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Devils Fork (conservation area), a wildland in the George Washington and Jefferson National Forests of western Virginia, has been recognized by the Wilderness Society as a special place worthy of protection from logging and road construction. The Wilderness Society has designated the area as a "Mountain Treasure".
The Devils Fork begins in northeastern Cleburne County, and flows southwest to meet Greers Ferry Lake near Ida. The three forks converge into the north section of Greers Ferry Lake, which is connected to the south section of the lake by The Narrows, the site of the former Little Red River.
Devil's Fork, Devils Fork and Devil Fork can refer to: The blivet, also known as the Devil's tuning fork, an optical illusion; Devils Fork State Park, a 622-acre (2.52 km 2) park in Northwestern South Carolina; Bidens frondosa, an herb native to North America; The Devils Fork, a tributary of the Little Red River in Arkansas; Devil Fork, Kentucky
An impossible trident, [1] also known as an impossible fork, [2] blivet, [3] poiuyt, or devil's tuning fork, [4] is a drawing of an impossible object (undecipherable figure), a kind of an optical illusion. It appears to have three cylindrical prongs at one end which then mysteriously transform into two rectangular prongs at the other end.
Devils Fork State Park is in northwestern South Carolina on the eastern edge of the Sumter National Forest at the edge of 7,500-acre (3,035 ha) Lake Jocassee. It is located three miles (5 km) off SC 11 , the Cherokee Scenic Highway, near the town of Salem, South Carolina .
Devils Fork was an unincorporated community located in Wyoming and Raleigh counties, West Virginia, United States. Part of the community was renamed Stephenson . The area's coal mines and a portion of its community [ 2 ] (see Mine Map 322942) resided in the vicinity of Amigo in Raleigh County.
"They sprayed 'GDK,' with an upside-down devil's fork," said Downing, who recently retired as a Framingham police lieutenant. "It looks like the can malfunctioned, there were drips of paint ...
The Wilson River, about 33 miles (53 km) long, flows from the Northern Oregon Coast Range to Tillamook Bay in the U.S. state of Oregon.Formed by the confluence of its Devil's Lake Fork and its South Fork, it runs generally west through the Tillamook State Forest to its mouth near the city of Tillamook.