Boston Paper - Notes on the Topography and Geology of Western North Carolina-The Hiawassee Valley

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 14
- File Size:
- 814 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1888
Abstract
NeaR the town of Christiansburg, Va., occurs a singular feature in topographical as well as geological structure, which may be said to have an important bearing on a large area to the southwest. The great water-shed ridge, which divides the waters flowing into the St. Lawrence from those flowing into the Atlantic ocean, coming southwestward, forms all of what was the boundary of Maine as agreed upon by the treaty of 1783, and a part of the present boundary, all of the northern New Hampshire boundary, and entering Vermont, continues south of Lake George. Passing irregularly through New York, it enters Pennsylvania, and there bifurcating, sends one prong to the west as a divide between the waters of the lakes and the Ohio, while the other becomes the steady, regular ridge which gave it the name of Alleghany, and thus passes on southwestward through Virginia. At no point has it ever been the geological divide. Its course, commencing in the Archean rocks, has passed through nearly every series of formation, and comes into Virginia in the Carboniferous strata. The geological divide—the line between the fossiliferous and the non-fossiliferous rocks—lies, in Canada, to the west of it, but from New York south into Virginia is far to the east. Reference to Dr. Hitchcock'k map will show this. But at the locality noted these positions are changed; the water-divide becomes the eastern chain, and the geological divide is the western, returning, it may be said, to the positions occupied in the region where they originated. These relations are shown on the large map accompanying the present paper. For several miles, the track of the Norfolk and Western Railroad
Citation
APA:
(1888) Boston Paper - Notes on the Topography and Geology of Western North Carolina-The Hiawassee ValleyMLA: Boston Paper - Notes on the Topography and Geology of Western North Carolina-The Hiawassee Valley. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1888.