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Big South Fork National River & Recreation AreaEast Rim Overlook with fall colors
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Big South Fork National River & Recreation Area
History & Culture
 
Graduate students work an archeologic dig in Big South Fork.
National Park Service
Graduate students work an archeologic dig near a rockshelter in Big South Fork.
 

The National Park Service preserves and interprets a diverse cross-section of our nation’s cultural and natural resources. This is especially true in the Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area. The area has a long human history spanning the last ten thousand years. From the prehistoric Paleo Indians to the coal miners of recent time, Big South Fork is an area with a rich cultural tapestry.

Archeology excavation in Big South Fork
Help protect your natural and cultural resources
Contact the Resource Protection Hotline if you witness what you believe to be an illegal activity.
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Coal tipple and rail cars at Blue Heron. 
Blue Heron Mining Community
This outdoor museum tells the story of life in a 1950's company coal town.
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South Arch of the Twin Arches 
Sandstone Arches
Big South Fork and the Cumberland Plateau is an area rich in sandstone arches.
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Devils Jump Rapid is just below the site of the proposed dam.  

Did You Know?
In the 1960's Congress requested the Army Corps of Engineers to study the feasibility of damming the Big South Fork of the Cumberland River just above the Devils Jump Rapid to create another reservoir. Had that happened Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area would never have existed.

Last Updated: February 11, 2008 at 16:08 EST