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Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Waterfalls of South Carolina 03

Isaqueena Falls

Isaqueena Falls
, located near
Walhalla, South Carolina, is a waterfall
in the Oconee District of the Sumter National Forest.
The falls are named after a Cherokee girl who allegedly
leaped from the top of the falls with her lover, an
Oconee brave, in an attempt to hide him from the
rest of her tribe, which was at war with the Oconee.
Isaqueena allegedly then hid him in the recessed
area just below the top of the falls. It is very close
to Stumphouse Tunnel, another notable local landmark.
Today a small park provides access to both places.[1

Waterfalls of South Carolina 02

The Great Falls of the Catawba River


The Great Falls of the Catawba River mark

the point at which the river encounters a series of

rapids while coursing across the Piedmont Plateau on

the border of Lancaster County, South Carolina,

and Chester County, South Carolina, near

the town of Great Falls. Prior to the creation

of the Fishing Creek Reservoir and other

artificial lakes by Duke Power, the falls were

a major landmark on the river. The rapids could

be heard from long distances away, while a major

pre-Columbian trading path ran near the left bank.

Historically the Great Falls of the Catawba were

approximately 4 miles long, with a total elevation

drop of 121 feet. (The word "falls" was an 18th

century appellation, when any river rapids and

vertical waterfalls alike were both referred to as falls.)

The creation of the dams at Great Falls, South Carolina

has resulted in the top 2 miles of it being completely

dry (dewatered) except during times of very high flow.

The bottom portion of historical Great Falls is drowned

by Cedar Creek dam, another hydroelectric project.

As of 2006, interest groups have formed in the Carolinas

to restore the Great Falls by altering the dam and

restoring flow to the dewatered stretch of Great Falls

as part of a major restoration project of the Catawba River.

As of 2007, a new licensing arrangement has been agreed

to by Duke Energy and several interested parties.

Below the Great Falls, the river flows into Lake Wateree

where it becomes the Wateree River.

Waterfalls of South Carolina 01

Bull Sluice


Bull Sluice is a prominent rapid on

the Chattooga River on the Georgia and

South Carolina border in the United States

which was featured in the film Deliverance. Its

convenient location off of the US76 bridge makes it a

popular destination for whitewater rafters and kayakers.

The short hike to the rapid also makes it attractive to

spectators.

Bull Sluice is a benchmark Class IV+ rapid as rated

by American Whitewater during normal flow of 1.8 to

2.4 feet.[1] It becomes easier at lower water and

significantly more difficult at higher water. Bull

Sluice is the largest and final named rapid of

Section 3 of the Chattooga River. Since it is one

of the more accessible rapids on the river, many

boaters who run the narrower and more

dangerous Section 4 will first run Bull Sluice

before continuing downstream, making the

rapid the de facto start of the final section of

the river.

A small cave exists under the main flow of

the water. Swimmers will often enter the

cave during warmer weather to watch

boaters run the rapid above them.

Waterfalls of South Carolina 01

Blackwater Falls State Park

Blackwater Falls State Park is located in
the Allegheny Mountains of Tucker County, West Virginia,
USA. The centerpiece of the Park is Blackwater Falls, a
62-foot (19 m) cascade where the Blackwater River leaves
its leisurely course in Canaan Valley and enters
rugged Blackwater Canyon. It is among the most
photographed venues in the state and appears on
calendars, stationery, advertisements of all kinds and,
most famously, on jigsaw puzzles. The River is named
for its tannic acid-darkened water.

Valley Falls State Park

Valley Falls State Park is a 1,145 acre (4.63 km²) day use facility

sited along both banks of the Tygart Valley River. The park is

located about 7 miles (11 km) south of exit 137 of I-79,

near Fairmont, West Virginia.

The park's main feature is a half-mile long set of

waterfalls that separate Marion and Taylor County, West Virginia.

The park and river provide a popular

and risky kayaking run.[2]

Although the falls are an inviting spot,

swimming is not allowed. [3] However, it is

not uncommon on a hot summer day to see

numerous sunbathers relaxing on the large

flat rocks that cover the

area near the river.[citation needed]

In the 19th century a small community

thrived along the river at the

current state park's location.

The ruins of a sawmill and a gristmill are

still visible along the river.[3]

Waterfalls of Canada

This is a list of waterfalls in

Canada. Alfred Creek Falls in British Columbia

is recorded as one of the tallest in Canada at

a height of 700 meters (2,297 ft) and a class-3 horsetail

waterfall.[1] Deserted River Falls also in British

Columbia is thought to be the largest of North America

at 670 meters (2,198 ft). Della Falls in

British Columbia supplied

by Drinkwater Creek[2] Takkakaw Falls used

to have the distinction of being the tallest

Canadian waterfall at 373 meters (1,224 ft)

and is considered to be the 23rd world

tallest.[3] Hunlen Falls, 365 meters (1,198 ft)

is listed as the world's 25th tallest waterfall

at Highest waterfalls of the world, waterfalls

with the height above 300 m. According to Waterfalls

of the world, Della Falls is the 19th tallest

waterfall in the world.[4] James Bruce Falls,

840 meters (2,756 ft), is the 8th tallest

waterfall of the world and Alfred Creek Falls,

700 meters (2,297 ft) is the 29th tallest in

the world according to the World Waterfall

Database: World's Tallest Waterfalls[5] Niagara Falls

in Ontario, a segmented block waterfall, is

the 10th largest waterfall in the

world. Virginia Falls, Northwest Territories,

supplied by the South Nahanni River, is the

14th world's largest waterfall and

the Grand Falls on the Hamilton River is

listed as the 15th largest on the World

Waterfall Database: World's Largest

Waterfalls.[6] According to the website,

Top 10 Awe Inspiring Waterfalls, Niagara

Falls is ranked 2nd.[7] is considered

to be the 16th-tallest waterfall

in the world at 440 meters

(1,444 ft) and is the

tallest measured waterfall

in Canada.

Waterfall ice climbing is a sport

undertaken by climbing enthusiasts aware

of avalanche risks.[8][6] To several waterfalls

which are not near a highway, hiking trails

lead into the site of the waterfall. Some

waterfalls have bridges and cable cars to

provide additional scenic views of the waterfall

such as at Montmorency Falls[9]. Photography

of waterfalls records the panorama of scenic

cascading waterfalls. Some waterfalls are

conducive to swimming, or kayaking

sports.

There are three waterfalls in Canada which

appear to reverse. They

are Wager Bay, Nunavut; Barrier Inlet,

Nunavut; and Reversing Falls at the mouth

of the Saint John River, New Brunswick.

During low tide the watersource falls over

a rocky ledge as a waterfall. During high

tide, the seawater raises above the height

of the rocky ledge, and the seawater rushes

into the river valley against the low tide

river flow.[10]

World's Largest Waterfalls


Name

Volume (sort)

Width (sort)

Watercourse

Country


1 .

Inga Falls

1,500,000 cfs

? ft / ? m

Congo River

Congo

2 .

Livingstone, Chutes de

1,240,000 cfs

15,840 ft / 4,828 m

Congo River

Congo

3 .

Boyoma Falls

600,000 cfs

4,500 ft / 1,372 m

Lualaba River

Congo

4 .

GuaĆ­ra, Salto del

470,000 cfs

15,840 ft / 4,828 m

Rio Paran

Brazil

5 .

Khone, Chutes de

410,000 cfs

35,376 ft / 10,783 m

Mekong River

Laos

6 .

Celilo Falls

191,215 cfs

10,560 ft / 3,219 m

Columbia River

USA

7 .

Par?, Salto

125,000 cfs

18,400 ft / 5,608 m

Rio Caura

Venezuela

8 .

Paulo Afonso, Cachoeira de

100,000 cfs

60 ft / 18 m

Rio S?o Francisco

Brazil

9 .

Urubupunga, Salto do

97,000 cfs

6,600 ft / 2,012 m

Rio Paran

Brazil

10 .

Niagara Falls

85,000 cfs

3,948 ft / 1,203 m

Niagara River

USA / Canada

11 .

Iguacu, Salto de

61,660 cfs

8,858 ft / 2,700 m

Rio Igua

Argentina / Brazil

12 .

Patos e Maribondo, Saltos dos

53,000 cfs

6,600 ft / 2,012 m

Rio Grande

Brazil

13 .

Victoria Falls

38,430 cfs

5,700 ft / 1,737 m

Zambezi River

Zimbabwe / Zambia

14 .

Virginia Falls

35,300 cfs

850 ft / 259 m

South Nahanni River

Canada

15 .

Grand Falls

35,000 cfs

150 ft / 46 m

Hamilton River

Canada

16 .

Cauvery Falls

33,000 cfs

2,784 ft / 849 m

Cauvery River

India

17 .

Kongou Falls

31,783 cfs

10,500 ft / 3,200 m

Ivindo River

Gabon

18 .

Williamette Falls

30,849 cfs

1,550 ft / 472 m

Willamette River

USA

19 .

Kaieteur Falls

23,400 cfs

370 ft / 113 m

Potaro River

Guyana

20 .

Epupa Falls

17,657 cfs

? ft / ? m

Kunene River

Namibia

21 .

Hidden Falls

15,000 cfs

? ft / ? m

Yarlung Tsangpo

Tibet

22 .

San Rafael, Cascada de

14,125 cfs

? ft / ? m

Rio Coca

Ecuador

23 .

Rheinfall

13,066 cfs

370 ft / 113 m

Rhein River

Switzerland

24 .

Great Falls

11,406 cfs

150 ft / 46 m

Potomac River

USA

25 .

Augrabies Falls

11,050 cfs

80 ft / 24 m

Orange River

South Africa

26 .

Kootenai Falls

10,941 cfs

845 ft / 258 m

Kootenay River

USA

27 .

Murchison Falls

10,594 cfs

23 ft / 7 m

Victoria Nile

Uganda

28 .

Ruacana Falls

10,000 cfs

2,280 ft / 695 m

Cunene River

Namibia / Angola

29 .

Shoshone Falls

10,000 cfs

1,000 ft / 305 m

Snake River

USA

30 .

Sandstone Falls

7,847 cfs

1,500 ft / 457 m

New River

USA

31 .

Great Falls

7,558 cfs

? ft / ? m

Missouri River

USA

32 .

Dettifoss

7,062 cfs

328 ft / 100 m

J?kuls? ? Fj?llum

Iceland

33 .

Hafragilsfoss

7,062 cfs

300 ft / 91 m

J?kuls? ? Fj?llum

Iceland

34 .

Selfoss

7,062 cfs

600 ft / 183 m

J?kuls? ? Fj?llum

Iceland

35 .

Spokane Falls

6,731 cfs

400 ft / 122 m

Spokane River

USA

South Africa Fauna and Flora : Wildlife Guide

South Africa has seven major terrestrial biomes,

or habitat types - broad ecological life zones

with distinct environmental conditions and

related sets of plant and animal life.


South Africa occupies the southern tip of Africa, its

long coastline stretching more than 2 500km from the

desert border with Namibia on the Atlantic coast southwards

around the tip of Africa and then north to the border with

subtropical Mozambique on the Indian Ocean.


The low-lying coastal zone is narrow for much of that

distance, soon giving way to a mountainous escarpment

that separates it from the high inland plateau. In some

places, notably the province of KwaZulu-Natal in the

east, a greater distance separates the coast from the

escarpment.


Although the country is classified as semi-arid,

it has considerable variation in climate as well

as topography.


The great inland Karoo plateau, where

rocky hills and mountains rise from sparsely

populated scrubland, is very dry, and gets more

so as it shades in the north-west towards the

Kalahari desert. Extremely hot in summer,

it can be icy in winter.


In contrast, the eastern coastline

is lush and well watered, a stranger to frost. The southern

coast, part of which is known as the Garden Route, is rather

less tropical but also green, as is the Cape of Good Hope - the

latter especially in winter. This south-western corner of the

country has a Mediterranean climate, with wet winters and

hot, dry summers. Its most famous climatic characteristic

is its wind, which blows intermittently virtually all year

round, either from the south-east or the north-west.


The eastern section of the Karoo does not extend as far

north as the western part, giving way to the flat landscape

of the Free State, which though still semi-arid receives

somewhat more rain. North of the Vaal River the Highveld

is better watered and saved by its altitude (Johannesburg

lies at 1 740m; its annual rainfall is 760mm) from subtropical

extremes of heat. Winters are cold, though snow is rare.


Further north and to the east, especially where a drop in

altitude beyond the escarpment gives the Lowveld its name,

temperatures rise: the Tropic of Capricorn slices through

the extreme north. This is also where one finds the typical

South African Bushveld of wildlife fame.


By far South Africa's biggest neighbour is the ocean - or

two oceans, which meet at the southwestern corner. Its

territory includes Marion and Prince Edward Islands,

nearly 2 000km from Cape Town in the Atlantic Ocean.


The cold Benguela current sweeps up from the Antarctic

along the Atlantic coast, laden with plankton and providing

rich fishing grounds. The east coast has the north-to-south

Mozambique/Agulhas current to thank for its warm waters.

These two currents have a major effect on the country's

climate, the ready evaporation of the eastern seas providing

generous rainfall while the Benguela current retains its

moisture to cause desert conditions in the west.


Several small rivers run into the sea along the coastline,

but none are navigable and none provide useful natural

harbours. The coastline itself, being fairly smooth,

provides only one good natural harbour, at Saldanha

Bay north of Cape Town. A lack of fresh water prevented

major development here. Nevertheless, busy harbours

now exist at Cape Town, Port Elizabeth, East London,

Durban and Richard's Bay.


On dry land, going from west to east, the country

shares long borders with Namibia and Botswana,

touches Zimbabwe, has a longitudinal strip of border

with Mozambique to the east, and lastly curves in around

Swaziland before rejoining Mozambique's southern border.

In the interior, nestled in the curve of the bean-shaped Free

State, is the small mountainous country of Lesotho,

completely surrounded by South African territory.


There are only two major rivers: the Limpopo, a stretch

of which is shared with Zimbabwe, and the Orange

(with its tributary, the Vaal) which runs with a

variable flow across the central landscape from east

to west, emptying into the Atlantic Ocean at the Namibian

border. In so dry a country, dams and irrigation are extremely

important: the largest dam is the Gariep on the Orange River.


South Africa is home to:

  • the largest land-mammal - the African elephant
  • the smallest mammal - the shrew, which is the size of a finger tip
  • the tallest mammal - the giraffe
  • the fastest land-mammal on earth - the cheetah
  • the largest reptile - the leatherback turtle
  • the largest African antelope - the eland
  • the largest bird in the world - the ostrich
  • the heaviest flying bird in the world - the kori bustard
  • the largest rodent in Africa - the porcupine
  • the largest rhino population in Africa