Alt Text Map of Ocmulgee Mounds National Historical Park in Georgia. Park property is indicated in green and is bordered by Ocmulgee River to the southwest. Extended Description The park entrance is near the top center of the park off Jeffersonville Road, near where Jefferson meets Emery Highway. The park road continues south to the Ocmulgee Visitor Center, which has parking and a picnic area nearby. Southeast of the Visitor Center, the road crosses the Norfolk Southern Railroad and continues to curve southwest, traveling west past Walnut Creek Wetlands and ending near the west edge of the park. One more parking area is available across from the wetlands and another at the dead end of the road. A web of hiking and biking trails intersect and wind throughout the park. The northernmost terminus of these trails is at McDougal Mound, which is west of the park entrance near Main Street. That trail curls down and meets Bartram Trail near the visitor center, the Loop Trail and Opelofa Trail near Walnut Creek Wetlands, and Heritage Trail, which continues off the left edge of the map. The hiking trails and park road curl by and around about a dozen sites and features represented with green shapes to indicate that ruins are visible. Dunlap Mound and the Civil War Earthwork are north of the visitor center. Two curving lines representing Trenches, a Cornfield Mound, and Earth Lodge make a line southeast of the visitor center. That area is labeled Village Site, and three more locations are labeled in a row just below this with Funeral Mound to the west, Trading Post Site, and Southeast Mound. The Lesser Temple Mound and Great Temple Mound are south of the park road and west of the wetlands. Interstate 16 cuts through the edge of the park that abuts the Ocmulgee River. US Route 80 travels north off of Interstate 16 and ends at Emery Highway, which leads to the park entrance. Legend Red text above the legend reads, “For Your Safety: For your protection and the park’s, please keep off the mounds’ slopes and do not climb the mounds. Stay on trails. Ride your bikes on roads and the Heritage and River Trails. Picnic in picnic area only; no fires are permitted. Park in designated areas.” A scale below measures distances of 0.25 and 0.5 kilometers and 0.25 and 0.5 miles. The legend reads as follows: Brown, narrowly dashed line for Hiking trail, Brown, wide-dashed line for Biking and hiking trail, Green square for Visible ruin, and Blue diamonds for Seasonal marsh. Two symbols represent Picnic area (no fires) and Parking.