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Kettle Creek Reservoir is a 167 acres (68 ha) and serves as a fishery for trout, bass, bullhead, sucker, and panfish. Kettle Creek and it tributaries are excellent cold water fisheries. The fishing quality in the areas down stream of the dam has been damaged by pollution from acid mine drainage. [3] Most of Kettle Creek State Park is open to ...
Kettle Creek is a freestone stream, meaning that there is little limestone and alkalinity in it. [14] The soils in the lower part of the Kettle Creek watershed are highly acidic, deep, and well-drained. A total of 22 percent of the surface rock in this area is interbedded sedimentary rock, while sandstone makes up 78 percent.
Kettle is an unincorporated community in Cumberland County, Kentucky, United States. It lies along Route 61 south of the city of Burkesville, the county seat of Cumberland County. [1] Its elevation is 984 feet (300 m). [2] The community was named after a creek of the same name. [3]
Kettle Creek Gorge Natural Area is a 774-acre (313 ha) protected area in Sullivan County, Pennsylvania, United States. It is part of Loyalsock State Forest. [1] [2]
As of 2012, Cumberland County had the fewest registered Democrats, 844, out of all of Kentucky's counties. [17] The last Democrat to carry Cumberland County at the Presidential level was Horatio Seymour in 1868. Lyndon Johnson, in his 1964 landslide, is the only Democrat to receive 40% of the county's vote in a presidential election since 1896.
Kentucky/Tennessee state line: Peytonsburg: 1.960: 3.154: KY 2064 south (Hendricks Creek Road) – Hendricks Creek Resort [5] Northern terminus of KY-2064 2.754: 4.432: KY 214 west (Kettle Creek Road) Eastern terminus of KY-214 3.354: 5.398: KY 3108 (Red Banks Road/Cherry Tree Ridge Road) – Salvation Army Camp Paradise Valley: SA camp to the ...
Kettle Creek Wild Area, 2,600 acres (1,100 ha), buffers the Kettle Creek Gorge Natural Area and is home to Kettle Creek, a wilderness trout stream. McIntyre Wild Area, 7,500 acres (3,035 ha), holds the complete watersheds of four streams that cascade into numerous waterfalls. It gets its name from the old 19th-century mining town of McIntyre ...
[2] [3] The wild area is named for Hammersley Fork, a tributary of Kettle Creek, which flows through the area. The wild area includes 10.78 miles (17.35 km) of the Susquehannock Trail System , an 83.4-mile (134.2 km) loop hiking trail almost entirely on state forest land.