Adirondack Mountains
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- Adirondacks
- On the Web:
- Union College - Arches - Soils and Soil Acidification in the Adirondack Mountains (Nov. 28, 2024)
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Adirondack Mountains, mountains in northeastern New York state, U.S. They extend southward from the St. Lawrence River valley and Lake Champlain to the Mohawk River valley. The mountains are only sparsely settled, and much of the area exists in a primitive natural state, protected by state law.
Although they are frequently included in the Appalachian Mountain system, the Adirondack Mountains are related geologically to the great plateau of the Canadian Shield. The Adirondacks were formed some one billion years ago and have been subjected to hundreds of millions of years of erosion and glaciation, notably the glaciations of the Pleistocene Epoch (about 2,600,000 to 11,700 years ago). The Adirondacks region is circular in outline, domelike in appearance, and covers more than 9,100 square miles (23,600 square km). The region is made up of hundreds of peaks and foothills, with more than 40 summits higher than 4,000 feet (1,200 metres); the tallest are Mount Marcy, which is the highest point in the state at 5,344 feet (1,629 metres), and Algonquin Peak of Mount McIntyre at 5,114 feet (1,559 metres). Although the peaks are primarily rounded in shape, several of the higher ones, including Whiteface Mountain (4,867 feet [1,483 metres]), reveal bare rock walls in vertical escarpments.
The Adirondack Mountains are covered with spruce, hemlock, and pine forests interspersed with hardwoods on the lower slopes; white-tailed deer and black bear are the largest species of wildlife. The action of retreating glaciers during the last Pleistocene Ice Age left the area covered by glacial till (intermingled clay, sand, gravel, and boulders) and created the many spectacular gorges, waterfalls, lakes, ponds, and swamps for which the region is noted. Some 2,300 lakes and ponds dot the landscape. More than 31,000 miles (50,000 km) of rivers and streams radiate from the upland region into the St. Lawrence, Hudson, and Mohawk rivers and Lakes Ontario and Champlain. Summers in the Adirondacks are moderated by cool mountain breezes, and winters, though cold, are mitigated by dry air and clear skies.
The name Adirondack is derived from an Iroquois word meaning “eater of tree bark,” a derisive term bestowed by them upon a neighbouring Algonquin tribe. The French explorer Samuel de Champlain became the first European to sight the Adirondacks, in 1609, but the area resisted all but sparse settlement until the late 19th century. In 1892 the New York state legislature created Adirondack Park, which has grown over the years and is roughly coterminous with the Adirondacks region, making it the largest American state or national park outside of Alaska. The park covers almost one-fifth of the state and is about the size of Vermont. The state-owned Adirondack Forest Preserve now comprises some 3,900 square miles (10,100 square km) within the park and is a popular tourist area. The majority of the land in Adirondack Park, however, is privately owned and used for lumbering, agriculture, and recreation. The mining of iron ore, graphite, and titanium has been replaced by the mining of wollastonite (a form of calcium silicate) and garnet.
Numerous parks, private resort villages, and state campsites in the Adirondacks provide facilities for camping, swimming, hiking, and canoeing, especially around the Saranac River and Lake Placid. Winter sports include Olympic ski and bobsled runs at Lake Placid (which hosted the 1932 and 1980 Olympic Winter Games) and other sites, snowmobiling, and ice skating. Good highways provide access to some parts of the region, but its more remote portions are accessible only to hikers or canoeists. Historic landmarks in the area include Fort Ticonderoga, Lake George, and Plattsburgh. The Adirondack Museum, on a campus of exhibit buildings near Blue Mountain Lake, houses relics of human activity in the mountains since colonial times.