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Category: 31. The Lumbee River; environment
and environmentalism
NPS001. United States. National Park
Service. Lumber River, North Carolina.
http://www.nps.gov/rivers/wsr-lumber.html
Accessed 9 April 2002.
Publication type: Web site/page
Detailed, interestingly written overview of the
river and its resources; its special designations; and its importance
to the area's Native Americans. There is a Lumber River State Park
(address and telephone number given). The river's total range is
115 miles; the range for federal purposes is 81 miles (60 scenic, 21 recreational).
In 1989 the river was added to the North Carolina Natural and Scenic Rivers
System. On September 28, 1998, it was added to the National Wild
and Scenic Rivers System.
This Web page contains excerpts from the Lumber River
eligibility report and environmental assessment, prepared as part
of the National Wild and Scenic Rivers designation. The report
describes highway access to the river; recreation (canoeing, fishing,
hunting, picnicking/camping, biking/jogging, swimming); fossil hunting;
wildlife; archaeological sites along the river; Native American prehistory;
history; vegetation; and climate (temperature and precipitation).
The report explains the five resource categories in which the National
Wild and Scenic Rivers Study found the Lumber River to be outstandingly
remarkable: recreation resources, fish, wildlife, scenery, and
botany.
Additional subjects: Lumber River State Park
This annotation was edited on: June 24, 2002
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net |
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