The Red Hills or Tallahassee Hills is a region of gently rolling hills in the southeastern United States. It is a geomorphic region and an ecoregion.

Red Hills is highlighted in RED

Location edit

The Red Hills physiographic region of northern Florida was defined in 1914 as most of Leon County north of the Cody Scarp, and small portions of southernmost Grady and Thomas counties in Georgia. The original tree cover of the region was a shortleaf pine-oak-hickory woodland with deep sandy clay soil. A wider definition of the Red Hills Region includes Jefferson County, Florida north of the Cody Scarp and the southern portions of Grady and Thomas counties in Georgia. This larger region consists of about 2,400 square kilometers (930 square miles) that is bounded by the Aucilla River on the east and northeast, by the Ochlockonee River on the west and northwest, and by the Cody Scarp on the south. The Red Hills physiographic region is part of the Tallahassee Hills/Valdosta Limesink ecoregion, which extends across northern Florida and southern Georgia from the Apalachicola River to the vicinity of Valdosta, Georgia.[1][2][3][4]

A wider Red Hills section of Florida has been defined as extending 150 miles (240 kilometers) along the Alabama and Georgia borders, including, from east to west, Madison, Jefferson, Leon, Gadsden and Jackson counties.[5]

There is a Red Hills Physiographic Province in south central Alabama.[6]

History edit

The area was first settled by Paleo-Indians in and around the various lakes in the southern part of the Red Hills. The Apalachee were found here in the 16th century, and were almost annihilated through wars, disease, and slavery. In the 18th century, the Seminoles made the Red Hills their home until the early 19th century and the Seminole Wars.

Also in the 19th century, white settlers began cotton plantations, which thrived until the Civil War. At one time, Leon County, Florida, was the 5th largest producer of cotton among all counties in Georgia and Florida. After the Civil War, many of the Red Hills' plantations became winter homes and quail hunting plantations for wealthy northerners; the area between Thomasville and Tallahassee is still home to dozens of such plantations, such as Greenwood, Pebble Hill, and Goodwood.

Geography edit

Rolling hills, ravines and gullies covered by forests and the large lakes of Lake Jackson, Lake Iamonia, Lake Miccosukee, Lake Lafayette, and Lake Talquin. The highest point in the Red Hills is 280 feet (85 meters) north of Tallahassee by 10 miles (16 kilometers). The soil is red clay deposited during the last ice age from the Appalachian Mountains. Rivers running through the Red Hills Region are the Aucilla River, Ochlockonee River, and Telogia Creek. The St. Marks River is subterranean until it meets the surface in the Woodville Karst Plain.

Flora and Fauna edit

Trees edit

The area is covered in a number of native species. There are a variety of oak including southern live oak, water oak, laurel oak, white oak, overcup oak, post oak, black oak[7] as well as other hardwood trees such as American sweetgum, a variety of magnolia, as well as hickory, flowering dogwood, red maple, and redbud. Conifers are also abundant, including shortleaf pine, and loblolly pine. The Red Hills are home to some of the last remnants of the great longleaf pine forests remaining in the nation.[citation needed]

Animal life edit

The Red Hills Region supports the northern bobwhite quail, white-tailed deer, red fox, raccoon, eastern gray squirrel, nine-banded armadillo, black bear, migratory bird, federally endangered red-cockaded woodpecker, gopher tortoise, eastern diamondback rattlesnake, eastern tiger salamander, and many other animals and plants.[8]

Features edit

The Red Hills Region serves as one of the highest recharge areas for the Floridan aquifer — which is 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."

Parks and Natural Areas edit

Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park

Lake Jackson Mounds Archaelogical State Park

Elinor Klapp-Phipps Park

Namesake Event edit

Each spring, the equestrian community meets for the Red Hills Horse Trials, an Olympics qualifying event held at Elinor Klapp-Phipps Park.

References edit

  1. ^ Clewell, Andre F. (December 2013). "Prior Prevalence of Shortleaf Pine-Oak-Hickory in the Tallahassee Red Hills". Castanea. 78: 267. doi:10.2179/13-022. JSTOR 24619718. S2CID 31028878.
  2. ^ Cox, James A.; Baker, W. Wilson; Engstrom, R. Todd (Winter 2001). "Red-cockaded woodpeckers in the Red Hills region: a GIS-based assessment". Wildlife Society Bulletin. 29 (4): 1279. JSTOR 3784154.
  3. ^ "Geomorphic tour: The shape of the region". Florida Natural Areas Inventory. Retrieved 9 April 2022.
  4. ^ Griffith, G. E., J. M. Omernik, J. A. Comstock, S. Lawrence, T. foster. "Level III and IV Ecoregions of Georgia" (PDF). Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 February 2017. Retrieved 1 June 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Paisley, Clifton (1989). The Red Hills of Florida (1528–1865). Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press. ISBN 978-0-8173-0412-6.
  6. ^ Dodd, C. Kenneth Jr. (1991). "The status of the Red Hills salamander Phaeognathus hubrichti, Alabama, USA, 1976–1988". Biological Conservation. 55: 57–75. doi:10.1016/0006-3207(91)90005-T – via Science Direct.
  7. ^ Arny, Nancy P. (June 1996). "Common Oaks of Florida" (PDF). University of Florida. Retrieved 2 May 2014.
  8. ^ Oxford Journals: Stand structures on quail plantations