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Big South Fork National River & Recreation AreaFall colors at the mouth of Station Camp Creek
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Big South Fork National River & Recreation Area
Environmental Factors
Big South Fork River from Leatherwood Ford
National Park Service
Time, weather and water have combined to form the deep gorges found throughout Big South Fork.
 

For countless centuries, the landscape and associated plant and animal life of the Cumberland Plateau have been shaped and altered by the forces of nature. Geologic processes, fire, and climatic conditions have each had their influence. Those same environmental factors continue their molding and sculpting today, though often on a time scale that seems to make change invisible.

In more recent times, the interactions of people and the landscape have influenced the landscape and the life that depends on it. Forested land has been cleared and cultivated, roads have been constructed, and homesteads established. Wildfires were stopped and non-native vegetation was introduced. Pollutants have also degraded the quality of park streams and jeopardized fishery resources. Non-native insects, which have arrived in this country from distant parts of the world, threaten to have substantial impacts on the park’s forest ecosystem.

Park staff and cooperating scientists are working to better understand these environmental factors and to find ways to manage those that are adversely impacting the condition of park resources.

Archeology dig occuring at Big South Fork  

Did You Know?
In terms of total sites, Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area is the most important archaeological location in the Southeast Region of the National Park Service. The 1,335 documented archaeological sites at Big South Fork represent only 20% of the estimated total for the park.
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Last Updated: December 01, 2006 at 14:22 EST