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Cynthia Donahey 10-12-2004 05:13 PM

Canyon in the Garden State (New Jersey)
 

I just saw Garden State(a movie worth seeing for this), and this film of an
underground canyon in New Jersey, that was uncovered, when someone was
trying to building a shopping mall. I guess they had to stop. Mother
Nature stopped them cold. Does anyone know anything about this. It's kind
of a gardening question.

Mike LaMana 11-12-2004 03:06 AM

Perhaps they are alluding to the abandoned hard rock mines in Morris,
Passaic, Warren and Sussex counties?? I have traveled around a bit and am
aware of no large caverns beneath my beloved NJ. I am eager to learn more,
though...
Mike
--
Mike LaMana, MS, CTE
Consulting Forester & Arborist
Heartwood Consulting Services, LLC
Toms River, NJ
www.HeartwoodConsulting.net


"Cynthia Donahey" wrote in message
...

I just saw Garden State(a movie worth seeing for this), and this film of
an
underground canyon in New Jersey, that was uncovered, when someone was
trying to building a shopping mall. I guess they had to stop. Mother
Nature stopped them cold. Does anyone know anything about this. It's kind
of a gardening question.




fran 15-12-2004 01:39 AM

No canyons that I am aware of, though there are some streams flowing
through deep gullies. I guess you can call those 'canyons' if you
stretch the point a bit.

Majored in geology at Rutgers, so I think I'd of heard of any
canyons.....

On Fri, 10 Dec 2004 22:06:47 -0500, "Mike LaMana"
fake@MikeatHeartwoodConsultingdotnet wrote:

Perhaps they are alluding to the abandoned hard rock mines in Morris,
Passaic, Warren and Sussex counties?? I have traveled around a bit and am
aware of no large caverns beneath my beloved NJ. I am eager to learn more,
though...
Mike



Stephen Henning 15-12-2004 01:50 PM

fran wrote:

No canyons that I am aware of, though there are some streams flowing
through deep gullies. I guess you can call those 'canyons' if you
stretch the point a bit.

Majored in geology at Rutgers, so I think I'd of heard of any
canyons.....


During the heavy rains this past summer NJ had several hundred dams fail
and serious flooding, so they must have some kind of canyons. I guess
it is all nomenclature. What is called a mountain in the East is a hill
in the West. What is called a valley in the East is a gully in the
West. We usually don't use the term canyons in the East, we call them
Water Gaps except in Pennsylvania's Grand Canyon at Wellsboro. The East
is more glacial while the West is more volcanic and platelet related.
So we have more glacial valleys. The west has big erosion canyons.

--
Pardon my spam deterrent; send email to
Cheers, Steve Henning in Reading, PA USA
http://home.earthlink.net/~rhodyman

fran 17-12-2004 02:28 AM

And most dams in NJ are under 30' high, as I recall. Serious flooding
is often because people have built on the flood plains, all the way
into the 10 - 15 year flood zones (areas around Trenton come to mind).
In the northwest part, near the mountains, there are some river
valleys that some might call canyons, but not via the terminology I
learned.


On Wed, 15 Dec 2004 08:50:38 -0500, Stephen Henning
wrote:

fran wrote:

No canyons that I am aware of, though there are some streams flowing
through deep gullies. I guess you can call those 'canyons' if you
stretch the point a bit.

Majored in geology at Rutgers, so I think I'd of heard of any
canyons.....


During the heavy rains this past summer NJ had several hundred dams fail
and serious flooding, so they must have some kind of canyons. I guess
it is all nomenclature. What is called a mountain in the East is a hill
in the West. What is called a valley in the East is a gully in the
West. We usually don't use the term canyons in the East, we call them
Water Gaps except in Pennsylvania's Grand Canyon at Wellsboro. The East
is more glacial while the West is more volcanic and platelet related.
So we have more glacial valleys. The west has big erosion canyons.



Kris[_4_] 30-12-2018 12:14 AM

Canyon in the Garden State (New Jersey)
 
replying to Cynthia Donahey, Kris wrote:
They called it Kiernans fault.

--
for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/garden...sey-30348-.htm




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