Texhomex
Texhomex is a marker showing the
The tri-state marker is in a pasture and can be accessed by walking over a cattle guard.[2][3][4]
It is a concrete post a few feet tall with a metal circle at the top which describes the technical position of the post.
Other Nearby Geographic Points
The Northwest corner of the Texas panhandle is located 2.2 miles west of this point, which was due to originally a surveying error in 1859. The joint congressional resolution in 1911 declared the line surveyed by Clark to be the actual boundary line between Texas and New Mexico. The Northwest corner of the Texas panhandle had been previously marked[5] but the marker was either removed or buried when the highway was widened in 2016.[6]
The marker for the
-
Marker location
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New Mexico top right, Oklahoma bottom right, Texas on the left.
See also
- List of Oklahoma tri-points
- Four Corners Monument: monument on the Arizona-Colorado-New Mexico-Utah border
- International Boundary Marker: monument on the Louisiana-Texas border
- OKKAMO Tri-State Marker: monument on the Arkansas-Missouri-Oklahoma tripoint
- Preston Monument: monument on the Colorado-New Mexico-Oklahoma tripoint
References
- ^ Clark, Patterson & Denise Lu "Cornering America's tri-points: A guide to 65 lonely spots where at least three states converge" (Sept. 17, 2015) (Accessed Nov. 29, 2021)
- ^ "NM-OK-TX" USEnds.com Accessed Nov. 29, 2021
- ^ [coloradoguy.com/tristate-marker-tx-ok-nm/photos.htm "Tri-state marker Texas, Oklahoma, and New Mexico"]
- ^ Clark, Patterson & Denise Lu "Cornering America's tri-points: A guide to 65 lonely spots where at least three states converge" (Sept. 17, 2015) (Accessed Nov. 29, 2021)
- ^ [coloradoguy.com/nw-texas-marker/photos.htm "The Northwest corner of Texas - near Clayton, New Mexico"]
- ^ "Trip report - Nov. 20, 1990 by Jack Parsell" HighPointers.org Nov. 20, 1990
- ^ "Cimarron Principal Meridian (Clayton, NM)"
External links
36°30′01.67″N 103°00′08.58″W / 36.5004639°N 103.0023833°W