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Clove Lakes Park has a rich natural history with valuable ecological assets and a few remnants of the past. Chief among them are the park's lakes and ponds, outcroppings of serpentine rocks, and Staten Island's largest living thing, a 119-foot-tall (36 m) tulip tree. [2] Clove Lakes Park is home to many species of indigenous wildlife.
Stony Clove Creek is a 10.3-mile-long (16.6 km) [3] creek in the Catskill Mountains in New York. It is a tributary of Esopus Creek , which in turn is a tributary of the Hudson River . It joins the Esopus in the village of Phoenicia , and has two smaller tributaries up north of Phoenicia.
Horizontal resolution: 300 dpi: Vertical resolution: 300 dpi: Image width: 2,550 px: Image height: 2,761 px: Date and time of digitizing: 04:08, 29 September 2008
MapQuest offers online, mobile, business and developer solutions that help people discover and explore where they would like to go, how to get there and what to do along the way and at your destination.
Clove Brook is a 12.0-mile-long (19.3 km) [1] tributary of Papakating Creek in Sussex County, New Jersey in the United States. [2]Clove Brook, previously known as Bastions Brook, Clove Creek, Clove River, and Deep Clove River, rises from north of Colesville and travels in a southeasterly direction, predominantly on the north side of State Route 23, down through the Clove Valley toward Sussex ...
New York State Route 214 (NY 214) is a 12.48-mile (20.08 km) long state highway through the Catskill Park sections of Ulster and Greene counties.The route begins at an intersection with NY 28 in the town of Shandaken, just southwest of the hamlet of Phoenicia.
It carries many species of game fish, fowl, and amphibians.There is a lean-to and seven designated campsites near the lake. [3] Access is by an 8-mile hiking trail, starting around Platte Clove Preserve (County Route 16) up the Old Overlook Road and then around Plattekill Mountain to a junction culminating in a half-mile section called Echo Lake Trail.
A map of the actual Croton Watershed is found here. The Croton Watershed is the New York City water supply system 's name for its southernmost watershed and its infrastructure, [ a ] an organized entity rather than a mere hydrological feature.