- Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area
Infobox Protected area
name = Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area
iucn_category = V
caption =
locator_x = 205
locator_y = 101
location =Tennessee &Kentucky ,USA
nearest_city =Oneida, Tennessee , andWhitley City, Kentucky
lat_degrees =
lat_minutes =
lat_seconds =
lat_direction =
long_degrees =
long_minutes =
long_seconds =
long_direction =
area = 125,310 acres (507.11 km²)
established =March 7 ,1974
visitation_num = 626,751
visitation_year = 2007
governing_body =National Park Service The Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area preserves the
Big South Fork of the Cumberland River and its tributaries in northeasternTennessee and southeasternKentucky . In addition, the former mining community of Blue Heron is preserved and interpreted via signage.The Big South Fork region contains one of the highest concentrations of
natural bridges in the eastern United States and the area is located in parts of Scott, Fentress, Pickett, and Morgan counties in Tennessee, and McCreary County in Kentucky.Geology
The Big South Fork’s most prominent feature is the river gorge cutting through the softer Mississippian age rock beneath the hard Pennsylvanian capstone of the Cumberland Plateau. Water is the most influential agent of geologic change in the Big South Fork region. Over time water action has left many unique and amazing geologic features ranging from the river gorge with its magnificent bluffs to the
natural arch es and unusualhoodoos . [Russ Manning. (1994). "Exploring the Big South Fork." Norris: Mountain Laural Place.]Due to the substantial amount of annual rainfall of the region and the action of the Cumberland River and surrounding tributaries the water acts to erode the softer Mississippian rock composed of limestone, shale, and calcareous sandstone from beneath the much harder and erosion resistant capstone composed of Pennsylvanian sandstone. Flowing water hollows out the softer layers beneath and forms waterfalls and gorges. Where there is hard capstone intact, arches can form creating natural bridges across streams or a dry ravines. Direct erosion widens a joint and forms a cavity below the more resilient rock thus creating a void between the hard capstone and the area below. As result, water eroded arches are formed in the Big South Fork. Hoodoos are a rare but intriguing feature occurring in the Big South Fork. These hoodoos form in a similar manner to those found in the western United States. Where tough capstone still exists on the side of a hill for instance, it prevents the erosion of the softer material below. The result is a naturally formed erect columnar rock where once was located a hill. [Russ Manning. (1999). "The Historic Cumberland Plateau." Knoxville: The University of Tennessee Press.]
ources
Gallery
External links
* [http://www.nps.gov/biso/ Big South Fork NPS Site]
* [http://www.cs.utk.edu/~dunigan/bsf landforms of the Big South Fork]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.