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North Mountain (Virginia-West Virginia)
Mountain in West Virginia, USA
Mountain in West Virginia, USA
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | North Mountain |
| photo | Shanghai WV.jpg |
| photo_caption | North Mountain's Roundtop summit in the distance seen from Shanghai, West Virginia, to the west. |
| elevation_ft | 1673 |
| prominence_ft | 1073 |
| location | Frederick County, Virginia / Berkeley County, West Virginia, U.S. |
| range | Allegheny Mountains, part of the Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians |
| coordinates | |
| topo | USGS Tablers Station |
| easiest_route | Drive |
North Mountain is a mountain ridge within the Ridge-and-valley Appalachians in the U.S. states of Virginia and West Virginia.
Geography
North Mountain spans 23.5 mi from the Potomac River in the north to the community of Green Spring in Frederick County, Virginia in the south. The ridge is divided into two sections; the north and south spans. The north span consists of the portion of the ridge from the Potomac to the town of Hedgesville, West Virginia, which lies 3.5 mi to the south within Skinners Gap in between the mountain's two spans. The northern span is characterized by lower elevations, its highest point is 920 ft just north of Hedgesville, and numerous gaps at valley floor elevations. The southern span consists of the remaining 20 mi of ridge line and is noticeably higher in elevation, containing the mountain's highest point of 1673 ft above sea-level at its Roundtop summit near Arden in Berkeley County, West Virginia. The southern section also contains many gaps, but all are several hundred feet above the valley floor. Back Creek Valley lies to the mountain ridge's west and the Shenandoah Valley to its east. Back Creek owes its name to North Mountain, as early settlers in the eighteenth century referred to the stream as to the "back" of the ridge when approaching it from the east.
The Roundtop summit was the location of Cowpuncher, a Presidential Emergency Facility serving Washington, D.C., during the Cold War. The facility consisted of microwave communication relay towers.
Variant names
According to the Geographic Names Information System, North Mountain has also widely been known as Great Ridge and Little North Mountain, when in comparison to the much larger Great North Mountain to the south.
Summits, knobs, and gaps
Although North Mountain is a continuous mountain ridge, it is made up of a number of summits, knobs, and gaps with individual names. These are listed from north to south.
- Potato Hill, 787 ft
- Skinners Gap, 640 feet (Hedgesville, West Virginia)
- High Knob, 938 ft
- Parks Gap, 1,100 feet (Dry Run Road)
- Boyds Gap, 1,480 feet (Tuscarora Pike)
- Roundtop, 1673 ft
- Mills Gap, 1,180 feet (Apple Harvest Drive and Gerrardstown Road)
- Dutton Gap, 1,290 feet
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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