North Fork Mountain

North Fork Mountain
North Fork Mountain facing the Tuscarora quartzite cliff to its west
Highest point
PeakKile Knob, Pendleton County, West Virginia, U.S.
Elevation4,588 ft (1,398 m)[1]
Coordinates38°36′58″N 79°28′55″W / 38.61611°N 79.48194°W / 38.61611; -79.48194
Dimensions
Length34 mi (55 km)
Geography
North Fork Mountain is located in West Virginia
North Fork Mountain
North Fork Mountain
Location of Pike Knob in West Virginia
CountryUnited States
StateWest Virginia
CountiesGrant and Pendleton
Range coordinates38°40′03″N 79°26′16″W / 38.66750°N 79.43778°W / 38.66750; -79.43778
Parent rangeAllegheny Mountains
Topo mapUSGS 
  • Upper Tract
  • Moatstown
  • Circleville
  • Franklin
  • Hopeville

North Fork Mountain is a quartzite-capped mountain ridge in the Ridge and Valley physiographic province of the Allegheny Mountains, also known as the High Alleghenies or Potomac Highlands, of eastern West Virginia.[2] Kile Knob, at 4,588 feet (1,398 m), is the mountain's highest point,[1] and Panther Knob and Pike Knob are nearly as high.

North Fork Mountain is the driest high mountain in the Appalachians,[3] and has vegetation and flora different from nearby, wetter high mountain areas immediately to the west such as Spruce Knob and Dolly Sods, with pines (Pinus) abundant on the mountain's ridgecrest, in contrast with the spruces (Picea) so characteristic of these comparably high summits across the North Fork Valley.[3][4]

North Fork Mountain is structurally an anticline mountain and a major component of the Wills Mountain Anticline system. The mountain's strata (rock layers) are nearly flat, but the Tuscarora quartzite that forms the mountain's caprock is bent downwards (and now mostly eroded away) east and west of the ridge, becoming nearly vertical along the mountain's slopes, where the same quartzite stratum forms such dramatic outcrops as Seneca Rocks.

Much of the mountain is within the Monongahela National Forest, and a large portion of the mountain has been proposed for federal wilderness designation[5] or inclusion within a new unit of U.S. National Park System.[6] The Nature Conservancy's Panther Knob and Pike Knob preserves are also located on North Fork Mountain.[3]

The scenic North Fork Mountain Trail follows much of the ridge crest,[7] and U.S. Route 33 is the only road that crosses the steep, rugged ridge.

  1. ^ a b "West Virginia Summits". PeakList.org. Archived from the original on 24 December 2008. Retrieved 10 June 2008.
  2. ^ "North Fork Mountain". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved 15 June 2023.
  3. ^ a b c "North Fork Mountain: Pike Knob and Panther Knob Preserves". Where we work. The Nature Conservancy. Retrieved 19 September 2011.
  4. ^ Strausbaugh, P.D. & E.L. Core (1978). Flora of West Virginia (Second ed.). Morgantown,West Virginia: Seneca Books, Inc. pp. xl + 1079.
  5. ^ "North Fork Mountain Wilderness Area (Proposed)" (PDF). West Virginia Wilderness Coalition. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 July 2008. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
  6. ^ Manchin (U.S. Senator), Joe III (26 July 2011). Letter to Jerry Payne, Ripley, West Virginia. Washington, D.C.: Reprinted in the newsletter of the Friends of the Blackwater Canyon (September 2011 issue, page 10).
  7. ^ Cite error: The named reference de Hart was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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