9. Bear Mountain State Park Bear Mountain State Park is perhaps the premiere attraction in the Hudson
Highlands region. Bear Mountain (elev. 1301 feet) is the highest of several
mountains in this preserve on the western shore of the Hudson River. Historical
legend states that when viewed from the river the mountain looks like a great
sleeping bear (Figure 28).
Bear Mountain is one of the most frequently visited park sites in the United
States, with total numbers rivaling those of Yellowstone National Park. Like
any park, however, once you get away from the overlooks and parking areas the
crowds thin out drastically, and the shear size of the park provides elbow room
for those willing to walk. The park is located at the terminus of the Palisades
Interstate Parkway at the intersection of Route 9W and the Bear Mountain Toll
Bridge. The Appalachian Trail crosses the bridge and climbs past the Bear Mountain
Lodge to the summit of Bear Mountain before continuing eastward into Harriman
State Park which borders the park on the east. Numerous other trails traverse
the park along old abandoned mining and military roads and trails. The summit
of Bear Mountain is accessible by car via Perkins Memorial Drive only during
the late spring through early fall. An observation tower at the summit is open
for limited hours during the day during the summer. Bear Mountain is also accessible
via Metro-North to the Peekskill or Garrison stations, then by taxi across the
river to the park. Food and lodging are available at the Bear Mountain Inn and
Overlook Lodge: (918)786-2731. The area has a rich history, particularly during the Revolutionary War era
when the control of the Hudson River was viewed by the British as strategic
to dominating the American territories. The American Industrial Revolution was
supplied, in part, from local forests and iron mines, and the fisheries of the
Hudson River. Resource utilization extracted a heavy toll on the region, especially
lumbering and agriculture, since the poor, thin soils on hillsides were easily
depleted. Local efforts to preserve the landscape failed until New York attempted
to relocate Sing Sing Prison to Bear Mountain. This act precipitated the events
that led to the establish Bear Mountain/Harriman State Park. The bedrock throughout Bear Mountain State Park is the Storm King Granite (Late
Proterozoic), a fairly uniform granite gneiss cut with occasional quartz-filled
veins, migmitite, and pegmatite dikes. In the valleys and hillsides to the north
and south of Bear Mountain are a number of iron mines which extracted magnetite
ore from hornblendite gabbro veins. One sealed off mine on the military reservation
north of the park reportedly reached a depth of about 6,000 feet. The ruins
of old mining roads, prospect pits, mine dumps, building foundations, and furnace
ruins occur throughout the area. Sites along trails in the Bear Mountain State
Park include the Doodletown Mine and the Cornell Mine (Figure 29). Samples of
magnetite ore can be easily located with a magnet. In some outcrops and in old
mining dumps along trails it can be quite abundant. As a consequence, you can
never really trust a compass in the Highlands region!
Views from the top of the mountain are spectacular, providing vistas of the
surrounding Hudson Highlands. All the surrounding mountaintops fall in the range
of 1,000-1,200 feet, consistent with the interpretation of Schooley Peneplain.
The resistant character of the Storm King Granite is responsible for Bear Mountain's
slightly higher elevation. The mountaintop also provides a spectacular view
of the Hudson River "fjord." Fjord is a Scandinavian term for a narrow,
generally deep inlet of the sea between steep hills or cliffs carved by glaciers.
The term certainly applies to the Hudson River valley in the vicinity of Bear
Mountain, although the once deep water setting is now filled mostly with sediments.
The river water is brackish and experiences tides typical of an estuary. Bear Mountain Lodge is built on a flat terrace approximately 120 feet above
the Hudson River. This terrace represents the level of the pre-glacial bed of
the ancient Hudson River. During the glacial advances of the Pleistocene, the
train of glacial ice carved the modern Hudson River channel to a depth of several
hundred feet below sea level. The parking and picnic areas on top of Bear Mountain are host to numerous glacial erratics, most consisting of gneiss derived from local outcrops. Many are large chunks of red puddingstone (conglomerate) derived from the Skunnemunk Conglomerate Formation (Early Devonian) which crops out in the Green Pond Outlier, a northeast-trending syncline of Middle Paleozoic sedimentary formation in the heart of the Highlands Province. These easily recognizable boulders were carried to the top of Bear Mountain by glacial ice from outcrop areas 30 miles to the north. Cobbles of Skunnemunk Conglomerate can be found as far south as the beaches on the south shore of Long Island!
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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/loc9.htm This site last updated July 22, 2003 (ps) |
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