Shawangunk Kill

Shawangunk Kill
Stream
The Shawangunk Kill where it divides Orange and Ulster counties
Country United States
State New York
Region Hudson Valley
Counties Orange, Sullivan, Ulster
Towns Greenville, Mamakating, Wawayanda, Wallkill,
Crawford, Shawangunk, Gardiner
Source Unnamed pond
 - location Greenville, New York
 - elevation 1,240 ft (378 m)
 - coordinates 41°23′35″N 74°36′10″W / 41.3931°N 74.6029°W / 41.3931; -74.6029
Mouth Wallkill River W of Gardiner
 - elevation 180 ft (55 m)
 - coordinates 41°41′01″N 74°09′55″W / 41.6835°N 74.1652°W / 41.6835; -74.1652Coordinates: 41°41′01″N 74°09′55″W / 41.6835°N 74.1652°W / 41.6835; -74.1652
Length 47 mi (76 km)
Basin 147 sq mi (381 km2)
Discharge
 - average 138 cu ft/s (4 m3/s)

The Shawangunk Kill is a 47.2-mile-long (76.0 km)[1] stream that flows northward through Orange, Sullivan and Ulster counties, New York, in the United States. It is the largest tributary of the Wallkill River.

It takes its name from the neighboring Shawangunk Ridge, where it rises in the town of Greenville, then flowing down into the valley. For part of its length, it forms the northwestern boundary of Orange County, with first Sullivan and then Ulster County along the other side.

Course

From its source in Greenville, the Shawangunk flows steadily northeastward to Mill Pond, near Mount Hope, by which point it has already lost almost half its original elevation. It passes through fields and woods east of Otisville. At the hamlet of New Vernon, it becomes the Orange-Sullivan county line and shortly thereafter receives its first named tributary, the Little Shawangunk Kill.

It begins to widen a bit at Bloomingburg, and north of that community it is crossed by NY 17, the busiest road along the kill. Several miles to the north, the confluence of another tributary, the Platte Kill, marks the point where Orange, Sullivan and Ulster counties come together as the stream bends slightly towards a more eastern heading.

Pine Bush eventually rises on the east, and a few more miles north of that hamlet the kill becomes the exclusive property of Ulster County when the boundary returns to land at Orange County's northernmost point. The Shawangunk continues to meander into a wider and wider valley, populated mostly with farms and woodlots, the mountain ridge spreading across the western sky. Finally, it curves due east and joins the Wallkill just south of US 44-NY 55 near Gardiner.

The lower Shawangunk habitat region as identified by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Natural history

In the early 1990s, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, when it was researching the fate of the former Galeville air base site (now Shawangunk Grasslands National Wildlife Refuge) found that the lower Shawangunk (from its mouth to Pine Bush) supports an unusually diverse plant and animal community for the region due to the absence of any serious impoundment along the upper river. It reported no less than six species of freshwater mussels, including the rare swollen wedge mussel, and 31 species of fish. Among the latter were the rare Notropis amoenus (comely shiner), Notropis stramineus (sand shiner), Percina caproedes (logperch), Lepomis auritis (redbreasted sunfish) and Noturus insignis (margined madtom).[2]

The study found that the region supports the only known community of Diarrhena obovata (beakgrass) in the state. Other rare plants in the lower Shawangunk Kill include threadfoot on submerged ledges, sharp-winged monkeyflower, wingstem and redrooted flatsedge along the stream itself, with Davis' sedge, swamp agrimony, Aster vimeneus (small white aster) and violet bushclover joining the beakgrass in the flood plains.[2]

Due to the minimal development (mostly agricultural) within much of its watershed, there is very little pollution.[2] In 2015 the Town Wallkill, through which five miles (8.0 km) of the stream flows, enacted a law to protect the Shawangunk Kill. It bars any construction (including roads), clear cuting, dumping or septic systems within 100 feet (30 m) of the high water mark. Crawford, to the north, has also enacted limits on new construction and rebuilding in the stream's vicinity, and Mount Hope already owns much of the land around it.[3]

Geology

The river bedrock is predominantly shale, covered by silty loam soils left behind by past glaciation. The stream bed itself varies from solid rock to particulates such as gravel, sand and clay. Geologically, the Shawangunk valley is part of the Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians, typified by the Shawangunk Ridge to the west and the lower Hoagerburgh Ridge to the east.<ref name="USFWS" /.

Crossings

North to south, going upriver

Tributaries

See also

References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map, accessed October 3, 2011
  2. 1 2 3 Shawangunk Kill retrieved from training.fws.gov March 1, 2007.
  3. Bayne, Richard D. (October 18, 2015). "Wallkill adds new law to protect Shawangunk Kill". Times Herald Record. Retrieved November 14, 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.