Hoosier Hill
Hoosier Hill sits on private property owned by Kim E. Goble. The high point sits in a forested area surrounded by farmland. In 2005, an Eagle Scout candidate named Kyle Cummings (Troop 820 from Lakeside Park, Kentucky), in cooperation with the property owner, built a trail, sign and picnic area at the high point.
Geologically, the hill sits in the Dearborn Upland, an area of high terrain in southeast Indiana that sits on top of the geologic structure known as the Cincinnati Arch. However, Hoosier Hill is located in a portion of the upland buried underneath glacial debris known as the Tipton Till Plain. As a result, while the average elevation of this upland region is 1100±100 feet above sea level, the topographic relief is gentle where the "hill" is no more than 30 feet higher than the surrounding landscape of gently rolling farmland. While the high topography seen at Brown County State Park, which sits in the Norman Upland in south central Indiana, can be mistaken to be a high point (where relief is 400–500 feet from valley to hilltop), the elevations of hilltops ranges from 800 to 1050 feet.
A.H. Marshall was the first person to successfully climb each U.S. state highpoint. He completed the task in 1936 after standing atop Hoosier Hill.
According to the local government, the wooden sign with the words, "INDIANA'S HIGHEST POINT" would frequently be stolen, so in 2016 the wooden sign was permanently replaced by an engraved boulder.
See also
- Outline of Indiana
- Index of Indiana-related articles
- List of U.S. states by elevation
- Sand Hill, Indiana's second highest named point
- Weed Patch Hill, Indiana's third highest named point
References
- ^ SRTM
- ^ "Hoosier Hill, Indiana". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 2008-12-17.
- ^ "Pinnacle of Indiana in Wayne County". WayNet. Retrieved 2 June 2014.
- ^ "Kyle Cummings Eagle Project Transforms Indiana's Hoosier Hill". HighPointers.org. Archived from the original on 2010-11-02. Retrieved 2008-12-17.
- ^ "First to climb 48 state high points, Arthur H. Marshall blazed a path that few choose to follow". Oregon Live. Retrieved 2014-02-15.
- ^ "Example of stolen/replaced sign".
External links
- "Landscapes of Indiana". Indiana Geological Survey. Retrieved 2009-02-17.