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Red River Gorge

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Red River Gorge, Daniel Boone National Forest, Kentucky
Red River Gorge, Daniel Boone National Forest, Kentucky
The Red River Gorge is a canyon system on the Red River in east-central Kentucky.  Geologically, it is part of the Pottsville Escarpment.
Much of the Gorge has been purchased as part of the Daniel Boone National Forest and has been subsequently reserved as the Red River Gorge Geological Area, an area of around 28,000 acres (over 113 km²). It has been designated a National Natural Landmark. The 13,000-acre Clifty Wilderness Area lies entirely within the gorge.

This intricate canyon system features an abundance of high sandstone cliffs, rock shelters, waterfalls, and natural bridges. There are more than 100 natural sandstone arches in the Red River Gorge Geological Area.

Kentucky's Natural Bridge State Park (Kentucky) is immediately adjacent to this area, featuring one of the largest natural bridges.

Because of its unusual and rugged nature, the Red River Gorge features a remarkable variety of ecological zones. It is the farthest southern site where the Canadian yew, Taxus canadensis, is known to grow.

Books

Red River Gorge has been the subject of several books.

The Unforeseen Wilderness, by essayist Wendell Berry and photographer Eugene Meatyard. The book was written at a time when a proposal to flood the gorge was being fought by opponents. The book contributed to the success of the opposition movement, culminating when United States Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas hiked the area on Saturday, November 18th, 1967 (approx 1:00pm). Amid 400 to 600 others present who were evenly split on the issue

Past Titan Rock: Journeys into an Appalachian Valley, University Press of Kentucky, 1984. Written by West Virginia University English professor Ellesa Clay High, Past Titan Rock consists of three sections. The first is a personal account of the author's experience during a season spent living in the Gorge. The middle section of the book details the life of Lily May Ledford, leader of the Coon Creek Girls, the first "all-girl" string band on radio. Ledford was born in the area in 1917 and grew up on Chimney Top Creek. The book's concluding section presents a series of interlocking short stories, each told from the perspective of a fictional character based on the author's experience of residents of the area.

Kentucky's Land of the Arches, by Robert H. Ruchhoft, is a comprehensive hiking guide to the Red River Gorge.

There are also a number of published guides to rock climbing in the area.

External links

 


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