March 20, 2024
The Falls Line
A natural boundary along the Atlantic seaboard of the U.S.
THE "FALLS LINE" is an approximately 900-mile long boundary between physiographic provenances along the Atlantic Seaboard of the US, running north-northeast from Georgia to New Jersey. It is expressed as a long series of waterfalls on the predominantly west-to-east flowing rivers that drain the Appalachian Mountains and piedmont into the Atlantic Ocean.
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It is the demarcation of the boundary between the Piedmont to the west and the Atlantic Coastal Plain to the east. First documented in the early 1600s, the falls were created as rivers transition from flowing over the hard crystalline igneous and metamorphic rocks of the Piedmont, to the much softer and more easily eroded sedimentary deposits that lie between the falls and the Atlantic coast.
A couple hundred million years ago, the predecessors of the current Appalachian Mountains were created as the result of a titanic collision between Africa and North America. They soared to heights estimated to be in excess of 20,000 feet. Time and the elements, the great levelers, have since eroded and worn most of that enormous mass of material away. Rivers have cut down through the lower areas, creating "gaps" in what remains and carrying vast amounts of sediment away, depositing it along the coastal plain to the east as well as the midcountry of Ohio, western Kentucky and Tennessee, etc. all the way to the Mississippi River.
To give you a sense of how much sediment there is, consider the image below (swiped from the same source as that above):
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The falls line boundary has had tremendous impact on how people, particularly European settlers and their descendants, have interacted with the land. Cities, towns, and villages tended to concentrate at the falls, which provided cheap power to operate mills.
The falls are the natural "head of navigation" for the rivers; below them, sailing vessels and steamships could operate easily, but they could not pass beyond. Towns along the fall line naturally tended to become inland ports, places where incoming trade goods could be delivered by vessel and outgoing materials such as crops, furs, timber, and other items could be picked up by the same vessels.
Fords across rivers above the falls tended to be located in places where the river bottoms expose and flow directly over the hard crystalline rock of the Piedmont; it's much easier for people, horses, and wagons to cross at such places than where the river bottom is deep, slippery, clinging mud. Several fords at or near the falls line played important roles in, among other things, key Civil War battles including Fredericksburg VA, Gettysburg, Antietam, as well as many other related operations.
On the coastal plain, rivers tend to be crossed by bridges and ferries rather than by fords. Roads are built much more easily on the relatively flat, low-lying, unconsolidated alluvial soil of the coastal plain than in the tortuous, steep, winding hills of the Piedmont. Naturally, that coincides with the establishment of many more settlements along and to the east of the falls line than to the west. Wikipedia will happily tell you much more, should you care to learn.
The short version is that the East Coast Greenway appears to follow the falls line for much of its (the ECG's) length as it traverses the mid-Atlantic region.
I happen to live within ten miles of the fall line where it crosses the Potomac River (at Great Falls, in Virginia and Maryland). I have in-laws in Charlotte NC, and there's relatively inexpensive bicycle-capable Amtrak service between there and Washington DC. My plan is to take the train down to Charlotte then set off riding back north until I get home. I'll intersect the ECG somewhere east of Greensboro NC, then use that and U.S. Bike Route 1 to work my way home. Starting somewhere well south of Richmond I expect to be on or near the falls line pretty much the rest of the way.
Heart | 1 | Comment | 5 | Link |
8 months ago
I'm definitely open to suggestions to improve the route from Charlotte to Bahama. There's nothing like local knowledge in that regard! I'm still glad you pointed out the site of the Nez Perce massacre out west, a couple years ago, and would give great consideration to your home turf suggestions.
8 months ago
The route map has been updated accordingly.
8 months ago
8 months ago
The nerve. How DARE you go off and do something you want to do, abandoning me and my desperate need for information without a care in the world. :)
Seriously, though: no worries, it's all good. I'll switch to the private channel.
8 months ago
Rather than camp, my overnight accommodations will be a mix of Warm Showers hosts, an AirBnB, a couple commercial hotels, and (I hope) a friend's house. That will lighten and shrink my load considerably, eliminating the need to carry my tent and all the related camping impedimentia.
It's just over a month before all of this is slated to happen, and thus far I've logged 25 miles of riding for the year. Guess I'd best get started changing that.
Rate this entry's writing | Heart | 9 |
Comment on this entry | Comment | 18 |
Great concept for a tour. I’ll look forward to following along.
8 months ago
Looking forward to following along with you again!
8 months ago
8 months ago
I've known of it since college, when my roommate (a geography major) talked about it. It may be that it was also covered in my own major, geology, but it is my roomie's conversation that I recall more clearly.
8 months ago
8 months ago
Hope you enjoy what's to follow.
8 months ago
https://www.cycleblaze.com/journals/mormontour/day-18-grace-to-lava-hot-springs/
8 months ago
Thanks for the offer to reuse your purloined graphic but I am not sut it's really relevant. The Eastern Continental Divide actually lies well to the west of the falls line, since it follows the ridges in the Blue Ridge physiographic province. The falls line, by contrast, marks the boundary between Piedmont and Atlantic Coastal Plain. The Piedmont is between the coastal plain and the Blue Ridge.
A map of I-95, on the other hand, would be a decent stand in for a falls line map since it runs quite close to it for much of the length of the falls line.
8 months ago
I may not also... The old hard drive just doesn't seem to pull up images like it did back when I was a young 60 some year old. Back then I could recount almost any hike or bike ride I had taken anywhere anytime. Now, I seem unable to remember where I went yesterday, or sometimes this morning.
Gittin' ol iz no fun at this stage... But it beats the alternative!
8 months ago
No it isn't, as I'm discovering to my dismay. I resented turning 40, really disliked having to face the fact I was 50, and haven't got words for being over 60. I will NOT go quietly into the good night. I will rage and kick and fight every inch of the way.
Now... HEY YOU KIDS! GIT OFF MY LAWN!!!
8 months ago
There's a good chance we'll have time on the way home from New York for a stop in Rockville, if your offer is still open and you're around in late May.
8 months ago
I'll be in Missouri riding the Katy Trail (https://www.cycleblaze.com/journals/katytrail2024/), from May 17 through the 26th (Sunday of Memorial Day weekend) but I'm home and available in very latest May. Hope we can link up for another exciting CycleBlaze meetup!
8 months ago
8 months ago
As the time of our possible connection draws nearer, feel free to switch channels to email. My address is in my CB profile.
8 months ago
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