The creek flows south out of my preserve, enters a county park, then crosses the line into the city of Philadelphia where it flows within municipal parkland all the way to its mouth at the Delaware River. About two miles upstream of its mouth, the creek falls off the hard edge of North America and flows onto sediments deposited on the shallow continental shelf - the Coastal Plain. The transition from the hard, ancient Piedmont rock to the sandy Coastal Plain - the fall line - is dramatic.
The fall line |
The Piedmont bedrock at the fall line displays graphic evidence of the repeated stresses experienced by the rock at the edge of the continent. North America and Africa have collided with one another on at least two occasions, and the bedrock, composed mostly of dull, gray metamorphic gneiss, is twisted and bent like taffy. In addition, other types of rock have gotten caught-up in the collisions and been incorporated into the cooled "taffy" like the quartzite in the image above, and the granite in the image below.
A stone studded with mica |
Fish ladder |
The pools created by this fish ladder have become very popular swimming holes with members of the Hispanic community in the neighborhood. On warm summer weekends, extended families bring barbeque picnics to the edge of the creek to enjoy the water. Although swimming is prohibited, and the creek is far too "impaired" for safe contact, it doesn't stop the kids from cooling off. Fortunately, if the shad begin to use the creek for spawning again, they would return in March and not have to contend with crowds of kids.
Requisite sycamore-against-blue sky image |
The fall line's a pretty "happening" place!