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South Carolina Eastern ContinentalDivideEarthCache EarthCache

Hidden : 1/26/2010
Difficulty:
1 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   other (other)

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Geocache Description:


Passing over high summits and along the ridges of the Blue Ridge Mountains in North and South Carolina, The Eastern Continental Divide lies on some of the most spectacular scenery that the Carolinas have to offer.

This is a unique spot in that this is the ONLY spot in South Carolina where the Continental Divide is marked by a sign in the entire state.

This is an easy earthcache to get to...just pull off the road at the small park-like area where Solomon Jones Road intersects Highway 276 at the North and South Carolina state line. Please be mindful of traffic.
I have rated the terrain a '1', and the cache is completely do-able from a wheelchair, however, while the terrain here is flat, there is some grass, and traffic could be a problem It IS possible to do this cache from your vehicle.
The triangle located here is maintained by the Cedar Mountain Community Club. Permission to locate the earth cache here has been granted by Joe P. the director.

The Eastern Continental Divide is aligned in a general southwest to northeast direction following the course of the Appalachian Mountains. On the north and west sides of the divide, water flows to the Gulf of Mexico via the watershed claimed by the Tennessee Valley Authority. To the east and south of the divide, water flows to the Atlantic Ocean.

A continental divide, sometimes called the backbone of a continent, is a topographic feature, a line of elevated terrain which forms a border between separate drainage basins or watersheds.
The term Continental Divide refers to a particular type of drainage divide. A drainage divide/continental divide is the boundary of a drainage basin. It is the geological boundary that physically separates the drainage of one drainage basin from that of another drainage basin.
Precipitation on one side of a divide will drain into one basin and precipitation on the other side will drain into another basin.
This results in streams, rivers and waterways which make up a drainage basin flowing toward the opposite sides of a continent, depending on which side of the divide they are on. It may be easier to think of a continental divide as being like the peak of a ridge line. It is at this ridge line that we theoreticaly could pour a glass of water off one side of the ridge and it would end up in one watershed and a glass of water poured off the other side would end up in a completely different watershed.
A Continental Divide is found on each of the continents except for Antarctica which has no Continental Divide.

How exactly did these continental divides come to be?
A Continental Divide results over millions of years as the earth's crust folds, forming mountain ranges and their ridges and peaks, which then erode.
We may picture the divide as a line on a map.(see photo). The position and number of divides, including The Great Divide, is strongly affected by climatic and tectonic forces (forces within the earth that cause movements of the earth’s crust), which raise mountains and alter drainage patterns. Surprisingly the Continental divide is not static. It is dynamic and changes in accordance with these tectonic forces as well as isostatic forces (equilibrium in the earth’s crust where the forces that tend to elevate landmasses balance the forces tending to depress landmasses). Climatic forces also have an impact in that they may alter drainage patterns and growth or loss of continental glaciers.

The United States has 4 Continental Divides:
1) The Great Divide which is also known as the Continental Divide
2) The Northern Divide or Laurentian Divide
3) The St. Lawrence Seaway Divide
4) The Eastern Continental Divide

The Continental Divide in North America is the line that divides the flow of water between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Ocean. Rain or snow that drains on the east side of the Continental Divide flows toward the Atlantic Ocean while precipitation on the west side drains and flows toward the Pacific Ocean. (However, some rivers empty into the desert and don't end up in the oceans.) The continental divide runs north to south from the Seward Peninsula in Alaska, through British Columbia in northwestern Canada, through Montana, Wyoming and Colorado along the crest of the Rocky Mountains to New Mexico. Then, it follows the crest of Mexico's Sierra Madre Occidental, and finally extending to the tip of South America following the crest of the Andes. The Great Divide is the only one of the world’s conitnental divides that divide the river systems of two continents.

The Eastern Continental Divide,(the one we are interested in here) is the name given to the principal, and largely mountainous, hydrological divide of the Eastern US that separate the drainage basins that either drain to the west, toward the Gulf of Mexico or to the east, toward the Atlantic Ocean. It mainly follows the Appalachian Mountain Chain.

A look at rocks exposed in today's Appalachian mountains reveals elongated belts of folded and thrust faulted marine sedimentary rocks, volcanic rocks and slivers of ancient ocean floor, which provides strong evidence that these rocks were deformed during plate collision. The birth of the Appalachian ranges was some 300 million years ago.

The Eastern Continental Divide runs from a triple point called the Triple Divide at N 41 50’47” W 077 50’ 17” near the town of Gold in Potter County in northern Pennsylvania south of Wellsville (village), New York. It runs down the Appalachian Mountains through Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, along the northwestern border of South Carolina, and through Georgia and the city of Atlanta, and down through Florida ending at the southern tip of Florida.

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At the coordinates of this earthcache, you will find the Continental Divide as it runs through North and South Carolina. At this point you will see the ONLY sign on any SC road marking the Eastern Continental Divide(ECD). The ECD loosely follows Solomon Jones Road from this point out toward Camp Greenville and Pretty Place(a beautiful spot with a fabulous overlook - I highly recommend taking the time to drive out there and see the view), where it veers back into the state of North Carolina at the top of the hill. From there it continues on over Standing Stone Mountain above Jones Gap State Park.

At the location of the cache, the state line loosely follows the divide. We find a natural boundary line forming the border between two drainage basins. The precipitation falling on one side of this boundary line eventually travels one side of the continent and precipitation falling on the other side eventually travels to the other side of the continent, provided the water is not evaporated or redivereted in any way.

Commonly it is said that precipitation falling on opposite sides of the divide always travels to two different oceans. However, snow that melts or water that falls may actually evaporate or be used by vegetation after the water enters into the soil. When this happens, the precipitation may not actually make it to an ocean unless it again falls as precipitation. Also, lot of the precipitation flows to deep underlying aquifers of groundwater. Sometimes, because the divides are underground in the aquifers, they do not match exactly to the above ground Continental Divide. Then the water that falls on one side of the topographical Continental Divide may actually infiltrate the groundwater, travel within the underground aquifer and then be redistributed on the other side of the divide.
Even though it is not possible us to positively determine the destiny of each and every single drop of water that falls along the Continental Divide, we can be fairly certain that for the most part the precipitation falling east of the divide will ultimately reach one body of water and the water falling west of the divide will ultimately reach a separate body of water.

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To log this earthcache, e-mail me (the same day you post your log) with the answer to at least 1 of the following questions (OR post a photo at the site): (You do NOT need to wait for a response from me.)

Please: SEND ANSWER(s) in an email, Do NOT post it/them in your log!!

1.) What is the elevation at this point of the Continental Divide? _______ft.
2.) According to the definition of a divide, this point should be at a higher elevation than the surrounding land. Is it? ______.
3.) If it were raining at the coordinates, the rain falling to the west of the sign would eventually flow where? ___________________.
4.) If it were snowing at the coordinates, the snow falling to the east of the sign would eventually go where when it melted? ____________________.
5.) Name at least one natural occurrence that may prevent the precipitation falling along either side of the divide from reaching it's intended final destination? ____________________________.

A photo of you and your GPSr is always appreciated as added proof of your visit If you have the ability to take and upload a photo, please do so. NOTE: While I appreciate the answers to any and all questions, you may use your photo in place of your answer(s) as your proof of visit.

Thankyou for visiting the Eastern Continental Divide and learning a bit about earth science.
Happy Caching and Enjoy your travels!

I am adding this note: I request that you email your answers to me on the same day that you log your “found it” log. (This does not have to be the day you visit, just the day you log the find on the computer.) I also request that you do not log a “found it” log unless you have actually visited the site of the earthcache and sent the answers to me. The only person who really benefits from your visit is YOU.


I hope you enjoy your visit to the South Carolina Eastern Continental Divide.
Here are some nearby signs of interest.
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