n.
- A line connecting the waterfalls of nearly parallel rivers that marks a drop in land level.
- The natural line of descent, as for skiing, between two points on a slope.
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| US History Encyclopedia: Fall Line |
Fall Line, a line running approximately parallel to the Atlantic coast and dividing the eastern Atlantic coastal plain, or tidewater, from the western Appalachian foothill region, or Piedmont. This natural boundary was created by the difference in elevation and geologic structure of the two areas. As streams flow from the slightly higher, erosion-resistant rock of the Piedmont onto the more easily eroded strata of the coastal plain, they create waterfalls or rapids—thus the name "fall line." The line, close to the sea in the North, gradually retreats inland until it is a hundred miles or more from the ocean in southern Virginia and the Carolinas. In Georgia it turns westward into central Alabama.
The falls were the head of navigation for river traffic and also provided water power. This attracted development of towns along the fall line, such as Philadelphia, Baltimore, Richmond, Raleigh, Columbia, and Augusta. Roads ran along the inland edge of the plain to connect these cities. The fall line also became associated with sectionalism, especially in the South during the colonial period. The comparatively flat tidewater area, dominated by large plantations and wealthy, influential slave owners, contrasted starkly with the backcountry districts beyond the fall line, characterized by a small farm economy. In the colonial period, western antagonism toward the tidewater over such issues as taxation, frontier defense, ownership of land, and representation in the legislature occasionally led to mob violence. During the American Revolution some Piedmont farmers even joined the Tory side, in part because of their hostility to the tidewater planters who were opposing England. These sectional differences continued in some states until the Civil War.
Bibliography
Davis, Joseph L. Sectionalism in American Politics, 1774–1787. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1977.
Rand McNally. Atlas of American History. Chicago: Rand McNally, 1993.
—Robert W. Twyman/C. W.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: fall line |
| Wikipedia: Fall line |
In geomorphology, a fall line (at times referred to as a fall zone) marks the area where an upland region (continental bedrock) and a coastal plain (coastal alluvia) meet. Technically, a fall line is an unconformity. A fall line is typically prominent when crossed by a river, for there will often be rapids or waterfalls. Many times a fall line will recede upstream as the river cuts out the uphill dense material, often forming “c”-shaped waterfalls. Because of these features riverboats typically cannot travel any farther inland without portaging, unless locks are built there. On the other hand, the rapid change in elevation of the water, and the resulting energy release, makes the fall line a good location for water mills, grist mills, and sawmills. Because of the need for a river port leading to the ocean, and a ready supply of water power, settlements often develop where rivers cross a fall line.
With the advent of electric power, some places along the Fall Line acquired dams and hydroelectric generators, such as Columbia, South Carolina, and Augusta, Georgia.
Along the eastern coast of the United States, the east-facing escarpment where the Piedmont of the Appalachians descends steeply to the coastal plain forms a fall line over 1500 kilometers long. This long fall line (also referred to as the Fall Zone) played a major role in settlement patterns along rivers, back into prehistoric times. It is often referred to simply as "the fall line" or "the fall zone". In some places the fall line may be abrupt, while in others it is a zone that may be many miles wide. Geologically the fall line marks the boundary of hard metamorphosed terrain—the product of the Taconic orogeny—and the sandy, relatively flat outwash plain of the upper continental shelf, formed of unconsolidated Cretaceous and Tertiary sediments. Examples of the Fall Zone include the rapids in Richmond, Virginia, where the James River falls across a series of rapids down to the tidal estuary of the James River.
There are a few different theories as to how a Fall Line is formed or why they exist, and one in particular, brought forward by American Physiographer W.J. McGee states that a Fall Line is created through monoclinal faulting/flexing experienced in the region. While this theory is accepted by many geomorphologists much of the fall line along the east coast of the United States passes through areas where no evidence of faulting is present.
In the 19th century, the fall line often represented the head of navigation on rivers at points like Little Falls or the Great Falls, on the Potomac River. However, since the advent of flumes for water supply and canals for shipping in the early 20th Century, the most prominent feature of fall line settlement was the establishment of the cities along it. Since those cities were linked by the early highways, U.S. Route 1 was constructed to pass through many of these Eastern cities, roughly tracing the fall line, before breaking away from it and going into Florida.
Cities along the Piedmont – Coastal Plain fall line include, from north to south:
Cities along other fall lines include:
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
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