Appalachian Mountains

The Appalachian Mountains are a system of mountain ranges running along the eastern coast of North America from Newfoundland and Labrador in Canada in the north to Alabama in the United States in the south. Although shorter and less well known than the vast Rocky Mountains in the western part of the continent, the Appalachians are geologically the oldest North American mountain range. The highest peak in the range is Mount Mitchell in North Carolina.

The Appalachian Mountains are a varied destination. Many visit the mountains as day visitors. Some hike all or part of the Appalachian Trail, a 2,174-mile (3,499-km) hike along the main ridges of the mountain range.

Regions

The range runs through the following U.S. states and Canadian provinces (north to south):

Canada

 Western Newfoundland
Home to the Great Northern Peninsula and Gros Morne National Park.
 Cape Breton Island
Home to Cape Breton Highlands National Park.
 Saint John River Valley
Western part of New Brunswick, home to Mount Carleton Provincial Park and home to the "Appalachian Range Scenic Drive".
 Gaspé Peninsula
Home to Gaspésie National Park.
 Bas-Saint-Laurent
Home to Bic National Park.
 Eastern Townships
Home to Lac-Mégantic.
 Chaudière-Appalaches
Home to the maple-growing Beauce region.

United States

Cities

Georgia

Maryland

North Carolina

South Carolina

Pennsylvania

Quebec

Tennessee

Virginia

Front Royal Virginia

West Virginia

Other destinations

Understand

The Appalachians originally uplifted when the supercontinent Pangaea was forming. The crashing together of the European and African tectonic plates with the North American plate caused enormous mountains to rise. At their peak they were likely higher than the Alps or Rockies today, possibly rivaling the modern Himalayas. Erosion during the Age of Dinosaurs wore the Appalachians down to nearly a flat plain, but subsequent uplift allowed rivers to cut valleys into the ancient rock, forming the modern peaks and valleys that characterize the region.

The mountains served as a barrier to western migration when Europeans began settling the continent. Except along river valleys and the Great Lakes, there was very little white settlement west of the Appalachians until the beginning of the 18th century. The Erie Canal was dug, in part, to allow goods and travelers to flow more freely across the divide, and soon railroads would be laid through tunnels and across bridges to further open up the west.

Then there are those who settled in the mountains. In the South, the mountain dwellers developed a subculture known as Appalachia, or (derisively) "hillbilly". Farther north, in West Virginia and Pennsylvania, anthracite coal deposits led to a strong tradition of coal mining in the hills. In Quebec, every region is, to some extent, an extension of the Appalachians, but the "mountainous" character is interrupted by the wide St Lawrence River Valley cutting through it. South of the River, in the Gaspé region, and to the north in the Laurentians, the mountainous character is revealed once again. Likewise all of Atlantic Canada is to some extend a northward extension of the Appalachians, notably the Cape Breton Highlands and the mountainous interior of Newfoundland's Great Northern Peninsula.

Read

Bill Bryson's A Walk in the Woods, published in 1999, offers an entertaining look at the author's attempt to hike the Appalachian Trail.

See

Itineraries

  • Appalachian Trail over two million people a year hike a portion of this extensive trail running from Georgia to Maine.

Go next

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