Atlantic Seaboard Fall Line


The Atlantic Seaboard Fall Line, or Fall Zone, is a escarpment where the Piedmont and Atlantic coastal plain meet in the eastern United States. Much of the Atlantic Seaboard fall line passes through areas where no evidence of faulting is present.
The fall line marks the geologic boundary of hard metamorphosed terrain—the product of the Taconic orogeny—and the sandy, relatively flat alluvial plain of the upper continental shelf, formed of unconsolidated Cretaceous and Cenozoic sediments. Examples of Fall Zone features include the Potomac River's Little Falls and the rapids in Richmond, Virginia, where the James River falls across a series of rapids down to its own tidal estuary.
Before navigation improvements, such as locks, the fall line was generally the head of navigation on rivers due to their rapids or waterfalls, and the necessary portage around them. Numerous cities initially formed along the fall line because of the easy river transportation to seaports, as well as the availability of water power to operate mills and factories, thus bringing together river traffic and industrial labor. U.S. Route 1 and Interstate 95 link many of the fall-line cities.
In 1808, Treasury Secretary Albert Gallatin noted the significance of the fall line as an obstacle to improved national communication and commerce between the Atlantic seaboard and the western river systems:
Gallatin's observation was sound, though simplified and limited by the knowledge of his time. The limits of the Fall Line are subject to some dispute. In the north, the fall line is usually understood to have its northern limit at New Brunswick, New Jersey, a geologic continuation in fact crosses the Hackensack and Passaic rivers at the cities of those names, to which navigation was possible. In the south, some such as Gallatin above, and the USGS source in the infobox, imply its end to be in the Carolinas or Georgia, and to include only rivers running to the Atlantic; but it is more accurate, as the Georgia source in the infobox does, to trace it farther west through Georgia and Alabama, as that is the geologic continuation.

Cities and towns

Only the principal city of an area is listed below. However, two cities may belong on one river, if the one downstream is at the effective head of navigation and the one upstream at the site of useful water power.
Cities that lie along the Piedmont–Coastal Plain fall line include the following :
StatePoint Elevation & coordinatesFall zone:
drop/width
Geomorphology
Piedmont—Coastal plain
New JerseyNew Brunswick

New JerseyTrenton Falls of the Delaware
PennsylvaniaPhiladelphia
Fairmount Dam
DelawareWilmington
from its headwaters to sea level, with a series of falls and rapids in Wilmington
DelawareNewark
MarylandConowingo Dam
Susquehanna Falls
MarylandEllicott City Crystalline rock—unconsolidate marine sediments
MarylandLittle Falls
Washington, DCTheodore Roosevelt Island
VirginiaFredericksburg
VirginiaRichmond
VirginiaEmporia
North CarolinaSmithfield
North CarolinaGoldsboro
North CarolinaFayetteville
South CarolinaColumbia
GeorgiaMacon
GeorgiaColumbus


(
The river drops approximately 120 feet where the Coastal Plain meets the Cumberland Plateau.