Red Hills Region

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Red Hills Region of Florida & Georgia.
The Red Hills Region of Florida & Georgia.

The Red Hills Region is a unique 300,000-acre (515.6 sq mi) area of the southeastearn United States overlapping parts of southwestern Georgia and north Florida.

Contents

[edit] Location

The Red Hills extend from the Aucilla River on the east to the Ochlockonee River on the west, and from the farmlands near Coolidge, Georgia down to Tallahassee, Florida where the land drops at the Cody Scarp down to the Woodville Karst Plain.

[edit] History

The area was first settled by paleo-indians in and around the various lakes in the southern part of the Red Hills. Apalachee indians were found here in the 16th century. The Apalachee were almost annihilated through killing, disease, and slavery. It is now known through DNA that some Apalachee made it to southern Louisiana. In the 18th century the Seminoles made the Red Hills their home until the early 1800s and the Seminole Wars. Also during this time, more white settlers began cotton plantations which thrived until the Civil War. At one time, Leon County, Florida was the 5th largest producer of cotton between all counties in Georgia and Florida. After the Civil War, the Red Hills' plantations became farms and quail plantations for rich northerners.

[edit] Geography

Rolling hills and ravines covered by forests. The highest point in the Red Hills is 280 feet (85.3m) north of Tallahassee by 10 miles. The area is covered in 6 variety of oak, sweetgum, magnolia, hickory, maple, redbud, shortleaf pine and many other variety of trees. The RHR is home to some of the last remnants of the great longleaf pine forests remaining in the nation. The soil is red clay deposited during the last Ice Age from the Appalachian Mountains.

[edit] Animal life

The Red Hills Region supports Northern Bobwhite Quail, White-tailed Deer, Red Fox, Racoon, Eastern Grey Squirrel, Armadillo, Black Bear, migratory birds, the federally endangered Red-cockaded Woodpecker, the gopher tortoise, and many other animals and plants.

[edit] Features

The Red Hills Region serves as one of the highest recharge areas for the Floridan Aquifer — a pristine underground sea critical to the drinking water supply for residents of Florida, Georgia, and Alabama. The Red Hills Region also has the largest concentration of undeveloped plantation lands in the United States. The Red Hills has been identified for special conservation efforts and the Nature Conservancy has designated the Red Hills as one of America's "Last Great Places."

[edit] External links