As glaciers retreated from what is now the New England landscape, distinctive hills were formed. When the last glacier moved across the New England landscape over 10,000 years ago, it formed distinctively-shaped hills called "drumlins" running parallel to the path of the ancient ice flow. Dexter Drumlin is "a classic example"[2][5][6][7]
35 acres (140,000 m2) surrounding the drumlin was donated to the Trustees of Reservations by Lancaster "town father" Nathaniel Dexter by bequest in 2002.[4][5] The change of the toponym from "Kilbourn Hill" to "Dexter Drumlin" was part of a Trustees of Reservations rebranding effort in 2000 following their acquisition of the property.
Ecology
The reservation consists of hayfield, transitional meadow, and wetlands. The stream that runs along the western side of the hill forms wet meadows in lower terrain. Grassland bird species nest and raise their young on the hill and in the adjacent floodplains.[2]
Dexter Drumlin is open to hiking, picnicking, crosscountry skiing, mountain biking, sledding, and kite flying. A one-mile (1.6 km) long mowed, path passes over the crest of the drumlin and along the Nashua River tributary.[2] The property has been used for kite flying events.[9]Rockcollectors may discover "sacred crosses" of chiastolite of a type considered to be of spiritual value by the Algonquian peoples who once dominated the region.[10]
The reservation trailhead is located on George Hill Road across from Browning Elementary School in Lancaster.[4]
^[3]Archived 2011-07-18 at the Wayback Machine SICB Abstracts, Fitchburg State College: Photinus ignitus male courtship behavior and Photuris predation in response to virtual fireflies