the north bank of Las Vegas Wash (view E)

Approaching a trail junction with a marker (view E)

Arriving at a trail junction (view E)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Trail junction directional sign: Visitor Center to the right (view S)

Trail junction: Las Vegas Wash Trail turns left (view E)

Trail junction: Las Vegas Wash Trail drops into the wash (view N)

Starting down into Las Vegas Wash (view N)

Parts of the wash are eroded mud deposits (view NW)

A bit of mud from recent rains along the trail (view NW)

Crossing gravels in the North Branch of Las Vegas Wash (view NW)

The trail climbs onto the North Bank of the wash (view W)

Trail runs along the North Bank of the wash (view W)

Approaching a fenced section (view W)

Badlands (not sure why this area is fenced off; view N)

Approaching another information sign (view NW)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Sign in archaeological excavation trench (view N)

Sign: Reconstructing a Spring (view N)

Trail continues beneath mud cliffs (view NW)

Interesting layers in the mud cliff face (view NE)

Fencing keeps hikers safely away from the crumbling cliffs (view NW)

An ancient stream channel (note gravel bed) in the mud cliff (view NW)

Approaching another sign under mud cliffs (view NW)

Sign: Every Layer Tells a Story (view NE)

The trail returns to Las Vegas Wash (view W)

Three steps down, then three steps up (view SW)

Crossing mud deposits in the wash (view SW)

Crossing gravels in the Main Branch of Las Vegas Wash (view SW)

The wash area is well vegetated with diverse shrubs (view SW)

Trail starts to climb out of the wash (view S)

Approaching another information sign (view SW)

Sign: The Las Vegas Wash (view N)

Exiting the main wash up a side wash (view S)

Eroded badlands in the side canyon (view SW)

A layer of tufa eroding from a mud hill (view NW)

Tufa fragments that rolled down the hillside (view NW)

Trail continues up the side Canyon (view SW)

Gravel layers eroding from the hillsides

Gravels from a streambed that eroded from the hillside

Atop the badlands, the next shade structure comes into view (view SW)

Trail continues up the side Canyon (view SW)

The trail climbs rather steeply towards the top of the badlands (view S)

Out of the side canyon, the trail arrives at the first shade structure (view S)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Las Vegas Wash Trail continues past the shade structure (view SW)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Las Vegas Wash Trail crosses the service road (view SW)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Las Vegas Wash Trail continues across rolling desert terrain (view W)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Las Vegas Wash Trail dips through a swale (view SW)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Las Vegas Wash Trail retuning towards the Fossil Stream sign (view SW)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Las Vegas Wash Trail passing the Fossil Stream sign (view SW)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Las Vegas Wash Trail retuning towards the grassy swale (view SW)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Las Vegas Wash Trail retuning through the grassy swale (view SW)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Las Vegas Wash Trail retuning towards the Trail Rules sign (view SW)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Las Vegas Wash Trail passing the Trail Rules sign (view SW)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Las Vegas Wash Trail passing the trailhead kiosk (view SW)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Las Vegas Wash Trail retuning to the Monumental Mammoth (view S)
Las Vegas Wash Trail
Las Vegas Wash Trail retuning to the trailhead parking area (view SE)

Table 1. Hiking Coordinates and Distances based on GPS Data (NAD27; UTM Zone 11S). Download Hiking GPS Waypoints (gpx) file.

Wpt. Location UTM Easting UTM Northing Elevation (ft) Point-to-Point Distance (mi) Cumulative Distance (mi)
10 Trailhead 661079 4020602 2,359 0.00 0.00
11 Trail Junction 661413 4020853 2,350 0.29 0.29
15 Descent into Wash 661845 4020759 2,335 0.31 0.60
06 Trail Junction 661965 4020724 2,315 0.09 0.69
14 Edge of Wash East 661949 4020813 2,305 0.06 0.75
13 Edge of Wash NW 661804 4021002 2,312 0.17 0.92
12 Edge of Wash SW 661642 4020952 2,317 0.11 1.03
11 Trail Junction 661413 4020853 2,350 0.17 1.20
10 Trailhead 661079 4020602 2,359 0.29 1.49

Happy hiking! All distances, elevations, and other facts are approximate.
copyright; Last updated 250306

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