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Crossville has long been a great crossroads of East and Middle Tennessee. Crossville is located at the center of Cumberland County at (35.954221, -85.031267 The city is situated atop the Cumberland Plateau amid the headwaters of the Obed River, which slices a gorge north of Crossville en route to its confluence with the Emory River to the northeast.
The county is home to a number of karst formations, most notably at Grassy Cove, a large, closed depression located southeast of Crossville. It is 3 miles wide, 5 miles long, and over 1,000 feet deep.
[135] [136] The 16-mile (26 km) segment linking US 70N in Monterey and US 127 in Crossville opened to traffic on December 1 of that year. [137] The final section of I-40 in Knoxville to be completed was the segment connecting US 11W and US 11E/25W/70, which opened on December 19, 1967, to eastbound traffic and on June 21, 1968, to westbound ...
East Tennessee's major landforms. East Tennessee is located within three major geological divisions of the Appalachian Mountains: the Blue Ridge Mountains on the border with North Carolina in the east; the Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians (usually called the "Great Appalachian Valley" or "Tennessee Valley" [a]) in the center; and the Cumberland Plateau in the west, part of which is in Middle ...
[1] North American area code 931 is the telephone area code serving a horseshoe-shaped region of 28 counties [2] in Middle Tennessee. It covers almost all of Middle Tennessee except for the Nashville metropolitan area.
Fairfield Glade is located in eastern Cumberland County at (35.994355, -84.884986 It is situated on several ridges and valleys on the Cumberland Plateau and is bordered to the east by the valley of Daddys Creek, a tributary of the Obed River, and to the north by the state Catoosa Wildlife Management Area.
Stewarts Creek High: 2,458; 12 portable classrooms; 37.7% eligible for free or reduced-priced school meals; 20% increase of students in existing zone over five-year stretch by August 2027
Ozone Falls State Natural Area is a state natural area in Cumberland County, Tennessee in the southeastern United States. It consists of 43 acres (0.17 km 2) centered on Ozone Falls, a 110-foot (34 m) plunge waterfall, and its immediate gorge along Fall Creek.