16. Norvin Green State Park Norvin Green State Park is located in the Ramapo Mountains region of
the New Jersey Highlands. To get there, take I-287 to exit 57, follow
Skyline Drive to Greenwood Lake Turnpike to West Brook Road, and then
to Snake Den Road. Parking for the trail system encompassing the park
and the bordering forested preserve around Wyanokie Reservoir is at the
Weiss Ecology Center. The center offers overnight accommodations and may
charge a daily parking fee during the summer. The trail system is quite rugged, involving climbs in elevation from
400 to 1,300 feet. Norvin Green includes part of the Highlands Trail,
which upon completion will extend from the Delaware River to the Hudson
River. Spectacular views from bald areas on the mountain tops extend eastward
to include the Manhattan skyline. The bald patches on the mountaintops
are called "pine paddies." Pitch pines are able to grow in the
cracks and gravel patches around these glacier-scoured hilltop exposures.
Their expanding roots and decaying needles slowly weather the rock into
soil, providing a footing for the succession of plants to follow. The bedrock in the area consists dominantly of Proterozoic hornblende
and biotite granite, quartz-diorite gneiss, and highly foliated amphibolite
gneiss. Veins of magnetite-rich, biotite-hornblende gabbro were mined
in the vicinity. The Blue Mine orebody was discovered in 1765 and was
mined intermittently until late in the nineteenth century. The nearby
Roomy Mine is a smaller underground excavation opened in 1840. Extreme
care should be used when examining the mines! They are accessible along
a trail marked with red blazes that starts about 150 feet south of the
Weiss Ecology Center parking area on Snake Den Road. (The trail runs along
the border between private residences, so please be courteous! The name
"snake den" is appropriate in that garter snakes, as well as
other varieties, gather and nest in abundance in this area during the
winter.) Several abandoned mining roads and paths intersect the trail,
but stay with the red trail. Approximately a quarter mile from the trailhead
a branch of the abandoned mine road to the right climbs about 200 yards
to the Roomy Mine. The larger Blue Mine is a quarter mile farther along
the red trail and is on the left where the trail crosses the creek (Figure
39). The mine tailing dump and building foundations are on the low hill
to the left of the trail. The rubble includes masses of pyroxene gabbro,
biotite, hornblende, magnetite and pyrite. Much of the ore was processed
in a furnace near the location of the Weiss Ecology Center's swimming
pool, but it was dismantled many years ago. The ore deposits are similar
to numerous other magnetite-rich veins throughout the granite and gneiss
of Late Proterozoic throughout the Highlands province, and are probably
a product of the intense regional metamorphism and deep crustal igneous
intrusions that occurred during the Grenville Orogeny.
The trail to Blue Mine turns westward and climbs steeply over a half mile to a barren hilltop of foliated gneiss. This glacially scoured hilltop at 970 feet in elevation provides a commanding view of the valley to the north. Around this hilltop pitch pines are gradually establishing hold, gradually transforming the weathered regolith into a suitable soil for other evergreen shrubs and deciduous plants to take hold.
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U.S. Geological Survey Maintainer: WESP team webmaster contact FOIA || Privacy Statement || Disclaimer || Accessibility URL: http://3dparks.wr.usgs.gov/nyc/parks/loc16.htm This site last updated July 22, 2003 (ps) |
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