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The northeast side drains into Sages Ravine, thence into Schenob Brook, the Hubbard Brook, the Housatonic River, and Long Island Sound. Mount Frissell is bordered by Round Mountain to the southeast, Mount Ashley to the north, and Brace Mountain to the west.
After the town of Salisbury, the trail ascends into the Taconic Range, crossing, in order: Lions Head, Riga Ridge, and Bear Mountain, after which the Massachusetts line is achieved at Sage's Ravine. The trail passes within one mile (1.6 km) of the business district of Kent, a resupply point for long-distance hikers.
Indiana: Wesselman Woods: 200 acres (81 ha) Central U.S. hardwood forests: Sugar Maple, Tulip Tree, Oak Indiana: Pioneer Mothers Memorial Forest [31] 88 acres (36 ha) [31] Central U.S. hardwood forests: Oak Indiana: Ginn Woods [32] 161 acres (65 ha) [32] Southern Great Lakes forests: Indiana: Meltzer Woods [33] 48 acres (19 ha) [32] Southern ...
Just north of Bear, the trail, as it crosses into Massachusetts, descends into Sages Ravine, a deep gorge in the eastern Taconic ridgeline which is home to a fragile old growth forest. As the trail crosses the brook in the ravine, it leaves the area maintained by the Connecticut section of the Appalachian Mountain Club.
Roads on the National Register of Historic Places in Indiana (1 P) Pages in category "Historic trails and roads in Indiana" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total.
Nineveh Township is one of nine townships in Johnson County, Indiana. As of the 2010 census, its population was 3,987 and it contained 1,688 housing units. [ 4 ] Nineveh Township took its name from Nineveh Creek .
Lake Monroe, Indiana's largest reservoir, forms the northern boundary. [1] It was established as wilderness in 1982 and is managed by the Hoosier National Forest. It covers 12,472 acres (19.49 mi 2 or 50.47 km 2). It was named in honor of Indiana's first State Forester Charles C. Deam. [1]
The Indiana General Assembly in 1901 created the Indiana State Board of Forestry. [1] [2] Entrance sign. In May 1903, the Indiana state government purchased 2,028 acres (8.21 km 2) of forest in the north of Clark County, noted for its knob features (isolated conical hills), [3] for use as Indiana's first state forest, at a cost of US$16,000. [4]