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Geomorphology and forest ecology of a mountain region in the central Appalachians

January 1, 1960

The area studied, mostly in the headwaters of the Shenandoah River, Augusta and Rockingham Counties, Va., includes about 55 square miles of densely forested mountain land and has an average relief of about 1,500 feet. It is part of an area that in June 1949 was subjected to a violent cloudburst which damaged large tracts on slopes and bottom lands. Most of the area is underlain by flaggy arkosic sandstone and interbedded reddish shale of the Hampshire formation of Devonian age. The highest ridges are capped by massive sandstone of the Pocono formation of Mississippian age. In most of the area the rocks dip gently to the southeast but in the northwestern and southeastern parts they are folded into synclines that localize northeastward-trending ridges.

Publication Year 1960
Title Geomorphology and forest ecology of a mountain region in the central Appalachians
DOI 10.3133/pp347
Authors John Tilton Hack, John C. Goodlett
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Professional Paper
Series Number 347
Index ID pp347
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse