36. Tillman Ravine Natural Area Tillman Ravine is an easily accessible hiking area in the southern end
of Stokes State Forest located on the western flank of Kittatinny Mountain
(see Figure 72 on the Delaware
River Valley page). This public access area provides a series of well-maintained
hiking trails with bridges along the gorge carved by Tillman Brook. There
are two parking areas that provide easy access to an upper and lower falls
along the ravine. Tillman Ravine is a young stream valley that has formed since the Pleistocene
continental glacier melted about 15,000 years ago. Tillman Brook is spring
fed year round. The path of the stream follows fractures in the densely
cemented sandstone and along less resistant shale beds of the Bloomsburg
Red Beds (Late Silurian). In the Tillman Ravine area, the Bloomsburg Formation
is unfossiliferous, however, specimens of fossil plant material and fish
remains have been reported from shaley beds within this unit elsewhere. A small anticline in the redbeds is located near the top of the upper
falls. A feature located at the base of the lower falls is known as the
Teacup. The Teacup is a large pothole formed as sand and gravel slowly
scour the bedrock where a patch of swirling water remains stationary for
a long period of time (Figure 79).
Tillman Ravine is host to a mature hemlock grove, and an abundance of
mountain laurel and rhododendron. These plants that are so common along
Kittatinny Mountain thrive in areas of acidic soil, the dominant soil-type
found in areas underlain by sandstone.
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