|  | Visit Point      ReyesPoint Reyes is a prominent cape on the Pacific coast of northern California in Marin County. From its thunderous ocean breakers crashing against rocky headlands and expansive sand beaches to its open grasslands, brushy hillsides and forested ridges, Point Reyes offers visitors over 1,000 species of plants and animals to discover. Interesting Facts:              
                  Incredible biodiversity! The Point Reyes       peninsula hosts 45% of North America’s bird species and almost 18% of       California's plant species.
                    |  Point Reyes - photo copyright Michael McAreavy | There are over 50       species of animals at Point Reyes that are listed by the state or federal government       as threatened, rare, or endangered.Don’t get blown away! Point Reyes is       the windiest place on the Pacific Coast – the highest recorded wind speed       was 133 mph!Don’t get lost in the fog!  Point       Reyes is the second foggiest place on the North American continent!        Thick fog frequently reduces visibility to the hundreds of feet,       especially in the summer. During the 1906 San Francisco       earthquake the Point Reyes Lighthouse moved 18 feet in less than a       minute! Big quakes like this shift Point Reyes up to 20 feet once every       130 years or so.In 1981, the first breeding pair of       elephant seals was discovered near Chimney Rock in the Point Reyes       National Seashore. Today the park is a thriving breeding ground for the       once nearly extinct species. Over 120 known village sites of the Coastal Miwok Indians exist       within the park, the first human civilization of the Point Reyes       peninsula, dating back 5,000 years!For more information, please visit: http://www.nps.gov/pore/index.htm                
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