fbpx
Wikipedia

The Palisades (Hudson River)

The Palisades, also called the New Jersey Palisades or the Hudson River Palisades, are a line of steep cliffs along the west side of the lower Hudson River in Northeastern New Jersey and Southeastern New York in the United States. The cliffs stretch north from Jersey City about 20 miles (32 km) to near Nyack, New York, and are visible at Haverstraw, New York. They rise nearly vertically from near the edge of the river, and are about 300 feet (90 m) high at Weehawken, increasing gradually to 540 feet (160 m) high near their northern terminus.[1] North of Fort Lee, the Palisades are part of Palisades Interstate Park and are a National Natural Landmark.[2]

The Palisades
The cliffs of the Palisades as seen from the Ross Dock Picnic Area in Palisades Interstate Park
LocationNortheastern New Jersey (Hudson and Bergen counties)
Downstate New York (Rockland County)
Coordinates40°57′52″N 73°54′31″W / 40.96451°N 73.90859°W / 40.96451; -73.90859
Designated1983
Atop the Hudson Palisades in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, overlooking the Hudson River, the George Washington Bridge, and the skyscrapers of Midtown Manhattan, New York City

The Palisades are among the most dramatic geologic features in the vicinity of New York City, forming a canyon of the Hudson north of the George Washington Bridge, as well as providing a vista of the Manhattan skyline. They sit in the Newark Basin, a rift basin located mostly in New Jersey.

Palisade is derived from the same root as the word pole, ultimately from the Latin word palus, meaning stake. A "palisade" is, in general, a defensive fence or wall made up of wooden stakes or tree trunks. The Lenape called the cliffs "rocks that look like rows of trees", a phrase that became "Weehawken", the name of a town in New Jersey that sits at the top of the cliffs across from Midtown Manhattan.

Geology edit

The basalt cliffs are the margin of a diabase sill, formed about 200 million years ago,[3] at the close of the Triassic period by the intrusion of molten magma upward into sandstone.[4] The molten material cooled and solidified before reaching the surface. Water erosion of the softer sandstone left behind the columnar structure of harder rock that exists today. The cliffs are about 300 ft (100 m) thick in sections and originally may have reached 1,000 ft (300 m).

The end-Triassic extinction event that coincided with the formation of the Hudson Palisades, Central Atlantic magmatic province, 200 million years ago ranks second in severity of the five major extinction episodes that span geologic time.[4][5] The most severe extinction in the past 500 million years was the Permian–Triassic extinction event, informally known as the Great Dying,[6][7][8] coincided with flood basalt eruptions that produced the Siberian Traps, which constituted one of the largest known volcanic events on Earth and covered over 770,000 sq mi (2,000,000 km2) with lava[9]

Franklyn Van Houten completed groundbreaking research on a rock formation known as the Newark Basin. His discovery of a consistent geological pattern in which lake levels rose and fell is now known as the "Van Houten cycle".[10][11][12][13]

History edit

 
A colored postcard of the Palisades c. 1898

The Palisades appear on the first European map of the New World, made by Gerardus Mercator in 1541 based on the description given him by Giovanni da Verrazzano,[14] who suggested they look like a "fence of stakes".[15]

During the early stages of the American Revolution, British military Commander Lord Cornwallis landed a force of between 2,500 and 5,000 at Huyler's Landing on November 20, 1776.[16][17] In an effort to ambush American General George Washington and crush the rebellion in the wake of the rebel's defeat in the Battle of Brooklyn and the Battle of Fort Washington, Cornwallis marched his men up the steep Palisades and southward through the Northern Valley. Washington, stationed near Fort Lee, was alerted to the ambush effort by an unknown horseback patriot, remembered only as the Closter Rider, and successfully fled west through Englewood and over the Hackensack River, avoiding capture in what is remembered as Washington's Retreat.[18][19]

The Palisades were the site of 18 documented duels and probably many unrecorded ones in the years 1798–1845. The most famous is the Burr–Hamilton duel between Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr, which took place in a spot known as the Heights of Weehawken on July 11, 1804.[20]

An English visitor, Fanny Trollope, in her 1832 book Domestic Manners of the Americans, wrote of a park established at the Palisades by a Hoboken ferryboat entrepreneur at that time:

It is hardly possible to imagine one of greater attraction; a broad belt of light underwood and flowering shrubs, studded at intervals with lofty forest trees, runs for two miles along a cliff which overhangs the matchless Hudson; sometimes it feathers the rocks down to its very margin, and at others leaves a pebbly shore, just rude enough to break the gentle waves, and make a music which mimics softly the loud chorus of the ocean. Through this beautiful little wood, a broad well gravelled terrace is led by every point which can exhibit the scenery to advantage; narrower and wilder paths diverge at intervals, some into the deeper shadow of the wood, and some shelving gradually to the pretty coves below. The price of entrance to this little Eden, is the six cents you pay at the ferry.[21]

After the Civil War, signs advertising patent medicines and other products covered the rock face in letters 20 feet (6.1 m) high.[22]

In the 19th century, the cliffs were heavily quarried for railroad ballast, leading to local efforts to preserve them. Beginning in the 1890s, several unsuccessful efforts were made to turn much of the Highlands into a forest preserve. Fearing that they would soon be put out of business, quarry operators responded by working faster: in March 1898 alone, more than three tons of dynamite was used to bring down Washington Head and Indian Head in Fort Lee, New Jersey, producing several million cubic yards of traprock. The following year,[14] work by the New Jersey Federation of Women's Clubs led to the creation of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission, headed by George W. Perkins, which was authorized to acquire land between Fort Lee and Piermont, New York. Its jurisdiction was extended to Stony Point, New York in 1906.

In 1908, the State of New York announced plans to move Sing Sing Prison to Bear Mountain. Work was begun in the area near Highland Lake (renamed Hessian Lake) and in January 1909, the state purchased the 740-acre (3.0 km2) Bear Mountain tract. Conservationists, inspired by the work of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission, lobbied successfully for the creation of the Highlands of the Hudson Forest Preserve. However, the prison project was continued. Mary Williamson Averell, whose husband, Union Pacific Railroad president E. H. Harriman died in September of that year, offered the state another 10,000 acres (40 km2) and one million dollars toward the creation of a state park.

 
Palisades as seen from West 187th Street and Chittenden Avenue in Washington Heights, Manhattan

George Walbridge Perkins, who served as president of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission from its creation in 1900 until his death in 1920, with whom she had been working, raised another $1.5 million from a dozen wealthy contributors including John D. Rockefeller and J. P. Morgan. New York State appropriated a matching $2.5 million and the state of New Jersey appropriated $500,000 to build the Henry Hudson Drive (which would be succeeded by the Palisades Parkway in 1947). Ultimately, the Sing Sing relocation was discontinued.

In the 1910s, when Fort Lee was a center of film production, the cliffs were frequently used as film locations. The most notable of these films was The Perils of Pauline, a serial which helped popularize the term cliffhanger.[23]

In October 1931, after four years of construction, the George Washington Bridge opened between Upper Manhattan and Fort Lee.

On April 28, 1940, the Boy Scout Foundation of Greater New York announced the donation of 723 acres by John D. Rockefeller Jr. to establish a weekend camp for New York City Boy Scouts.[24]

In June 1983, the Palisades were designated a National Natural Landmark by the National Park Service.[25]

On May 12, 2012, a 10,000 ton rockfall just south of the state line left a 520-foot (160 m) scar on the cliffs.[22]

The Palisades is now a part of Palisades Interstate Park, a popular destination for hiking and other outdoor recreational activities, that also includes Harriman-Bear Mountain State Park, Minnewaska State Park Preserve and several other parks and historic sites in the region.

On June 23, 2015, officials of the South Korean conglomerate LG Group announced that their planned new North American headquarters building in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, which was originally designed to be 143 feet (44 m) tall, and would have broken the tree line on top of the Palisades, would be reduced to 69 feet (21 m) in height, thus preserving the contour of the ridge. The new building had been opposed by numerous conservation groups and politicians, including four former governors of New Jersey.[26]

 
The Palisades, with fall foliage. On the left is the George Washington Bridge. A controversial plan to build a high-rise that would have broken the tree line was proposed, and later modified, by LG Electronics.[26]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Township of Palisade" on the Bergen County website
  2. ^ "National Natural Landmarks - National Natural Landmarks (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved April 15, 2019. Year designated: 1983
  3. ^ Tirella, Tricia. "Spotlight on North Bergen". Palisade magazine; Summer 2010; Page 16.
  4. ^ a b Brannen, Peter. "Headstone for an Apocalypse" (op-ed) New York Times (August 6, 2013)
  5. ^ Chu, Jennifer. "Huge and widespread volcanic eruptions triggered the end-Triassic extinction" MIT News (March 21, 2013)
  6. ^ "The Great Dying': MIT Insights into the Most Severe Mass Extinction in Earth’s History" The Daily Galaxy (November 24, 2013)
  7. ^ Chandler, David L. "Ancient whodunit may be solved: The microbes did it!" MIT News (March 31, 2014)
  8. ^ Brannen, Peter (July 29, 2017). "Opinion - When Life on Earth Was Nearly Extinguished". The New York Times. Retrieved June 5, 2018.
  9. ^ Joel, Lucas (November 18, 2020) "Burning Fossil Fuels Helped Drive Earth’s Most Massive Extinction" The New York Times
  10. ^ Structural Geology & Tectonics Group "Van Houten cycle" (illustration) on the Rutgers University website
  11. ^ Olsen. "Milankovich Cycles in Early Mesozoic Rift Basins of Eastern North America Provide Physical Stratigraphy and Time Scale for Understanding Basin Evolution" from Lamont Newsletter 13 (1986) pp.6-7, on the Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory website
  12. ^ MacPherson, Kita. "Franklyn Van Houten, expert on sedimentary rocks, dies at 96" News at Princeton (September 14, 2010) on the Princeton University website
  13. ^ Chalker, Georgette E. "Franklyn Bosworth Van Houten 1914-2010" Princeton University Department of Geosciences website (February 10, 2011)
  14. ^ a b Cheslow, Jerry. "If You're Thinking of Living In Alpine, N.J.; Lavish Homes in a Millionaire's Borough" New York Times (December 14, 1997)
  15. ^ Rounds, Kate. "Preserving Palisades from development Commissioners also tackle road repairs, hybrid car" Hudson Reporter (June 15, 2008)
  16. ^ "On His Lordship's Mysterious Ascent - Palisades Interstate Park in New Jersey". www.njpalisades.org. Retrieved November 9, 2020.
  17. ^ "Historic New Bridge Landing". Bergen County Historical Society. Retrieved November 9, 2020.
  18. ^ "Steuben House". bergencountyhistory.org. Retrieved June 5, 2018.
  19. ^ "North Jersey". North Jersey. Retrieved June 5, 2018.
  20. ^ Ellis, Joseph J. 2000. Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation. (Chapter One: The Duel), Alfred A. Knopf. New York. ISBN 0-375-40544-5
  21. ^ Trollope, Fanny, Domestic Manners of the Americans, Ch. 30.
  22. ^ a b O'Neill, James "Palisades scar is proof of nature's raw power" Bergen County Record (July 7, 2012)
  23. ^ Verdon, Joan "A hike back in time to era of silent film" Bergen County Record (March 5, 2012)
  24. ^ Malatzky, David M. "Origin of Alpine Scout Camp" January 6, 2014, at the Wayback Machine (2006) on the Ten Mile River Scout Museum website
  25. ^ "National Natural Landmarks (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nature.nps.gov. Retrieved June 5, 2018.
  26. ^ a b *Dwyer, Jim. "LG to Reduce Height of Headquarters, Preserving Palisades Horizon" The New York Times (June 23, 2015)
    • "LG Building Project to Proceed in New Jersey; Conservation Groups and LG Reach 'Win-Win' Settlement" (press release) Protect the Palisades website (June 23, 2015)
    • Sullivan, S. P. "Former N.J. governors ask LG to rethink plan for high-rise HQ along the Palisades" NJ.com (June 7, 2013)
    • Sullivan, S. P. "LG supporters looking for Gov. Christie's help in fight over high-rise HQ on the Palisades" NJ.com (July 3, 2013)
    • Ma, Myles. "Opponents protest as LG celebrates start of work on Englewood Cliffs headquarters" NJ.com (November 14, 2013)
    • Byrne, Brendam T.; Kean, Thomas H.; Florio, James J.; and Whitman, Christine Todd "The Threat to the Palisades" (op-ed) New York Times (March 24, 2014)
    • Associated Press "NJ conservation groups file briefs opposing LG's planned construction on Palisades" NJ.com (April 7, 2014)
    • Ma, Myles. "Senate advances bill banning tall buildings along Palisades" NJ.com (June 7, 2014)

External links edit

  • Palisades Interstate Park
  • Saving the Palisades Documentary, shown at Weehawken Public Library, portrays women's role in preserving cliffs, by Jim Hague, Hudson Reporter
  • Photographs of the Palisades in all seasons, from across the Hudson River in Manhattan
  • Headstone for an Apocalypse
  • Newark Basin
  • Newark Basin coring project

palisades, hudson, river, palisades, also, called, jersey, palisades, hudson, river, palisades, line, steep, cliffs, along, west, side, lower, hudson, river, northeastern, jersey, southeastern, york, united, states, cliffs, stretch, north, from, jersey, city, . The Palisades also called the New Jersey Palisades or the Hudson River Palisades are a line of steep cliffs along the west side of the lower Hudson River in Northeastern New Jersey and Southeastern New York in the United States The cliffs stretch north from Jersey City about 20 miles 32 km to near Nyack New York and are visible at Haverstraw New York They rise nearly vertically from near the edge of the river and are about 300 feet 90 m high at Weehawken increasing gradually to 540 feet 160 m high near their northern terminus 1 North of Fort Lee the Palisades are part of Palisades Interstate Park and are a National Natural Landmark 2 The PalisadesThe cliffs of the Palisades as seen from the Ross Dock Picnic Area in Palisades Interstate ParkLocationNortheastern New Jersey Hudson and Bergen counties Downstate New York Rockland County Coordinates40 57 52 N 73 54 31 W 40 96451 N 73 90859 W 40 96451 73 90859U S National Natural LandmarkDesignated1983 Atop the Hudson Palisades in Englewood Cliffs New Jersey overlooking the Hudson River the George Washington Bridge and the skyscrapers of Midtown Manhattan New York City The Palisades are among the most dramatic geologic features in the vicinity of New York City forming a canyon of the Hudson north of the George Washington Bridge as well as providing a vista of the Manhattan skyline They sit in the Newark Basin a rift basin located mostly in New Jersey Palisade is derived from the same root as the word pole ultimately from the Latin word palus meaning stake A palisade is in general a defensive fence or wall made up of wooden stakes or tree trunks The Lenape called the cliffs rocks that look like rows of trees a phrase that became Weehawken the name of a town in New Jersey that sits at the top of the cliffs across from Midtown Manhattan Contents 1 Geology 2 History 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksGeology editMain article Palisades Sill The basalt cliffs are the margin of a diabase sill formed about 200 million years ago 3 at the close of the Triassic period by the intrusion of molten magma upward into sandstone 4 The molten material cooled and solidified before reaching the surface Water erosion of the softer sandstone left behind the columnar structure of harder rock that exists today The cliffs are about 300 ft 100 m thick in sections and originally may have reached 1 000 ft 300 m The end Triassic extinction event that coincided with the formation of the Hudson Palisades Central Atlantic magmatic province 200 million years ago ranks second in severity of the five major extinction episodes that span geologic time 4 5 The most severe extinction in the past 500 million years was the Permian Triassic extinction event informally known as the Great Dying 6 7 8 coincided with flood basalt eruptions that produced the Siberian Traps which constituted one of the largest known volcanic events on Earth and covered over 770 000 sq mi 2 000 000 km2 with lava 9 Franklyn Van Houten completed groundbreaking research on a rock formation known as the Newark Basin His discovery of a consistent geological pattern in which lake levels rose and fell is now known as the Van Houten cycle 10 11 12 13 History edit nbsp A colored postcard of the Palisades c 1898 The Palisades appear on the first European map of the New World made by Gerardus Mercator in 1541 based on the description given him by Giovanni da Verrazzano 14 who suggested they look like a fence of stakes 15 During the early stages of the American Revolution British military Commander Lord Cornwallis landed a force of between 2 500 and 5 000 at Huyler s Landing on November 20 1776 16 17 In an effort to ambush American General George Washington and crush the rebellion in the wake of the rebel s defeat in the Battle of Brooklyn and the Battle of Fort Washington Cornwallis marched his men up the steep Palisades and southward through the Northern Valley Washington stationed near Fort Lee was alerted to the ambush effort by an unknown horseback patriot remembered only as the Closter Rider and successfully fled west through Englewood and over the Hackensack River avoiding capture in what is remembered as Washington s Retreat 18 19 The Palisades were the site of 18 documented duels and probably many unrecorded ones in the years 1798 1845 The most famous is the Burr Hamilton duel between Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr which took place in a spot known as the Heights of Weehawken on July 11 1804 20 An English visitor Fanny Trollope in her 1832 book Domestic Manners of the Americans wrote of a park established at the Palisades by a Hoboken ferryboat entrepreneur at that time It is hardly possible to imagine one of greater attraction a broad belt of light underwood and flowering shrubs studded at intervals with lofty forest trees runs for two miles along a cliff which overhangs the matchless Hudson sometimes it feathers the rocks down to its very margin and at others leaves a pebbly shore just rude enough to break the gentle waves and make a music which mimics softly the loud chorus of the ocean Through this beautiful little wood a broad well gravelled terrace is led by every point which can exhibit the scenery to advantage narrower and wilder paths diverge at intervals some into the deeper shadow of the wood and some shelving gradually to the pretty coves below The price of entrance to this little Eden is the six cents you pay at the ferry 21 After the Civil War signs advertising patent medicines and other products covered the rock face in letters 20 feet 6 1 m high 22 In the 19th century the cliffs were heavily quarried for railroad ballast leading to local efforts to preserve them Beginning in the 1890s several unsuccessful efforts were made to turn much of the Highlands into a forest preserve Fearing that they would soon be put out of business quarry operators responded by working faster in March 1898 alone more than three tons of dynamite was used to bring down Washington Head and Indian Head in Fort Lee New Jersey producing several million cubic yards of traprock The following year 14 work by the New Jersey Federation of Women s Clubs led to the creation of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission headed by George W Perkins which was authorized to acquire land between Fort Lee and Piermont New York Its jurisdiction was extended to Stony Point New York in 1906 In 1908 the State of New York announced plans to move Sing Sing Prison to Bear Mountain Work was begun in the area near Highland Lake renamed Hessian Lake and in January 1909 the state purchased the 740 acre 3 0 km2 Bear Mountain tract Conservationists inspired by the work of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission lobbied successfully for the creation of the Highlands of the Hudson Forest Preserve However the prison project was continued Mary Williamson Averell whose husband Union Pacific Railroad president E H Harriman died in September of that year offered the state another 10 000 acres 40 km2 and one million dollars toward the creation of a state park nbsp Palisades as seen from West 187th Street and Chittenden Avenue in Washington Heights Manhattan George Walbridge Perkins who served as president of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission from its creation in 1900 until his death in 1920 with whom she had been working raised another 1 5 million from a dozen wealthy contributors including John D Rockefeller and J P Morgan New York State appropriated a matching 2 5 million and the state of New Jersey appropriated 500 000 to build the Henry Hudson Drive which would be succeeded by the Palisades Parkway in 1947 Ultimately the Sing Sing relocation was discontinued In the 1910s when Fort Lee was a center of film production the cliffs were frequently used as film locations The most notable of these films was The Perils of Pauline a serial which helped popularize the term cliffhanger 23 In October 1931 after four years of construction the George Washington Bridge opened between Upper Manhattan and Fort Lee On April 28 1940 the Boy Scout Foundation of Greater New York announced the donation of 723 acres by John D Rockefeller Jr to establish a weekend camp for New York City Boy Scouts 24 In June 1983 the Palisades were designated a National Natural Landmark by the National Park Service 25 On May 12 2012 a 10 000 ton rockfall just south of the state line left a 520 foot 160 m scar on the cliffs 22 The Palisades is now a part of Palisades Interstate Park a popular destination for hiking and other outdoor recreational activities that also includes Harriman Bear Mountain State Park Minnewaska State Park Preserve and several other parks and historic sites in the region On June 23 2015 officials of the South Korean conglomerate LG Group announced that their planned new North American headquarters building in Englewood Cliffs New Jersey which was originally designed to be 143 feet 44 m tall and would have broken the tree line on top of the Palisades would be reduced to 69 feet 21 m in height thus preserving the contour of the ridge The new building had been opposed by numerous conservation groups and politicians including four former governors of New Jersey 26 nbsp The Palisades with fall foliage On the left is the George Washington Bridge A controversial plan to build a high rise that would have broken the tree line was proposed and later modified by LG Electronics 26 See also editFairview Quarry Hudson River Waterfront Walkway Palisades Interstate Parkway List of National Natural Landmarks Long Path Newark Basin New York New Jersey Highlands New York New Jersey Line WarReferences edit Township of Palisade on the Bergen County website National Natural Landmarks National Natural Landmarks U S National Park Service www nps gov Retrieved April 15 2019 Year designated 1983 Tirella Tricia Spotlight on North Bergen Palisade magazine Summer 2010 Page 16 a b Brannen Peter Headstone for an Apocalypse op ed New York Times August 6 2013 Chu Jennifer Huge and widespread volcanic eruptions triggered the end Triassic extinction MIT News March 21 2013 The Great Dying MIT Insights into the Most Severe Mass Extinction in Earth s History The Daily Galaxy November 24 2013 Chandler David L Ancient whodunit may be solved The microbes did it MIT News March 31 2014 Brannen Peter July 29 2017 Opinion When Life on Earth Was Nearly Extinguished The New York Times Retrieved June 5 2018 Joel Lucas November 18 2020 Burning Fossil Fuels Helped Drive Earth s Most Massive Extinction The New York Times Structural Geology amp Tectonics Group Van Houten cycle illustration on the Rutgers University website Olsen Milankovich Cycles in Early Mesozoic Rift Basins of Eastern North America Provide Physical Stratigraphy and Time Scale for Understanding Basin Evolution from Lamont Newsletter 13 1986 pp 6 7 on the Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory website MacPherson Kita Franklyn Van Houten expert on sedimentary rocks dies at 96 News at Princeton September 14 2010 on the Princeton University website Chalker Georgette E Franklyn Bosworth Van Houten 1914 2010 Princeton University Department of Geosciences website February 10 2011 a b Cheslow Jerry If You re Thinking of Living In Alpine N J Lavish Homes in a Millionaire s Borough New York Times December 14 1997 Rounds Kate Preserving Palisades from development Commissioners also tackle road repairs hybrid car Hudson Reporter June 15 2008 On His Lordship s Mysterious Ascent Palisades Interstate Park in New Jersey www njpalisades org Retrieved November 9 2020 Historic New Bridge Landing Bergen County Historical Society Retrieved November 9 2020 Steuben House bergencountyhistory org Retrieved June 5 2018 North Jersey North Jersey Retrieved June 5 2018 Ellis Joseph J 2000 Founding Brothers The Revolutionary Generation Chapter One The Duel Alfred A Knopf New York ISBN 0 375 40544 5 Trollope Fanny Domestic Manners of the Americans Ch 30 a b O Neill James Palisades scar is proof of nature s raw power Bergen County Record July 7 2012 Verdon Joan A hike back in time to era of silent film Bergen County Record March 5 2012 Malatzky David M Origin of Alpine Scout Camp Archived January 6 2014 at the Wayback Machine 2006 on the Ten Mile River Scout Museum website National Natural Landmarks U S National Park Service www nature nps gov Retrieved June 5 2018 a b Dwyer Jim LG to Reduce Height of Headquarters Preserving Palisades Horizon The New York Times June 23 2015 LG Building Project to Proceed in New Jersey Conservation Groups and LG Reach Win Win Settlement press release Protect the Palisades website June 23 2015 Sullivan S P Former N J governors ask LG to rethink plan for high rise HQ along the Palisades NJ com June 7 2013 Sullivan S P LG supporters looking for Gov Christie s help in fight over high rise HQ on the Palisades NJ com July 3 2013 Ma Myles Opponents protest as LG celebrates start of work on Englewood Cliffs headquarters NJ com November 14 2013 Byrne Brendam T Kean Thomas H Florio James J and Whitman Christine Todd The Threat to the Palisades op ed New York Times March 24 2014 Associated Press NJ conservation groups file briefs opposing LG s planned construction on Palisades NJ com April 7 2014 Ma Myles Senate advances bill banning tall buildings along Palisades NJ com June 7 2014 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Palisades Hudson River Palisades Interstate Park Saving the Palisades Documentary shown at Weehawken Public Library portrays women s role in preserving cliffs by Jim Hague Hudson Reporter Photographs of the Palisades in all seasons from across the Hudson River in Manhattan Headstone for an Apocalypse Newark Basin Newark Basin coring project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Palisades Hudson River amp oldid 1185945360, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.