N.C. Post Offices by County
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Volume 12, Issue 1 Page 1 Love Is in the Air! Breeding Season Has Begun in the High Country Article and Photos by Judi Sawyer
Volume 12 – Issue 1 February 2020 to July 2020 Dear Fellow Birders, Hello everyone, wow, this spring is nothing like what we had planned!!! I hope everyone is able to get out and bird individually during migration. Make sure to visit the newly-constructed wetlands at Brookshire Park. We’ve already had reports of some shorebirds that normally are not that common in our area. Guy has sent out a notice regarding the May 9th spring bird count, and I hope many of you will be able to contribute. He has very thoroughly listed the various areas that are still open to birding, so take a look, and pick your spot! Cindy is also periodically notifying us about virtual birding events organized by AudubonNC. For now, we’ll have to be satisfied with virtual events. AudubonNC has requested that all chapters cancel all in person events through the end of June. Hopefully, we’ll still be able to have our annual meeting in July at Valle Crucis Community Park, as well as resume our scheduled walks. We’ve decided not to have an intern this summer due to the circumstances, so thank you very much to Adrianna Nelson and Christina Collins for volunteering to maintain our social media. It’s a good place to check for the latest updates. Our website calendar is also being kept up-to-date. In other news, the Burke’s grant that we received in January has multiple commitments. We have met the first one, which was asking the Watauga County Commissioners to establish a native plant resolution, which encourages the County to utilize native plants on all county properties and in development projects. -
Frequency and Magnitude of Selected Historical Landslide Events in The
Chapter 9 Frequency and Magnitude of Selected Historical Landslide Events in the Southern Appalachian Highlands of North Carolina and Virginia: Relationships to Rainfall, Geological and Ecohydrological Controls, and Effects Richard M. Wooten , Anne C. Witt , Chelcy F. Miniat , Tristram C. Hales , and Jennifer L. Aldred Abstract Landsliding is a recurring process in the southern Appalachian Highlands (SAH) region of the Central Hardwood Region. Debris fl ows, dominant among landslide processes in the SAH, are triggered when rainfall increases pore-water pressures in steep, soil-mantled slopes. Storms that trigger hundreds of debris fl ows occur about every 9 years and those that generate thousands occur about every 25 years. Rainfall from cyclonic storms triggered hundreds to thousands of debris R. M. Wooten (*) Geohazards and Engineering Geology , North Carolina Geological Survey , 2090 US Highway 70 , Swannanoa , NC 28778 , USA e-mail: [email protected] A. C. Witt Virginia Department of Mines, Minerals and Energy , Division of Geology and Mineral Resources , 900 Natural Resources Drive, Suite 500 , Charlottesville , VA 22903 , USA e-mail: [email protected] C. F. Miniat Coweeta Hydrologic Lab , Center for Forest Watershed Research, USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station , 3160 Coweeta Lab Road , Otto , NC 28763 , USA e-mail: [email protected] T. C. Hales Hillslope Geomorphology , School of Earth and Ocean Sciences, Cardiff University , Main Building, Park Place , Cardiff CF10 3AT , UK e-mail: [email protected] J. L. Aldred Department of Geography and Earth Sciences , University of North Carolina at Charlotte , 9201 University City Blvd. , Charlotte , NC 28223 , USA e-mail: [email protected] © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016 203 C.H. -
NATIONAL FORESTS Forest Service Celebrates Weeks
2011 Recreation Guide to the National Forests in North Carolina www.fs.usda.gov/nfsnc Forest Service celebrates Weeks Act PHOTO BY MARY NOEL From the Blue Ridge Parkway’s Green Knob Overlook, drivers can view the Burke-McDowell Tract, the first land purchased for eastern national for- ests through the 1911 Weeks Act. Known as the Curtis Creek tract, the land is part of the Grandfather Ranger District of Pisgah National Forest. which solidified ownership with one A century of entity and allowed the government to buy the land without a cloud on conservation: the title. Over the last 100 years, North 1911-2011 Carolina has become home to the by Mary Noel Nantahala, Pisgah, Uwharrie and magine if no national forests Croatan national forests, which existed in North Carolina. encompass more than 1.2 million This was reality in the early acres — about 4 percent of North 20th century. Early national Carolina’s land. forests in the West were These North Carolina national Iestablished from public lands by forest lands now include: 1909. However, the U.S. government l 11 congressionally designated needed to purchase land from wilderness areas. private landowners if national forests PHOTO COURTESY OF FOREST SERVICE l Three research experimental were to exist in the East. THE LANDS NOBODY WANTED: Most lands acquired in the early 1900’s were stripped of trees and excessively eroded from farming. forests (Bent Creek, Coweeta and With strong public support, the Blue Valley) Weeks Act became law on March 1, a price of just over $7 per acre. Later often had only a general idea of l Three National Wild and Scenic 1911, under the leadership of Rep. -
WGS Bulletin Subject Index by Keyword
WGS Bulletin Subject Index By Keyword Keyword Issue Vol:Num:Pg Article Title Absher Fall 1980 14:3:(14) Absher Family Bible Bible record of the family of William M and Nancy J. Reynolds Absher and some of their descendants, beginning in 1871. Abshire Summer 1987 21:2:(7-8) Family Records Some family records with the Absher surname found in the book of Family Records that belonged to Susanna Vannoy, dating from the late 1800s into the 1900s. Academy May 1975 9:2:(2-3) Cover Picture A picture and a short history of the 1934 Sulphur Springs Academy Building. Adams May 1968 2:2:(8) Daniel Adams Former Wilkes native A brief history of Judge Daniel Adams, a Wilkes Co., NC native, from a Johnson County Missouri History in 1881. Aug. 1969 3:3:(1) Jesse Adams Bible Record The Bible record of the Jesse Adams family, beginning in the late 1700s. Feb. 1970 4:1:(1) Jesse Adams Bible Continued A continued record of the Jesse Adams Bible from mid 1800s. Spring 1976 10:1:(6) Revolutionary War Pension Abstracts A brief statement pertaining to the affidavits and letters involving Henry Adams Rev. War Application by his wife, Susanna. Fall 1987 21:3:(22) From the Patriot A brief death announcement on 20 June 1907 for J. W. Adams, Sr. Spring 1988 22:1:(14) Bible Records A list of translated Bible Records for John Adams, born 1776, and some of his descendants. Spring 1989 23:1:(9) The Rev. John Adams' Bible The Bible Records of Rev. -
Hanging Rock State Park, North Carolina
R K A OU C present time N O D 400 R 10,000 million years years 1 275 million million years years T 100 million H years K C E C L O Hanging Rock State Park An Environmental Education Learning Experience Designed for Grade 5 “Today’s understanding of the earth’s history bears little resemblance to earlier ideas. Many old theories have been revised and new theories developed. As research continues, the story of the earth’s history as we presently understand it will continue to change. Every day discoveries raise new questions and result in the elimination or revision of old ideas. Much of the earth’s history has yet to be deciphered and the farther back one goes in time, the less clear the evidence becomes.” Fred Beyer, North Carolina–The Years Before Man Hanging Rock State Park, NC i April 2000 Funding for the original printing of this Environmental Education Learning Experience was generously contributed by Hanging Rock State Park, NC ii April 2000 This Environmental Education Learning Experience was developed by Jaye Dow Park Ranger III Hanging Rock State Park N.C. Division of Parks and Recreation Department of Environment and Natural Resources James B. Hunt Jr. Bill Holman Governor Secretary Hanging Rock State Park, NC iii April 2000 Other Contributors . Park volunteers; David Howells, former Ranger, Hanging Rock State Park; Luann Bridle, Hanging Rock State Park Advisory Committee; Fred Beyer, Science Educator, Fayetteville, NC; The N.C. Department of Public Instruction; The N.C. Department of Environment and Natural Resources; and the many individuals and agencies who assisted in the review of this publication: Phyllis Baker Smith, Hanging Rock Advisory Committee Marjory Roth, Principal, Greenhill School Nancy Parks, former Secretary, Greenhill School Carl Merschat, N.C. -
Southern Indian Studies, Vol. 45
Southern Indian Studies Volume 45 1996 Southern Indian Studies Published jointly by The North Carolina Archaeological Society, Inc. 109 East Jones Street Raleigh, NC 27601-2807 and Research Laboratories of Anthropology The University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3120 R. P. Stephen Davis, Jr., Editor Officers of the North Carolina Archaeological Society President: William D. Moxley, Jr., 2307 Hodges Rd., Kinston, NC 28501. Vice President: Robert V. Graham, 2140 Woodland Ave., Burlington, NC 27215. Secretary: Vincas P. Steponaitis, Research Laboratories of Anthropology, CB 3120, Alumni Building, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599. Treasurer: E. William Conen, 804 Kingswood Dr., Cary, NC 27513. Editor: R. P. Stephen Davis, Jr., Research Laboratories of Anthropology, CB 3120, Alumni Building, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599. Associate Editor (Newsletter): Dee Nelms, Office of State Archaeology, 109 E. Jones St., Raleigh, NC 27601-2807. At-Large Members: Scott Ashcraft, 615 Biltmore Ave., K-2, Asheville, NC 28803. Charles Ewen, Department of Anthropology, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC 27858. Mark McCravey, 3759 Vernon Lane, Snow Camp, NC 27349. Anne Poole, 124 South Woodcrest, Durham, NC 27703. Margo Price, 105 Eastridge Place, Chapel Hill, NC 27516. Larry Rose, P.O. Box 252, Ahoskie, NC 27910. Information for Subscribers Southern Indian Studies is published once a year in October. Subscription is by membership in the North Carolina Archaeological Society, Inc. Annual dues are $10.00 for regular members, $25.00 for sustaining members, $5.00 for students, $15.00 for families, $150.00 for life members, $250.00 for corporate members, and $25.00 for institutional subscribers. -
Wilkes Land Grant Summary Grouped by River System and Sub System
Wilkes Land Grant Summary Grouped By River System and Sub System 7,976 Land Grants 708,896 acres among those grants. Today Wilkes Co covers 484,480 acres. In addition to today's boundaries, Wilkes County originally included what is now Alleghany and Ashe counties. It also included parts of Watauga, Caldwell, Alexander and Surry counties. Sorted by river system: Catawba, New, South Yadkin, Unknown, Watauga, Yadkin. Then one page for each sub-system: Roaring River, Hunting Creek, Lewis Fork, etc. Jason Duncan ([email protected]) Wednesday, September 30, 2020 http://www.webjmd.com Page 1 of 39 Catawba River 99 grants assigned 1% of the Wilkes grants are assigned to this river system 6,302acres among these grants 1% of the acreage among all Wilkes grants is assigned to this river system Catawba River 99 grants 1% of the Wilkes grants are assigned to S of Wilkes Co this sub system 6,302 acres among these grants 1% of the acreage among all Wilkes grants is assigned to this sub system 0 acres in Wilkes Co today Modern Blair Fork, Davis Creek, Duck Creek, Ginger Creek, Grassy Creek, Holsclaw Creek, Lambert Creeks: Fork, Lower Creek, Lower Little River, McRary Creek, Mill Pond Branch, Millers Creek, Mountain Run, Poplar Creek, White Creek, Zacks Fork Creek Old Jones Branch, Tumbling Fork Creeks: Landmarks: Jason Duncan ([email protected]) Wednesday, September 30, 2020 http://www.webjmd.com Page 2 of 39 New River 734 grants assigned 9% of the Wilkes grants are assigned to this river system 113,567acres among these grants 16% of the acreage among -