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Clarke's Gap, also known as Clarks Gap, is a pass through Catoctin Mountain west of Leesburg, Virginia.The gap has an elevation of 643 feet (196 m). The gap is not a true wind gap, but rather a man-made railroad cut through a local saddle point between two ridges to the southeast and northwest created by the drainage of Dry Mill Branch of Tuscarora Creek to the east and an unnamed tributary of ...
Clarks Creek • average: 2.78 cu ft/s (0.079 m 3 /s) at mouth with Clarks Creek [5] Basin features; Progression: Clarks Creek → Ararat River → Yadkin River → Pee Dee River → Winyah Bay → Atlantic Ocean: River system: Yadkin River: Tributaries • left: unnamed tributaries • right: unnamed tributaries: Bridges: Long Branch Road
In 1979, the trail was extended 26 miles (42 km) westward from Falls Church to Goose Creek with the aid of a federal Rails-to-Trails grant, although it was only paved as far as Maple Avenue East (VA Route 123) in Vienna - a distance of 6 miles (10 km); and by 1979 Fairfax County had built Buckthorn Lane on a raised area across the right-of-way ...
Clarks Creek • average: 1.41 cu ft/s (0.040 m 3 /s) at mouth with Clarks Creek [5] Basin features; Progression: Clarks Creek → Ararat River → Yadkin River → Pee Dee River → Winyah Bay → Atlantic Ocean: River system: Yadkin River: Tributaries • left: unnamed tributaries • right: unnamed tributaries: Bridges: Long Branch Road ...
Clarks Creek drains 10.80 square miles (28.0 km 2) of area, receives about 50.0 in/year of precipitation, has a wetness index of 324.21, and is about 62% forested. [ 4 ] See also
Clarks Creek may refer to: Clarks Creek (Kansas), a stream in Geary and Morris counties; Clarks Creek (Missouri), a stream; Clarks Creek (Lackawanna River), a stream in Wayne County, Pennsylvania; Clarks Creek (Ararat River tributary), a stream in Patrick County, Virginia; Clarks Creek (Harrison County, Texas), a stream in Harrison County, Texas
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The trail is the continuously longest of the 30 National Scenic and National Historic Trails. The Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail is approximately 4,900 miles (7,900 km) long, extending from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to the mouth of the Columbia River, near present-day Astoria, Oregon.