Arabian Mountain | |
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Elevation | 940 ft (287 m) |
Location | |
Location | DeKalb County, Georgia, USA |
Geology | |
Type | Monadnock |
Climbing | |
First ascent | unknown |
Easiest route | Hike |
Arabia Mountain is a monadnock in DeKalb County, Georgia. The peak is 940 feet (287m) above sea level, rising 180 feet (55m) above Arabia Lake reservoir. It is now part of the Davidson-Arabia Mountain Nature Preserve, a DeKalb County park.
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On October 12, 2006, the mountain and adjoining features were designated Arabia Mountain National Heritage Area.[1] Guided hikes are led by park rangers Tyrone "Tyrone of Arabia" Burkette and Brittany "Ranger Britt" Camp. Panola Mountain is 3 miles 5 furlongs (5.9 km) to the southwest. While designated as one peak on USGS maps, most users familiar with the area consider the rock formation to be two peaks: Arabia Mountain to the northeast, and Bradley Mountain to the southeast, connected by a low saddle.
Arabia Mountain appears to be composed of granite, like other nearby peaks such as Stone Mountain and Panola Mountain. Although made of metamorphic rock, the mountain is actually composed of migmatite, metamorphosed at higher temperatures than gneiss but not sufficiently melted to become granite.
Like Panola Mountain and Stone Mountain, Arabia Mountain was quarried for decades before the property was turned over to the DeKalb park system. Structures and excavations from the quarry operations can be seen throughout the park. Parts of the mountain were used for filming the 1992 horror film "Pet Sematary Two".
Arabia Mountain is one of five locations in the US where black-spored quillwort (Isoetes melanospora) are found. It is one of 44 locations in the US where little amphianthus (Amphianthus pusillus) is found. These are endangered species protected by Georgia and Federal law. The largest and most important population of black-spored quillwort and one of the largest Amphianthus populations occur here. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's five-year review of these species, completed in 2008, states that "enforcement to protect sensitive areas needs improvement" in the Arabia Mountain area.[2]
Arabia Mountain is one of a small number of locations in the southeastern United States where Small's stonecrop (Diamorpha smallii) thrives (this plant is not listed as an endangered species in Georgia[3] or the US, but is in Tennessee[4]). When granite and similar stone outcrops are exposed to erosion, over time, small depressions, called solution pools, form where weaker rock wears away faster than surrounding rock (often assisted by lichen). Over time, these depressions fill with sand washed down from higher locations, which accumulates a small amount of organic content from decaying dead leaves and other detritus, as well as rain water. Small's stonecrop then takes hold in these sandy hollows.
The PATH Foundation has completed approximately 12 miles (19 km) of a 12-foot-wide (3.7 m) concrete road for pedestrian and bicycle use running from downtown Lithonia to Stonecrest Mall and thence through the Davidson-Arabia Mountain Nature Preserve to Panola Mountain State Park. This includes a spur to a parking area on Klondike Road and a spur to the DeKalb County School System's Murphey Candler Elementary School and Arabia Mountain High School.[5]
This trail will link with the proposed 26-mile (42 km), paved, 12-foot-wide (3.7 m) South River bicycle trail extending to the 2,000-acre (8.1 km2) Monastery of the Holy Spirit in Conyers.[6]
On the edge of the Arabia Mountain green space is the Arabia Mountain High School Academy of Engineering Medicine and Environmental Studies, opened August 2009. The Academy is a LEED-certified building and uses the "Environment as an Integrating Context for learning" (EIC) curriculum.[7] The high school is connected to the nature preserve via a spur bicycle path.
Arabia Mountain is a uniformed school but on the inside its a normal high school who just trunt up on #turn up thursday smh and now we on the map