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The Paulins Kill (also known as Paulinskill River) is a 41.6-mile (66.9 km) [1] tributary of the Delaware River in northwestern New Jersey in the United States. With a long-term median flow rate of 76 cubic feet of water per second (2.15 m 3 /s), it is New Jersey's third-largest contributor to the Delaware River, behind the Musconetcong River and Maurice River. [4]
The Paulinskill Viaduct, also known as the Hainesburg Viaduct, is a reinforced concrete railroad bridge that crosses the Paulins Kill in Knowlton Township, New Jersey. [1] When completed in 1910, it was the largest reinforced concrete structure in the world.
The 40-mile long Paulins Kill - third largest New Jersey tributary into the Delaware River - begins on a hillside on the Newton-Stillwater border, wanders through the town, into the Hyper Humas ...
The Paulinskill Valley Trail is a rail trail along the Paulins Kill river in New Jersey. It is the sixth longest trail in the state at 27 miles (43 km). [citation needed] It was originally a right-of-way of the New York, Susquehanna and Western Railroad [2] and the Blairstown Railway.
Flows into the Delaware at Flatbrookville, near Walpack Bend in Walpack Township, Sussex County, New Jersey; Tributaries include: Tillman Brook, Little Flat Brook, Beerskill, Big Flat Brook, Criss Brook, Forked Brook, Normanock Brook, Parker Brook, Stony Brook; Paulins Kill: 41.6-mile (66.9 km) 176.85 square miles (458.0 km2)
Law enforcement officers in New Jersey killed a man in a shootout Wednesday while trying to arrest him on several felony charges, authorities said. Officers with a regional task force of the U.S ...
Jacksonburg Creek is a tributary of the Paulins Kill located along the eastern face of Kittatinny Mountain in Warren County in northwestern New Jersey in the United States. It rises near the Warren County-Sussex County border in Hardwick Township and enters the Paulins Kill in the center of Blairstown.
Casper Shafer's house in Stillwater, New Jersey—the log cabin portion of the structure (left) was built c.1742, the main stone section (right) c. 1750.The architecture is typical of colonial-era and early American houses built by the Palatine German emigrants who settled in the Paulins Kill valley.