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Eastern Continental Divide
Hydrological divide in eastern North America
Hydrological divide in eastern North America

The Eastern Continental Divide, Eastern Divide or Appalachian Divide is a hydrological divide in eastern North America that separates the easterly Atlantic Seaboard watershed from the westerly Gulf of Mexico watershed. It is one of six continental hydrological divides of North America which define several drainage basins, each of which drains to a particular body of water.
The divide nearly spans the United States from south of Lake Ontario through the Florida peninsula, and consists of raised terrain including the Appalachian Mountains to the north, the southern Piedmont Plateau and lowland ridges in the Atlantic Coastal Plain to the south.
Course
Northern portion
_crossing_the_Eastern_Continental_Divide_on_top_of_Allegheny_Mountain_in_Pendleton_County,_West_Virginia.jpg)


The divide's northern portion winds through the middle of the Appalachian Mountains, either through the interior of the Allegheny Plateau or along the Allegheny Mountains. In this portion, the western drainage of the divide flows into the watersheds of the Allegheny River, Monongahela River, and New River, all tributaries of the Ohio River. The eastern drainage flows into the watersheds of the Susquehanna River, Potomac River, and James River, all of which flow into the Chesapeake Bay before entering the Atlantic Ocean.
At its northern terminus, the Eastern Continental Divide originates at Triple Divide Peak in Ulysses Township, Pennsylvania, about 10 mi south of the New York-Pennsylvania border, where it diverges from the St. Lawrence Divide. This point divides the eastern United States into three watersheds: those of the Genesee River flowing into Lake Ontario and then the St. Lawrence River to the north; Pine Creek into the Susquehanna River as part of the Atlantic seaboard watershed to the east; and the Allegheny River into the Ohio, the Mississippi, and the Gulf of Mexico to the west.
From north to south, the divide passes through the broader Allegheny Plateau region, following the boundary between the Allegheny River and Susquehanna River watersheds through most of Pennsylvania. At Blue Knob near Altoona, the Divide begins to follow Allegheny Mountain and then Little Savage Mountain. A few miles before the state border, the Divide begins to separate the Youghiogheny River and Potomac River watersheds.
In Maryland, the Divide runs significantly west of the Allegheny Front, following Backbone Mountain, and passing near the source of the North Branch Potomac River at the Fairfax Stone. The Divide then passes through a plateau of the Allegheny Mountains of West Virginia, passing between the north end of the Canaan Valley in the Cheat River watershed, and the Mount Storm Lake basin in the Potomac River watershed. The Divide then rejoins the Allegheny Front.
A significant portion of the Divide forms part of the border between West Virginia and Virginia along Allegheny Mountain and then Peters Mountain, separating the Greenbrier River and James River watersheds. It then makes a dramatic arc to the east around the Sinking Creek valley, and then follows the hill crest east of Blacksburg, Virginia.
Central portion
The divide's central portion generally follows the easternmost ridge of the Blue Ridge Mountains and thus of the Appalachian Mountains as a whole, which takes the form of a high escarpment. In this portion, the western drainage of the divide flows into the watersheds of the New River and Tennessee River, both tributaries of the Ohio River. The eastern drainage flows into the watersheds of the Roanoke River, Pee Dee River, and Santee River.
The divide initially separates the headwaters of the New River from that of the Roanoke River. Just before the Divide passes into North Carolina, it begins to separate the New River and Yadkin River watersheds. It then separates upper tributaries of the Tennessee River from those of the Santee River. Its high point is on Grandfather Mountain at 5,946 feet (1,812 m); although Mount Mitchell is the highest point in the Appalachian Mountains, it is not on the Divide, but 4 miles west of it.
Southern portion

Past the southern end of the Appalachian Mountains, the divide's southern portion winds through the lowlands of Georgia and Florida. In this portion, the western drainage of the divide flows into the watersheds of the Apalachicola River, Suwannee River, Withlacoochee River, and Peace River, all of which drain directly to the Gulf of Mexico. The eastern drainage flows into the watersheds of the Savannah River, Altamaha River, Satilla River, St. Marys River, and St. Johns River.
In Georgia, the Divide generally separates the Apalachicola River, watershed in the west from the Savannah River and Altamaha River watersheds to the east, passing through the Atlanta metropolitan area and extending past the southern end of the Appalachian Mountains southeasterly across the Georgia plateau. In southern Georgia, it separates the Suwannee River and Satilla River watersheds.
In Florida, the Divide generally follows the western edge of the St. Marys River and then St. Johns River, meandering into the low country of Northern Florida until it reaches Central Florida. The west side of the divide continues to be the Suwannee River and then the Withlacoochee River watersheds.
The southern terminus of the Eastern Continental Divide is at the triple divide between the Ocklawaha (a tributary of the St. Johns), Peace, and Kissimmee River watersheds, which is on the grounds of the Southern Dunes Golf and Country Club in Haines City, Florida on the Lake Wales Ridge. Because the Kissimmee River flows into Lake Okeechobee, whose distributaries reach both the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean via low swampland covered by a network of diverging canals and natural waterways, its watershed's land is not clearly divisible between the two watersheds.
Weather
Because the divide is at or in proximity to the highest terrain, air is forced upwards regardless of wind direction. This process of orographic enhancement leads to higher precipitation than surrounding areas. In winter, the divide is often much snowier than surrounding areas, due to orographic enhancement and cooler temperatures with elevation.
History
Prior to about 1760, north of Spanish Florida, the Appalachian Divide represented the boundary between British and French colonial possessions in North America. The Royal Proclamation of 1763 separated settled lands of the Thirteen Colonies from lands north and west of it designated the Indian Reserve; the proclamation border ran along the Appalachian Divide but extended beyond its Pennsylvania-New York terminus north into New England.
The exact route of the ECD shifts over time due to erosion, tectonic activity, construction projects, and other factors.
Locations
| Location | State | Coordinates | Summit or other feature | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pennsylvania | 2523 ft | ||||
| Triple Divide Peak, Ulysses Township, Potter County | |||||
| Babcock Ridge | |||||
| Allegheny Mountain | 2167 ft | ||||
| summit near Allegheny/Gallitzin Tunnels | |||||
| 2690 ft | |||||
| summit above Allegheny Mountain Tunnel (Pennsylvania Turnpike) | |||||
| 2460 ft | |||||
| summit above Sand Patch Tunnel | |||||
| Savage Mountain | 2392 ft | railroad cut on Great Allegheny Passage | |||
| Pennsylvania/Maryland | 2840 ft | ||||
| highest summit of the Mason–Dixon Line | |||||
| Maryland | 2620 ft | ||||
| crossing near Green Lantern Road | |||||
| Savage Mountain | 2600 ft | ||||
| saddle point at planned route of 1828 C&O Canal | |||||
| Backbone Mountain | Maryland/West Virginia | 3380 ft | |||
| (highest point) | Headwaters of Potomac River (Maryland's southern border) and Youghiogheny River | ||||
| West Virginia: Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia | TBD ft | ||||
| {{Specify | date=December 2009}} | ||||
| West Virginia: Dolly Sods Wilderness | |||||
| West Virginia: Mountain Lake Wilderness | |||||
| West Virginia | 3295 ft | ||||
| Saddle Point at Pendleton County and Randolph County. | |||||
| 2460 ft | |||||
| Midland Trail: planned crossing for the 19th century James River and Kanawha Turnpike | |||||
| Jefferson National Forest | Virginia | 3620 ft | |||
| saddle point at Johns Creek headwaters (James River tributary), and near triple point of Mississippi River (W) & Chesapeake Bay (NE)/Albemarle Sound (Roanoke River) (SE) | |||||
| Appalachian Trail | 3397 ft | ||||
| Parallel Route Begin | |||||
| Blacksburg, Virginia | 2080 ft | ||||
| Appalachian Trail | 3224 ft | ||||
| Parallel Route Begin | |||||
| 2180 ft | |||||
| crossing | |||||
| Christiansburg, Virginia | 2180 ft | ||||
| 2940 Riner Rd, Christiansburg, VA 24073 | |||||
| 2860 ft | |||||
| crossing | |||||
| / Blue Ridge Parkway | North Carolina | 2692 ft | |||
| crossing at Roaring Gap, NC | |||||
| Thurmond Chatham Wildlife Management Area | triple point of New River and Yadkin/West Prong Roaring rivers | ||||
| at Blowing Rock, North Carolina | 3620 ft | ||||
| crossing at the Green Park Inn | |||||
| 4020 ft | |||||
| crossing | |||||
| and Blue Ridge Parkway | 2820 ft | ||||
| crossing | |||||
| 2786 ft | |||||
| crossing | |||||
| 2880 ft | |||||
| crossing | |||||
| 2130 ft | |||||
| crossing | |||||
| 2910 ft | |||||
| crossing | |||||
| 2694 ft | |||||
| crossing, approx. 1 mile north of NC/SC border | |||||
| French Broad watershed | North Carolina–South Carolina | tributary of the Tennessee River along NC/SC border dividing mountain ridges running southeast meets Santee watershed flowing into Atlantic | |||
| Sassafras Mountain | 3564 ft | ||||
| located along the South Carolina-North Carolina border in northern Pickens County, South Carolina, and southern Transylvania County, North Carolina, nearest to the town of Rosman, North Carolina | |||||
| North Carolina | 2694 ft | ||||
| crossing | |||||
| Savannah watershed | North Carolina–South Carolina | across the border of Pickens County, South Carolina & Greenville County, South Carolina, up into Transylvania County, North Carolina, Jackson County, North Carolina, and Macon County, North Carolina, to dividing mountain ridges to Tennessee River tributaries | |||
| North Carolina | 3868 ft | ||||
| crossing | |||||
| Cowee Gap | 4199 ft | ||||
| divides Tennessee (Cullasaja) and Savannah (Chatooga) rivers | |||||
| Highlands, North Carolina | 4100 ft | ||||
| Sunset Rock | |||||
| 3771 ft | |||||
| crossing | |||||
| Black Rock Mountain State Park | Georgia | 3640 ft | |||
| a Blue Ridge summit | |||||
| ACF River Basin at Young Lick | 3809 ft | ||||
| triple point at intersection of 3 GA counties: Hiwassee (Towns Co)/Chattahoochee River (Habersham Co) on the west & on the east: Savannah River (Rabun Co) | |||||
| Altamaha watershed | triple point along border of Hall & Banks (GA) counties: Chattahoochee River-Banks (west) & Altamaha River-Hall/Savannah River-Banks (east) | ||||
| Suwanee watershed | triple point: Chattahoochee River/Suwanee Creek (west) & Altamaha River (east) | ||||
| 1280 ft | |||||
| crossing (1 of 5) | |||||
| 1120 ft | |||||
| crossing (2 of 5) | |||||
| Norcross, Georgia | 1086 ft | ||||
| through Norcross historic district | |||||
| 1050 ft | |||||
| crossing (3 of 5) | |||||
| 1020 ft | |||||
| crossing (1 of 2) | |||||
| Atlanta | near Dekalb Av | ||||
| 1020 ft | |||||
| crossing (1 of 4 crossings of I-75/4 of 5 crossings of I-85) | |||||
| 1050 ft | |||||
| crossing | |||||
| 1000 ft | |||||
| crossing (5 of 5) | |||||
| 976 ft | |||||
| crossing (2 of 4) | |||||
| 960 ft | |||||
| crossing (2 of 2) | |||||
| 927 ft | |||||
| crossing (3 of 4) | |||||
| Atlantic Seaboard fall line | near Macon, Georgia, this intersection is a triple physiographic point of the Piedmont (to the north) and the Gulf & Atlantic coastal plains (southwest & southeast). | ||||
| 410 ft | |||||
| crossing (4 of 4) | |||||
| Satilla watershed | triple point: Suwannee (west) & Altamaha River/Satilla River (east) | ||||
| St. Marys watershed | triple point: Suwannee (west) & Satilla River/St. Marys River (east) | ||||
| St. Johns watershed | Florida | triple point: Suwannee (west) & St. Marys River/St. Johns River (east) | |||
| 159 ft | |||||
| crossing | |||||
| Florida Trail | {{Specify | date=December 2009}} | Central Florida crossing over the Florida crustal arch | ||
| Withlacoochee watershed | triple point: Suwannee/Withlacoochee River (Florida) (west) & St. Johns River (east) | ||||
| Miami watershed | triple point: Withlacoochee (west) & St. Johns River/Miami River (east) | ||||
| Kissimmee/Okeechobee watershed | south point of ECD @ Withlacoochee & Miami/Kissimmee triple point |
Eastern Triple Divide
Genesee River (branch):2100 ft
Pine Creek: 2100 ft
--
Notes
References
References
- {{Cite gnis
- "PENNSYLVANIA'S MAJOR RIVER BASINS".
- "North Carolina River Basins".
- "Major River Watersheds of the Chesapeake Bay".
- "Virginia's Major Watersheds".
- "North Carolina Watersheds".
- "Georgia Rivers".
- "Palatlakaha River Watershed".
- "Peace River - Peace Creek Canal Watershed".
- "Kissimmee River - Above Lake Hatchineha Watershed".
- Palmer, Tom. (2020-08-22). "Nature of Things: Lake Lowery flooding has no easy solution".
- (2010-05-15). "Elevation Chart". Allegheny Trail Alliance.
- "Rock Mountain, GA - N34.91472° W83.34389°".
- Blackwell, Jeffrey. (July 21, 2009). "River's source up for debate in Pa. farmland". Gannett Company.
- "Google maps".
- {{gnis. 1201370. Triple Divide
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