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Shenandoah National ParkAn up-close look at a fern displays its intricate detail.
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Shenandoah National Park
Nature & Science
 
Natural Resources: a deer, a plant, ice storm, and rocks and mountains.
 

Shenandoah National Park includes 300 square miles of the Blue Ridge Mountains in the southern Appalachians. The park rises above the Virginia Piedmont to its east and the Shenandoah Valley to its west. Two peaks, Stony Man and Hawksbill, exceed 4,000 feet. The range of elevation, slopes and aspects, rocks and soils, precipitation, and latitude create a mix of habitats.

Tens of thousands of living creatures make their homes in the park, from black bear resting beneath rock overhangs, to tiny aquatic insects darting through cool mountain streams. The park’s many worlds are fascinating to explore.

Most of Shenandoah’s landscape is forested. In the process of photosynthesis, converting light, water, and minerals into foods, green plants give off water. From a distance this air-born water creates a faint haze giving the Blue Ridge its name. In recent years, the haze has taken on other ingredients, introduced by humans. Air is among the resources the staff at Shenandoah National Park is duty bound to protect.

Hardwood forests dominate the park. The forests are the result of many disturbances, some measured in geologic time, others in minutes. Remnants of boreal forests remind us that continental glaciers came near. Strands of barbed wire embedded in trunks mark the edges of former pastures. Uprooted trees show the path Tropical Storm Fran made in 1996.

 
Red maple leaves in full fall color.
Learn about our Science and Natural Resources Program
Science & Natural Resource Stewardship
Learn about scientific research & natural resource stewardship in the park.
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Learn more about park resources in our fact sheet series.
Natural Resource Fact Sheets
Learn more about park resources in our fact sheet series.
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Learn about Shenandoah's Wilderness
Wilderness
Learn about Shenandoah's Wilderness
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Download park species lists...
Species lists
Download park species lists...
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Brook trout can be distinguished from other trout by the dark, wavy line on its back and the white leading edges of its fins and tail.  

Did You Know?
In addition to the eastern brook trout, 35 other fish species live within Shenandoah National Park’s streams.
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Last Updated: November 08, 2007 at 17:15 EST