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Bald Eagle State Park is a 5,900-acre (2,388 ha) Pennsylvania state park in Howard, Liberty, and Marion townships in Centre County, Pennsylvania in the United States. The park includes the Foster Joseph Sayers Reservoir, formed by damming Bald Eagle Creek and other smaller streams and covering 1,730 acres (700 ha).
Also a designated Reptile and Amphibian Protection Area. [34] [35] Halfway Run Natural Area: Bald Eagle: Union: 407 acres (165 ha) [11] [36] Hemlocks Natural Area: Tuscarora: Perry: 120 acres (49 ha) [34] [37] The Hook Natural Area: Bald Eagle: Union: 5,119 acres (2,072 ha) Encompasses an entire regional watershed. [11] [38] Hoverter and Sholl ...
Interactive map of the numbering plan areas of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (blue). This is a list of telephone area codes of Pennsylvania. In 1947, the American Telephone and Telegraph Company divided Pennsylvania into four numbering plan areas (NPAs) and assigned distinct area codes for each.
Bald Eagle State Forest is a Pennsylvania state forest in Pennsylvania Bureau of Forestry District #7. The main office is located in Laurelton in Union County , Pennsylvania . The forest is found in Centre , Clinton , Mifflin , Snyder , and Union Counties.
The lake is formed due to the damming of Bald Eagle Creek, a tributary of the West Branch Susquehanna River, as well as other smaller creeks. [2] The dam was created in 1971 by the United States Army Corps of Engineers [3] to prevent flooding and continue water quality down stream.
In the 1980s, as part of the state’s bald eagle reintroduction program, 73 eaglets were relocated to Lake Monroe from Alaska and Wisconsin, and today the eagle population in the region is booming.
A wave window over the Bald Eagle Valley looking north from Port Matilda.The Allegheny Front, which forms the wave, is under the left edge of the window.. Bald Eagle Valley is a low-lying area in Pennsylvania that drains into Bald Eagle Creek between the Allegheny Front and Bald Eagle Mountain, south of the West Branch Susquehanna River, in the Ridge-and-valley Appalachians.
Snyder-Middleswarth Natural Area is a 500 acre (202 ha) National Natural Landmark within Bald Eagle State Forest in Spring Township, Snyder County, Pennsylvania in the United States. [4] It is named for two Pennsylvania politicians from Snyder County: Simon Snyder and Ner Alexander Middleswarth .