Lacawac Hiking Trails
Home
About
Sources
Contact Us
Maurice Broun Trail
Fields & Meadows
Stone Walls
Gypsy Moth Caterpillars
Oak Trees
>
White Oak
Red Oak
Black Oak
Raccoons
Owls
Snakes
>
Snake ID
Bats
>
Bat Houses
Lake Lacawac Trail
White Pine
Eastern Hemlock
Bog Plants
>
Sphagnum Moss
Blueberry Bushes
Pickerelweed
Lake Lacawac
Glacial Bog
Diversity of Birds
Glacial Erratic Rock
American Black Bear
>
Diet
Population
Reproduction
Big Lake Trail
Food Web
North American Beaver
Osprey
Watershed
Japanese Barberry
>
Characteristics
Threat to Forest
Control Methods
Minerals & Rocks
>
Minerals
Igneous Rocks
Sedimentary Rocks
Metamorphic Rocks
Identification
Sugar Maple
Streams
Hydroelectric Dam
Lake Wallenpaupack
>
Electricity Generation
Recreation
Watershed Management
Wild Grapevines
Hayscented Fern
Carriage-Lakefront Trails
Phytoplankton
Harmful Algal Blooms
Riparian Zones
Bioindicators
Lake Macroinvertebrates
Lake Succession
>
Oligotrophic Lake
Mesotrophic Lake
Eutrophic Lake
Lake Formation
Amphibians
Native Fish
Lake Research
Aquatic Plants
Zooplankton
Stratification
Lake Hydrology
Lake Chemistry
Monitoring for Preservation
Local Research with Global Implications
Historic Great Camp Trail
Connell Park
Sustainable Forestry
Hemlock Woolly Adelgid
Early Years
Field Station
Ledges Trail
Deer Exclosures
Geological Faults
>
Normal Fault
Reverse Fault
Strike-slip Fault
Wild Orchids
Ledges
Ferns
Mosses & Lichen
Vernal Pools
Mushrooms
Watres Trail
Edge Effect
Hummocks and Hollows
Visitors Center
Native Plant Garden
>
Golden Alexander
Black-Eyed Susan
Striped Cream Violet
Scarlet Beebalm
Blazing Star
Blue Moon
Blue Flag Iris
Tickseed
Coneflower
Butterfly Weed
Jerusalem Artichoke
Monkshood
Joe-Pye Weed
Mayapple
Blue Wood Sedge
Little Blue Stem
Bees
Weather Station
Partner Ridge Trail
Warbler Trail
A reverse fault forms when two landmasses are being compressed together. The hanging wall on one side of the fault moves upward.
Normal Fault
Strike-slip Fault
Home
About
Sources
Contact Us
Maurice Broun Trail
Fields & Meadows
Stone Walls
Gypsy Moth Caterpillars
Oak Trees
>
White Oak
Red Oak
Black Oak
Raccoons
Owls
Snakes
>
Snake ID
Bats
>
Bat Houses
Lake Lacawac Trail
White Pine
Eastern Hemlock
Bog Plants
>
Sphagnum Moss
Blueberry Bushes
Pickerelweed
Lake Lacawac
Glacial Bog
Diversity of Birds
Glacial Erratic Rock
American Black Bear
>
Diet
Population
Reproduction
Big Lake Trail
Food Web
North American Beaver
Osprey
Watershed
Japanese Barberry
>
Characteristics
Threat to Forest
Control Methods
Minerals & Rocks
>
Minerals
Igneous Rocks
Sedimentary Rocks
Metamorphic Rocks
Identification
Sugar Maple
Streams
Hydroelectric Dam
Lake Wallenpaupack
>
Electricity Generation
Recreation
Watershed Management
Wild Grapevines
Hayscented Fern
Carriage-Lakefront Trails
Phytoplankton
Harmful Algal Blooms
Riparian Zones
Bioindicators
Lake Macroinvertebrates
Lake Succession
>
Oligotrophic Lake
Mesotrophic Lake
Eutrophic Lake
Lake Formation
Amphibians
Native Fish
Lake Research
Aquatic Plants
Zooplankton
Stratification
Lake Hydrology
Lake Chemistry
Monitoring for Preservation
Local Research with Global Implications
Historic Great Camp Trail
Connell Park
Sustainable Forestry
Hemlock Woolly Adelgid
Early Years
Field Station
Ledges Trail
Deer Exclosures
Geological Faults
>
Normal Fault
Reverse Fault
Strike-slip Fault
Wild Orchids
Ledges
Ferns
Mosses & Lichen
Vernal Pools
Mushrooms
Watres Trail
Edge Effect
Hummocks and Hollows
Visitors Center
Native Plant Garden
>
Golden Alexander
Black-Eyed Susan
Striped Cream Violet
Scarlet Beebalm
Blazing Star
Blue Moon
Blue Flag Iris
Tickseed
Coneflower
Butterfly Weed
Jerusalem Artichoke
Monkshood
Joe-Pye Weed
Mayapple
Blue Wood Sedge
Little Blue Stem
Bees
Weather Station
Partner Ridge Trail
Warbler Trail