Gaudineer Scenic Area

Gaudineer Scenic Area

Geobox|Protected Area
name = Gaudineer Scenic Area
native_name =
other_name = Part of Monongahela National Forest
other_name1 =
category = National Natural Landmark


image_caption = Hiking trail in Gaudineer Scenic Area.
etymology_type =
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country = United States
country_

state = West Virginia
state_

region_type = County
region = Pocahontas
region1 = Randolph
district_type =
district =
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city =
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location =
lat_d = 38
lat_m = 37
lat_s = 41
lat_NS = N
long_d = 79
long_m = 50
long_s = 33
long_EW = W
elevation_imperial = 3996
elevation_round = 1
area_unit = acre
area_imperial = 140
area_round = 1
area_note = [http://www.fs.fed.us/r9/mnf/sp/gaudineer.html Monongahela National Forest: Gaudineer Scenic Area, accessed April 1, 2008] ]
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established_type = Established
established = October 1964
established_note =
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owner = USDA Forest Service
management = Monongahela National Forest
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free_type = Nearest city
free_label = Nearest city
free = Durbin, West Virginia
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map_caption = Location of Gaudineer Scenic Area in West Virginia
map_locator = West Virginia
map_first =
website = [http://www.fs.fed.us/r9/mnf/sp/gaudineer.html Gaudineer Scenic Area]

The Gaudineer Scenic Area (GSA) is a scenic area and National Natural Landmark [ [http://www.nature.nps.gov/nnl/Registry/USA_Map/States/West%20Virginia/NNL/GSA/index.cfm NPS NNL Webpage on Gaudineer Scenic Area] ] in the Monongahela National Forest (MNF). It is situated just north of Gaudineer Knob of Shavers Mountain on the border of Randolph and Pocahontas Counties, West Virginia, USA, about convert|5|mi northwest of the town of Durbin.

Description

The GSA is located in the Greenbrier Ranger District of the MNF. It lies near the crest of Shavers Mountain immediately north of Gaudineer Knob, the mountain's highest peak at convert|4432|ft. The Scenic Area itself is at about convert|4000|ft. Its total land area is convert|140|acre and apporoximately 50 of these acres are classified as virgin red spruce forest. Trees in this section range up to convert|40|in in diameter at chest height and are upwards of 300 years-old. [ [http://www.randolphcountywv.com/Outdoors%20Recreation/GaudineerScenicArea.htm Randolph County Convention & Visitors Bureau Webpage on GSA] ] The remaining convert|90|acre|m2 have only been subjected to selective timber harvesting, mostly for the task of removing broken limbs. The GSA contains—in addition to red spruce—excellent first and second-growth specimens of several native hardwoods, including red maple, sugar maple, yellow birch, and beech. Forest Service authorities estimate the total wood volume of the convert|140|acre|adj=on tract at one and a half million board feet.

History

The area surrounding the GSA was thoroughly clear-cut between about 1900 and 1920 by lumbermen of the West Virginia Pulp and Paper Company, based at Cass. Maurice Brooks described the circumstances whereby a portion of the virgin forest was spared in his classic book on Appalachian natural history:

Some years before the Civil War a speculating land company bought a tract of convert|69000|acre on the slope of Shavers Mountain. Their tract fronted for about seven miles (11 km) along the eastern side of the mountain. To survey and mark their holdings the company hired a crew of men who must have found rough going in this wilderness. The crew did a good job, but its chief forgot one thing – the fact that a compass needle points to magnetic, not true north. In this area the angle of declination is about four degrees, a significant source of error on a seven-mile (11 km) front…. An experienced Virginia surveyor, in checking the data, discovered the error but said nothing about it. Presently, however, when the sale was being concluded and the deeds recorded, he brought the error to light, and under a sort of “doctrine of vacancy” claimed the wedge of land left by a corrected survey. His title was established, and he and his heirs found themselves owner of a seven-mile (11 km) strip of forest, aggregating almost convert|900|acre|km2. While timber above and below the wedge was cut, this narrow holding was undisturbed. Its thickest end, a fringe of tall spruces on the near horizon, is just east of Gaudineer Tower. From these trees came seed to produce a new forest, a happy result of a hundred-year-old mistake. [Brooks, Maurice (1965), "The Appalachians" (Series: The Naturalist's America), Illustrated by Lois Darling and Lo Brooks, Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, pp 71-72.]

The tract was eventually purchased by the Forest Service at the insistence of former MNF Supervisor Arthur A. Wood, who believed that future generations should know what an Appalachian spruce stand was like.

In October 1964 the Regional Forester designated this area as a Scenic Area and the Forest Service began to manage it as such. In December 1974 the GSA was designated a Registered Natural Landmark for its exceptional value. In May 1983 it was registered by the Society of American Foresters as an outstanding example of a vegetative community in a near natural condition dedicated for scientific and educational purposes.

References

ee also

*Shaver's Fork Mountain Complex
*List of old growth forests
*List of National Natural Landmarks


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