Glassmine Falls

Glassmine Falls is an ephemeral waterfall in Buncombe County, North Carolina, on Glassmine Branch, near Barnardsville, NC. It is located below the Blue Ridge Parkway around milepost 362.

Glassmine Falls
Visible Portion of Glassmine Falls, August 2006
LocationBuncombe County, in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina
Coordinates35.735333°N 82.331550°W / 35.735333; -82.331550
TypeSlide
Total height>800 ft (240 m) (estimated)

Geology

When it flows, the falls slides down the rock face of Blackstock Knob Mountain down to the North Fork Swannanoa River. The flow is not constant and can sometimes nearly dry up completely. It is most visible after heavy rains, which can be at any time during the year. A sign at the overlook for the falls claims that the falls is over 800 ft (247m) high, although the actual height is probably much less.

History

At the base of the falls is the old Abernathy Mine, a mica mine. The miners referred to the mineral they mined as "glass", which is how the falls got its name.

Visiting The Falls

Access to the falls is restricted to a viewing platform at milemarker 361.2 on the Blue Ridge Parkway. The falls is directly in the City of Asheville's watershed, so direct access to the falls is strictly prohibited.

Nearby Falls

gollark: > mad social scientistI'd really like to see something like this somewhere.
gollark: Just nanorobotically/magically assemble everything exactly where it's needed.
gollark: Hyperbolic geometry has interesting properties I would probably like to know more about except geometry is very hard.
gollark: Or hyperbolic space warehouses.
gollark: I mean, they're more useful there.


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