enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Everglades National Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Everglades_National_Park

    374 [ 4] Everglades National Park is an American national park that protects the southern twenty percent of the original Everglades in Florida. The park is the largest tropical wilderness in the United States and the largest wilderness of any kind east of the Mississippi River. An average of one million people visit the park each year. [ 5]

  3. Everglades - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Everglades

    The Miami Oolite facies also acts to impede flow of water from the Everglades to the ocean between Fort Lauderdale and Coot Bay (near Cape Sable). [ 18 ] The metropolitan areas of Miami , Fort Lauderdale, and West Palm Beach are located on a rise in elevation along the eastern coast of Florida, called the Eastern Coastal Ridge, that was formed ...

  4. Port Everglades - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_Everglades

    Port Everglades is a man-made seaport. The port was originally dredged from Lake Mabel, a natural body of water that was a wide and shallow section of the Florida East Coast Canal system. In 1911, the Florida Board of Trade passed a resolution that called for a deep-water port.

  5. ValuJet Flight 592 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ValuJet_Flight_592

    ValuJet Airlines Flight 592 was a regularly scheduled flight from Miami to Atlanta. On May 11, 1996, the ValuJet Airlines McDonnell Douglas DC-9 operating the route crashed into the Everglades about 10 minutes after departing Miami as a result of a fire in the cargo compartment probably caused by mislabeled and improperly stored hazardous cargo.

  6. Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dade-Collier_Training_and...

    Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport. Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport ( IATA: TNT, ICAO: KTNT, FAA LID: TNT) is a public airport located within the Florida Everglades, 36 miles (58 km) west of the central business district of Miami, in Collier County, Florida, United States. It is owned by Miami-Dade County and operated by ...

  7. Indigenous people of the Everglades region - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_people_of_the...

    The indigenous people of the Everglades region arrived in the Florida peninsula of what is now the United States approximately 14,000 to 15,000 years ago, probably following large game. The Paleo-Indians found an arid landscape that supported plants and animals adapted to prairie and xeric scrub conditions.

  8. Draining and development of the Everglades - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draining_and_development...

    Conservationists concerned about the Everglades have been a vocal minority ever since Miami was a young city. South Florida's first and perhaps most enthusiastic naturalist was Charles Torrey Simpson , who retired from the Smithsonian Institution to Miami in 1905 when he was 53.

  9. South Florida rocklands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Florida_rocklands

    The South Florida rocklands ecoregion, in the tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests biome, occurs in southern Florida and the Florida Keys in the United States, where they would naturally cover an area of 2,100 km 2 (810 sq mi). These forests form on limestone outcrops with very thin soil; [ 2] the higher elevation separating them ...