Lake Lucero Tour Registration - National Park Service 2025

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open the Lake Lucero Tour Registration in the editor.
  2. Begin by entering your name, phone number, and email address in the designated fields. Ensure that your contact information is accurate for any follow-up communications.
  3. Indicate the number of vehicles you will be bringing. Remember, vehicle space is limited to 30, so it's important to reserve early.
  4. Review the mandatory safety requirements carefully. Check the box confirming that you have read and agree to comply with these rules for a safe tour experience.
  5. If you wish to receive updates about events at the monument, check the box to be added to the email list.
  6. Once all fields are completed, save your form and choose either to email it directly or print it for faxing. If emailing, ensure 'Lake Lucero Tour' is in your subject line.

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Lake Lucero lies in the southwest corner of the Tularosa Basin. In the heart of New Mexicos Tularosa Basin, wave-like dunes of gypsum sand cover 275 square miles of desert, part of which is protected by White Sands National Park.
Most of Lake Otero dried up. The dry portions of the lakebed became what we know today as Alkali Flat, while the smaller seasonal playa that remained formed modern Lake Lucero. As Lake Oteros water disappeared selenite crystals formed on Alkali Flat.
Take a tour to Lake Lucero with a ranger and learn about the formation of the sands and the special plants and animals that live in and around the dunes. These three-hour ranger-guided tours to the playa (dry lakebed) of Lake Lucero are offered once a month and reservations are required.
Cost. A special program fee of $8 per person ages 16 and older and $4 per child ages 15 and younger apply. Federal passes such as the America the Beautiful Annual, Senior, and Access passes apply only to the entrance fees and not to the special program fee. Park entrance fees are not charged for the Lake Lucero program
Lake Erie is the fourth-largest Great Lake and the worlds twelfth largest freshwater lake.

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The park not only contains the large dune field but also a saline mudflat called Alkali Flat, a smaller ephemeral salt lake (or playa) named Lake Lucero, parts of the gypsum-dust plains east of the dune field, and alluvial fans from the surrounding mountains.
Lake Lucero is a playa located within that section of the Tularosa Basin that is contained within White Sands National Park in the U.S. state of New Mexico. The playa is noted for the unusually high quantity of water-deposited and wind-deposited gypsum dissolved in its intermittent waters.

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