Allegheny Front

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Allegheny Front
Dans Mountain- 2007.jpg
Dans Mountain, part of the Allegheny Front in Maryland
Highest point
Peak Mount Porte Crayon, Randolph/Pendleton Co. border, West Virginia
Elevation 4,774 ft (1,455 m)
Coordinates 38°55′44″N79°27′22″W / 38.92889°N 79.45611°W / 38.92889; -79.45611
Geography
Greatvalley-map.png
The Allegheny Front is west of the Cumberland Valley and is part of the Appalachian escarpment extending between the Helderberg Escarpment in New York to Walden Ridge in Tennessee.
CountryUnited States
States
  • Pennsylvania
  • Maryland
  • West Virginia
  • Virginia
Range coordinates 39°04′23″N79°17′53″W / 39.07306°N 79.29806°W / 39.07306; -79.29806
Parent range Allegheny Mountains of the Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians
Geology
Orogeny Alleghenian orogeny

The Allegheny Front is the major southeast- or east-facing escarpment in the Allegheny Mountains in southern Pennsylvania, western Maryland, eastern West Virginia, and western Virginia. The Allegheny Front forms the boundary between the Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians to its east and the Appalachian Plateau (locally called the Allegheny Plateau) to its west. The Front is closely associated with the Appalachian Mountains' Eastern Continental Divide, which in this area divides the waters of the Ohio/Mississippi river system, flowing to the Gulf of Mexico, from rivers flowing into Chesapeake Bay and from there into the Atlantic Ocean.

Contents

The Allegheny Front and the Eastern Continental Divide do not always coincide; for example, the North Branch of the Potomac River begins well west of the Front, at the Fairfax Stone near the southwestern tip of Maryland, about 10 miles (16 km) and across the actual divide from the headwaters of the Youghiogheny River draining northwards into the Monongahela and Ohio rivers.

The Allegheny Front is one of the windiest spots east of the Mississippi, leading to the recent establishment of wind farming there.[ citation needed ]

This profile of the Allegheny Portage Railroad crossing the Allegheny Front gives perspective on how the front formed the final barrier range preventing easy settlement of the colonial and post-Revolutionary-War West (today's Midwest). Note the upland nature of the western side of the front, the Allegheny Plateau. Allegheny Portage Railroad.jpg
This profile of the Allegheny Portage Railroad crossing the Allegheny Front gives perspective on how the front formed the final barrier range preventing easy settlement of the colonial and post-Revolutionary-War West (today's Midwest). Note the upland nature of the western side of the front, the Allegheny Plateau.

Geography

The Allegheny Front forms part of the Appalachian Structural Front, separating the Appalachian Plateau from the Appalachians' Ridge and Valley Province. [1] The various other escarpments along this structural feature include the Catskill Escarpment to the northeast and the Cumberland Escarpment to the southwest. [1] The Allegheny Front extends for about 180 miles (290 km) southwesterly from south-central Pennsylvania through western Maryland, then divides the eastern panhandle of West Virginia from the rest of that state.

The name "Allegheny Front" is applied to the escarpment throughout much of its extent, although it is little used in Maryland.

Elevations

The highest part of the crest of the Allegheny Front is also its southernmost high point, Mount Porte Crayon at 4,770 feet (1,450 m), on the Pendleton/Randolph county line in West Virginia. Its lowest point, 790 feet (240 m), is along the North Branch of the Potomac River near Keyser, West Virginia. [2] Other high points along the front include the Dolly Sods Wilderness in West Virginia, a broad, rocky plateau at an elevation of about 4,000 feet (1,200 m); Dan's Rock on Dans Mountain in Maryland at 2,895 feet (882 m); and Blue Knob in northern Bedford County, Pennsylvania, with an elevation greater than 3,120 feet (950 m).

Eastern Continental Divide

Red Creek west of the crest of the Allegheny Front in the Dolly Sods area of West Virginia; the creek originates along the Eastern Continental Divide, with its waters flowing to the Gulf of Mexico as part of the Ohio River watershed. Dolly-Sods-Red-Creek.jpg
Red Creek west of the crest of the Allegheny Front in the Dolly Sods area of West Virginia; the creek originates along the Eastern Continental Divide, with its waters flowing to the Gulf of Mexico as part of the Ohio River watershed.
Seneca Creek, incised into the Allegheny Front west of Seneca Rocks, West Virginia. This short but steep creek originates along the Eastern Continental Divide; its waters flow into the Atlantic Ocean via the Potomac River and Chesapeake Bay. Seneca Creek - Mouth.jpg
Seneca Creek, incised into the Allegheny Front west of Seneca Rocks, West Virginia. This short but steep creek originates along the Eastern Continental Divide; its waters flow into the Atlantic Ocean via the Potomac River and Chesapeake Bay.

Local segments of the Eastern Continental Divide usually pass within a few miles of the Allegheny Front and in many places coincide with it; this divide between waters of the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico separates the westward-flowing Ohio River watershed from the eastward-flowing watersheds of the Susquehanna, Potomac, and James rivers. Numerous eastward-flowing streams have their headwaters incised into Allegheny Front, displacing the divide westward from the front, including the North Branch of the Potomac River west of Cumberland, Maryland, which originates well into the Appalachian Plateau at the Fairfax Stone, just south of Maryland's southwestern tip. No waterway crosses the front from east to west.

1827 Finley Map of Pennsylvania 1827 Finley Map of Pennsylvania - Geographicus - Pennsylvania-finley-1827.jpg
1827 Finley Map of Pennsylvania

Course

The Allegheny Front begins in central Pennsylvania northwest of Lock Haven and extends southwest paralleling Bald Eagle Mountain and Brush Mountain to its east. The front continues to a point north of the Pennsylvania/Maryland boundary where it is offset about 10 miles (16 km) to the east as it changes from the bold escarpment that characterized it west of Altoona to its more gentle rise in Maryland.

Across the Mason–Dixon line in Maryland, the front becomes Dans Mountain, west of Cumberland, which reaches 2,895 feet (882 m) at Dan's Rock. Along Maryland's southern border, the North Branch of the Potomac River cuts down through the front at 790 feet (240 m) just west of Keyser, West Virginia.

South of the Potomac in West Virginia, the front continues through the Mount Storm area, then passes along the eastern edge of Dolly Sods, a wide plateau of Pottsville conglomerate bedrock at about 4,000 feet (1,200 m) elevation. From the Sods, the front continues southward as an increasingly steep escarpment west of the North Fork of the South Branch Potomac River, with the Roaring Plains West Wilderness continuing the high plateaus of the Dolly Sods area along the escarpment's crest. The Allegheny Front's southern end is Mount Porte Crayon (4,770 ft or 1,450 m), after which the land drops steeply to Seneca Creek, west of Seneca Rocks. [4]

Escarpments

Pottsville-capped Spruce Knob in West Virginia Spruce Knob.jpg
Pottsville-capped Spruce Knob in West Virginia

South of Mount Porte Crayon and Seneca Creek, the Appalachian structural front is less clearly unified. Pottsville-capped Spruce Mountain, south and east of Seneca Creek, continues the Allegheny Front's geology southward; [5] this ridge reaches an elevation of 4,863 feet (1,482 m) at Spruce Knob, West Virginia's highest point. Similarly steep escarpments sharing much of the same geologic structure are also present nearby along the eastern slopes of Allegheny Mountain and Back Allegheny Mountain (along with the southern end of Shavers Mountain), but these mountains lack the Pottsville caps characteristic of the Allegheny Front. [5] Allegheny Mountain's long, nearly level crest is generally about 4,000 to 4,200 feet (1,200 to 1,300 m) in elevation, with Paddy Knob reaching 4,477 feet (1,365 m). High points on Back Allegheny Mountain and adjacent Shavers Mountain include Gaudineer Knob (4,432 ft or 1,351 m) and Bald Knob (4,842 ft or 1,476 m); these two mountains form a part of the divide between the Monongahela River and New River portions of the Ohio River watershed.

Geology

Pottsville conglomerate atop the Allegheny Front showing ventifact (wind) etching, Bear Rocks, Dolly Sods, West Virginia Rocks-in-WV.jpg
Pottsville conglomerate atop the Allegheny Front showing ventifact (wind) etching, Bear Rocks, Dolly Sods, West Virginia

Most of the Allegheny Front is capped by a nearly horizontal, erosion-resistant stratum (rock layer) of white Pottsville conglomerate, sometimes where flat with younger Carboniferous strata on top. [5] The silica-cemented, gravel-containing Pottsville rock formed as part of a vast delta in the Pennsylvanian period. [6]

The region was then uplifted and folded during the Alleghenian orogeny about 320-250 million years ago, during the Carboniferous [7] and Permian periods, forming the modern Appalachian Mountains as the North American and African tectonic plates collided. [6]

Subsequent erosion (for more than 200 million years) has preferentially removed various softer surrounding rocks, especially the easily dissolved Greenbrier limestone, leaving areas of the hard Pottsville conglomerate as a caprock protecting softer rock strata immediately beneath. The Pottsville outcrops conspicuously in various more exposed areas along the front's eastern edge. Many of these clifftops offer broad scenic views, unlike most mountaintops within the generally forested Appalachians, and the more readily accessible are popular tourist destinations, including Dan's Rock on Dans Mountain in Maryland and the Dolly Sods and an overlook along U.S. Route 50 in West Virginia.

Since the eastern side of the front is drained by Chesapeake Bay stream that drop fairly rapidly through the Ridge and Valley Province to the low-elevation waters of the Great Appalachian Valley, erosion on the eastern slope of this caprock layer has been much more intense than on the western slope, where drainage to low elevations is spread over a greater distance (particularly considering stream meanders) through the Appalachian Plateau to the Ohio River. These contrasting patterns of erosion produce a steep escarpment along much of the front's eastern edge, with the mountains west of the front generally grading more gently into the Appalachian Plateau.

Ecology

American mountain-ash (Sorbus americana), characteristic of high-elevation cliff-edge vegetation along the Allegheny Front Sorbus americana.jpg
American mountain-ash (Sorbus americana), characteristic of high-elevation cliff-edge vegetation along the Allegheny Front

The nearly continuous high elevation and clifftop bedrock exposures of the Allegheny Front provide an important corridor of upland habitat in the central Appalachian Mountains.

Migratory bird flyway

During the fall, the Allegheny Front is associated with an important flyway for migratory birds traveling from their northern breeding grounds to their southern wintering sites. In good weather, the birds can be seen from late morning, when they take advantage of the thermals (rising pockets of warm air) to facilitate flying, until the thermals cease in late afternoon. [8]

Among the bird-banding stations and migratory bird observatories associated with this flyway are:

Dolly Sods Wilderness

In the Dolly Sods Wilderness of West Virginia, and southward toward Mount Porte Crayon, the front is topped for more than 10 miles (16 km) by a broad, nearly flat plateau with many wide areas of exposed bedrock along the edge of the escarpment's 2,800-to-3,200-foot (850 to 980 m) drop [10] to the North Fork River to the east, along the front's base. Many of these windswept cliff-edge outcrops are sparsely vegetated, with occasional one-sided (flagged) red spruce ( Picea rubens ) trees, and open habitats dominated by various low-growing Appalachian and boreal plant species. [11]

Economic importance

U.S. Route 48 crossing the Allegheny Front U.S. Route 48 Allegheny Front aerial 2021.jpg
U.S. Route 48 crossing the Allegheny Front
View of Saddle Mountain at sunrise from Skyline atop the Allegheny Front along U.S. 50 in West Virginia Saddle-mtn.jpg
View of Saddle Mountain at sunrise from Skyline atop the Allegheny Front along U.S. 50 in West Virginia
NedPower Mount Storm Wind Project, West Virginia Mount Storm Wind Farm.jpg
NedPower Mount Storm Wind Project, West Virginia

The long, steep, nearly continuous, often windswept escarpment of the Allegheny Front has both positive and negative effects on society and culture in the central Appalachians region.

Challenge to transportation and communication

Few roads or railroads cross the Allegheny Front, limiting transportation and communication between the regions to its east and west. Establishing passage of the front was key to the development of the U.S. railroad network during the second half of the 19th century, thereby connecting the Midwest by rail with the Atlantic seaboard. The Pennsylvania Railroad built the Horseshoe Curve track section west of Altoona, so that freight trains could ascend or descend to or from the Allegheny Plateau to the west.

Recreation and tourism

Substantial portions of the Allegheny Front's crest and slopes are parts of a national forest (the Monongahela in West Virginia) or various state, local, or private wildlands parks or preserves. The few readily accessible scenic viewpoints atop the Allegheny Front are popular tourist destinations. The Skyline Overlook along U.S. Route 50 in West Virginia is readily accessible by a major road. The front is also a significant part of scenic views from various highways and mountains to its east, such as North Fork Mountain in West Virginia.

Wind farming

The NedPower Mount Storm Wind Project in West Virginia includes 132 wind turbines along 12 miles (19 km) of the Allegheny Front in Grant County near Mount Storm. Constructed between 2006 and 2008, it generates up to 264 megawatts of electricity for the mid-Atlantic power grid, enough to service about 66,000 homes and businesses.

In December 2016, Save Our Allegheny Ridges, a group that opposes energy development on forested mountaintops, said in a news release that Invenergy plans to install a series of wind turbines atop Shaffer Mountain in Somerset County just a few miles north of the Allegheny Front Hawk Watch. [12]

Related Research Articles

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The Appalachian Mountains, often called the Appalachians, are a mountain range in eastern to northeastern North America. The term "Appalachian" refers to several different regions associated with the mountain range, and its surrounding terrain. The general definition used is one followed by the United States Geological Survey and the Geological Survey of Canada to describe the respective countries' physiographic regions. The U.S. uses the term Appalachian Highlands and Canada uses the term Appalachian Uplands; the Appalachian Mountains are not synonymous with the Appalachian Plateau, which is one of the provinces of the Appalachian Highlands.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Allegheny Mountains</span> Mountain range in the northeastern United States

The Allegheny Mountain Range, informally the Alleghenies, is part of the vast Appalachian Mountain Range of the Eastern United States and Canada and posed a significant barrier to land travel in less developed eras. The Allegheny Mountains have a northeast–southwest orientation, running for about 300 miles (480 km) from north-central Pennsylvania southward, through western Maryland and eastern West Virginia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eastern Continental Divide</span> Hydrological divide in eastern North America

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Allegheny Plateau</span> Dissected plateau in the eastern United States

The Allegheny Plateau is a large dissected plateau area of the Appalachian Mountains in western and central New York, northern and western Pennsylvania, northern and western West Virginia, and eastern Ohio. It is divided into the unglaciated Allegheny Plateau and the glaciated Allegheny Plateau.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Monongahela National Forest</span> National forest in West Virginia, United States

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dolly Sods Wilderness</span> U.S. wilderness area in West Virginia

The Dolly Sods Wilderness is a U.S. Wilderness Area in the Allegheny Mountains of eastern West Virginia and is part of the Monongahela National Forest of the U.S. Forest Service.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bear Rocks Preserve</span>

Bear Rocks is a widely recognized symbol of West Virginia wilderness and among the most frequently photographed places in the state. It is a well-known landmark on the eastern edge of the plateau that includes the Dolly Sods Wilderness. It sits in a high-elevation heathland punctuated with wind-carved sandstone outcrops and is home to more than a dozen rare plant and animal species. Situated on the crest of the Allegheny Front, Bear Rocks afford vistas over the South Branch Potomac River. Visibility can extend eastward to the Shenandoah National Park in Virginia.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mount Porte Crayon</span> Mountain in West Virginia, United States

Mount Porte Crayon is a mountain in the Roaring Plains Wilderness of the Monongahela National Forest in the northeastern corner of Randolph County, West Virginia, USA. It rises to an elevation of 4,770 feet (1,450 m), the elevational climax of the Allegheny Front. The mountain is named for 19th century writer and illustrator David Hunter Strother (1816–88), known as "Porte Crayon", who produced a wide array of early West Virginia landscapes in his work.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">North Fork Mountain</span> Mountain in West Virginia, United States

North Fork Mountain is a quartzite-capped mountain ridge in the Ridge and Valley physiographic province of the Allegheny Mountains, also known as the High Alleghenies or Potomac Highlands, of eastern West Virginia. Kile Knob, at 4,588 feet, is the mountain's highest point, and Panther Knob and Pike Knob are nearly as high.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wills Mountain</span>

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tuscarora Sandstone</span> Bedrock unit in Pennsylvania, Maryland, West Virginia, and Virginia, US

The Silurian Tuscarora Formation — also known as Tuscarora Sandstone or Tuscarora Quartzite — is a mapped bedrock unit in Pennsylvania, Maryland, West Virginia, and Virginia, US.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pottsville Formation</span>

The Pennsylvanian Pottsville Formation is a mapped bedrock unit in Pennsylvania, western Maryland, West Virginia, Ohio, and Alabama. It is a major ridge-former in the Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians of the eastern United States. The Pottsville Formation is conspicuous at many sites along the Allegheny Front, the eastern escarpment of the Allegheny or Appalachian Plateau.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">U.S. Route 33 in West Virginia</span> Segment of American highway

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roaring Plains West Wilderness</span> Wilderness area in West Virginia, United States

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Spruce Mountain (West Virginia)</span> Highest point in the state of West Virginia

Spruce Mountain, located in eastern West Virginia, is the highest ridge of the Allegheny Mountains. The whale-backed ridge extends for only 16 miles (26 km) from northeast to southwest, but several of its peaks exceed 4,500 feet (1,400 m) in elevation. The summit, Spruce Knob, is the highest Allegheny Mountain point both in the state and the entire range, which spans four states.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Blair Gap</span>

Blair Gap, one of the gaps of the Allegheny, is a water gap along the eastern face atop the Allegheny Front escarpment. Like other gaps of the Allegheny, the slopes of Blair Gap were amenable to foot travel, pack mules, and possibly wagons allowing Amerindians, and then, after about 1778–1780 settlers, to travel west into the relatively depopulated Ohio Country decades before the railroads were born and tied the country together with steel.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gaps of the Allegheny</span>

The gaps of the Allegheny, meaning gaps in the Allegheny Ridge in west-central Pennsylvania, is a series of escarpment eroding water gaps along the saddle between two higher barrier ridge-lines in the eastern face atop the Allegheny Ridge or Allegheny Front escarpment. The front extends south through Western Maryland and forms much of the border between Virginia and West Virginia, in part explaining the difference in cultures between those two post-Civil War states. While not totally impenetrable to daring and energetic travelers on foot, passing the front outside of the water gaps with even sure footed mules was nearly impossible without navigating terrain where climbing was necessary on slopes even burros would find extremely difficult.

References

  1. 1 2 Price, Paul H. (1931). "The Appalachian Structural Front". The Journal of Geology. 39 (1). Cornell University: 24–44. Bibcode:1931JG.....39...24P. doi:10.1086/623786. JSTOR   30064694. S2CID   129728102.
  2. Fenneman, Nevin M. (1938), Physiography of Eastern United States, New York and London: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., pp 250.
  3. Engraved by Young and Delleker for the 1827 edition of Anthony Finley's General Atlas
  4. Fenneman, Op. cit., pp 228-229.
  5. 1 2 3 Cardwell, Dudley H.; Robert B. Irwin; Herbert P. Woodward, with cartography by Charles W. Lotz (1986) [1968]. Geologic Map of West Virginia (revised ed.). West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey. p. 2.
  6. 1 2 Means, John (2010). Roadside Geology of Maryland, Delaware, and Washington D.C. Missoula, Montana: Mountain Press. pp. x + 346.
  7. The orogeny's beginnings were within the Pennsylvanian subperiod of the Carboniferous, often considered a distinct geological period, the Pennsylvanian.
  8. Venable, Norma Jean (1996), Dolly Sods , West Virginia Renewable Resources Unique Areas Series 813, West Virginia University Extension Service, Morgantown, West Virginia, pg 7.
  9. Wargo, Brian (2016). "A Golden Year in Pennsylvania". Hawk Migration Studies. 41 (2): 3.
  10. The elevation of the North Fork River at Laneville, directly east of the Sods, is 1,148 feet (350 m), for a drop from the 4,000-foot (1,200 m) summit plateau of about 2,800 feet (850 m). The Seneca Creek watershed drops about 3,200 feet (980 m) from Mount Porte Crayon's 4,770-foot (1,450 m) summit to about 1,560 feet (480 m) at the Potomac River at the town of Seneca Rocks (formerly called Mouth of Seneca), near the Seneca Rocks geological formation west of North Fork Mountain.
  11. Strausbaugh, P.D.; E.L. Core (1978). Flora of West Virginia (Second ed.). Morgantown, West Virginia: Seneca Books, Inc. pp. xl + 1079.
  12. "Wind project alarms group". www.altoonamirror.com. Retrieved 2017-01-22.