Panhandle Plains — Texas Parks & Wildlife Department

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Overview

The northernmost area of Texas is called the Panhandle. It is straight and narrow like the handle of a pan with the broader area of the state below it, like the bottom of a pan.

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This region has mostly flat, grassy land or plains. These plains are part of the same flat grassland that extends from the Great Plains of the Central United States. Sometimes this land is also called the Llano Estacado or “Staked Plains.” The land is mostly treeless and is on a high, flat plateau. The eastern part of the Panhandle is not quite as flat. It is lower in elevation and called a rolling plain. There is more rainfall in this eastern half and it is brushy.

The western and eastern parts of the Panhandle region is strikingly divided by deep canyons carved by rivers and their tributaries that wind their way through this area.

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Palo Duro Canyon and Caprock Canyons State Parks are in this region. The remarkable canyons were carved by rivers. They are sometimes called "inverted mountains" since the land is relatively flat until you reach the long and steep canyons in the ground.

Learn about the wildlife and history of this area!

Topography and Characteristics

Major Rivers: Red, Pecos, Canadian, Colorado and Brazos.Major Aquifer: Ogallala, Seymour, Nacotoch, Alluvium, Cenozoic, Pecos, Edwards-Trinity Size: 81,500 sq. mi.

The Panhandle goes from gently rolling hills to rough and dissected with canyons. This area forms the southern end of the Great Plains. Soils vary from coarse sands along streams, to clays and shales. The soil is neutral to slightly alkaline. Caliche (kah-lee-chee), soil mixed with chunks of calcium carbonate, generally is found two to five feet under surface soils.

Major Cities / Rainfall / Elevation

Regional Average Rainfall: 15-28 in./yrData source: National Climate Datat Center, U.S. Dept of Commerce.

Abilene - 23.78 in / 1,790 ftAmarillo - 19.716 in / 3,586 ftBorger - 21.984 in / 3,140 ftBoys Ranch - 18.18 in / 3,191 ftBrownwood - 28.32 in / 1,385 ftClarendon - 23.89 in / 2,700 ftLamesa - 19.07 in / 2,965 ftLubbock - 18.69 in / 3,254 ftMemphis - 22.51 in / 2,090 ftMidland - 14.80 in. / 2,862 ft Muleshoe - 17.37 in / 3,825 ftPaducah - 24.11 in / 1,900 ftPerryton - -20.88 in / 2,942 ft

Common Vegetation

SugarberryPlains cottonwoodHoney mesquiteBur oakPeach-leaf willowWestern soapberryMtn. mahoganyChokecherryPrairie crabappleEastern red cedar SaltbushSilver agaritaAcaciaFragrant sumacPrickly-pear cactusNarrow-leaf YuccaSideoats grammaCoral honeysuckleTeddy-bear chollaTexas poppy-mallow

 

Common Wildlife

RoadrunnerMule deerSwift foxPrairie dogBadgerPinyon mouseSwainson's hawkBlack-capped vireo Great horned owlBurrowing owlInterior least ternSnowy ploverPronghorn antelopeThirteen-lined ground squirrelPlains hognose snakeWestern diamondback rattlesnake

 

Learn more about these animals on our Wildlife Fact Sheets.

Rare Animals & Habitats

Black-footed ferretPalo Duro mouseTexas kangaroo rat Concho water snake

Learn more about Endangered and Threatened Species.

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