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Archbald, PA
$13.00
Title
The Rusty Bridge
Artist
Gary Keesler
Medium
Photograph - Digital Art
Description
The Rusty Bridge, An old out of use Railroad Bridge between Columbia, NJ and Upper Mt. Bethel, PA.
Should you might like to Google this location, you'll get a real birds eye view of it.
I believe it to be formerly of the Lackawanna RR Bridge within the (Delaware Water Gap - National Park) area just off of Rout 46 boarding Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
It's also known as the Delaware Train Bridge and was not able to determine the Bridges exact age, but it's very old and rusty.
What we do know is the Delaware Water Gap is a water gap on the border of the New Jersey and Pennsylvania where the Delaware River cuts through a large ridge of the Appalachian Mountains.
It forms the southern portion of the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, which is used primarily for recreational purposes, such as rafting, canoeing, swimming, fishing, hiking, and rock climbing, but for me it is a wonderful and beautiful photographic wall display from end to the other.
A water gap is a geological feature where a river cuts through a mountain ridge.
The Delaware Water Gap began to form 450 million years ago when quartz pebbles were deposited in a shallow sea, on top of the Ordovician Martinsburg shale.
The Martinsburg Shale was uplifted when a chain of volcanic islands collided with North America around the same time.
These islands went over the North American plate, and deposited rock on top of plate, forming the Highlands and Kittatinny Valley.
Then around 400 million years ago, a small, narrow continent collided with North America.
Pressure from the collision twisted the Silurian Shawangunk Conglomerate, shattering the gray quartzite as it was uplifted.
In addition, the pressure created heat, melted the quartzite, and allowed it to bind the quartz pebbles and conglomerate together.
This layer was then uplifted, and the Delaware River slowly cut its path down through the shattered quartzite.
If the quartzite had not been cracked, the river may not have been able to cut its path through the mountain.
Millions of years of rain, ice, snow and wind erosion shaped the area.
The Wisconsin glaciation, which occurred somewhere around 21,000 B.C. to 13,000 B.C., covered the entire Kittatinny Ridge and ended near Belvidere.
When the glaciers retreated, the gap assumed its present form.
See more by visiting my Delaware Water Gap gallery URL below.
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Uploaded
February 19th, 2014
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Viewed 590 Times - Last Visitor from Ottawa, ON - Canada on 04/23/2024 at 9:14 AM
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Winnipeg, MB - Canada
Amazing capture Gary. I have a view from my window with an old bridge like this one. f/v/t
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