Gore Mountain (New York)

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Gore Mountain
Gore Mountain is located in New York
Gore Mountain
Gore Mountain
Highest point
Elevation3563+ ft (1086+ m)[1]
Prominence1,850 ft (560 m)[1]
Listing
  • New York County High Points 7th
Coordinates43°40′35″N 74°02′06″W / 43.6764539°N 74.035134°W / 43.6764539; -74.035134Coordinates: 43°40′35″N 74°02′06″W / 43.6764539°N 74.035134°W / 43.6764539; -74.035134[2]
Geography
LocationNorth Creek, Warren County, New York, U.S.
Parent rangeAdirondack Mountains
Topo mapUSGS Thirteenth Lake

Gore Mountain is a mountain located near the village of North Creek in Warren County, New York, of which its peak is the highest point. Gore is flanked to the north by South Mountain, and to the southwest by Height of Land Mountain. The mountain is the site of the popular Gore Mountain ski resort.

History[]

Gore mountain gets its name from the word "gore", a tract of land, typically triangular, characteristically arising from survey lines that do not close. The mountain remained unsurveyed during early settlement of the Adirondack Mountain region because it was considered valueless to early farmers and loggers. It was considered too high and steep for farming and horse drawn logging. It remained a "gore" and the name stuck as Gore Mountain.[citation needed]

Watershed[]

Gore Mountain stands within the watershed of the Hudson River which drains into New York Harbor. The south end of Gore Mtn. drains into Black Mountain Brook, thence into Chatiemac Brook, North Creek, and the Hudson River. The southeast slopes of Gore Mtn. drains into Straight Brook, thence into North Creek. The northeast slopes of Gore Mtn. drains into Roaring Brook, thence into North Creek. The north west and west slopes of Gore Mtn. drain into the headwaters of the East Branch of the Sacandaga River, thence into Hudson River.

Garnet mining[]

Garnet (pyrope) aggregate from the Barton mines

Industrial garnet has been mined at the Barton garnet mine since 1878 when Henry Hudson Barton began mining garnet for use as sandpaper abrasives.[3] The rock that contains these garnets, referred to as the Gore Mountain Garnet unit, is a garnet amphibolite.[4]

See also[]

  • List of mountains in New York

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b "Gore Mountain, New York". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 2012-12-18.
  2. ^ "Gore Mountain". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2012-12-18.
  3. ^ Out of the Earth: Mining in the Adirondacks, The Adirondack Museum at Blue Mountain Lake, New York
  4. ^ Shinevar, William J; Jagoutz, Oliver; VanTongeren, Jill A (2021-01-28). "Gore Mountain Garnet Amphibolite records UHT Conditions: Implications for the Rheology of the Lower Continental Crust During Orogenesis". Journal of Petrology (egab007). doi:10.1093/petrology/egab007. ISSN 0022-3530.
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