At 729 feet tall, Amicalola Falls is the tallest cascading waterfall in the Southeastern United States and the tallest waterfall in Georgia.
Today Georgia is known to have seven natural wonders. These include Amicalola Falls State Park, Okefenokee Swamp, Providence Canyon, Radium Springs, Stone Mountain, Tallulah Gorge, and Warm Springs. There was an earlier list from 1926 that replaced Providence Canyon and Radium Springs with Jekyll Island Forest and the Marble vein in Longswamp Valley.
Animals- Black bear, grouse, songbirds, salamanders, rainbow trout, brown trout, eels, milk snakes, woodpeckers, deers, birds, and tadpoles
There are many landforms in Georgia. Each has a designation of constructive or destructive. Some of these are:The Okeefenokee Swamp - (Destructive)The Amicoloa Falls - (Constructive)Graves Mtn. - (Constructive)Soapstone Rdg - (Constructive and Destructive)There are some which I don't know if they are constructive or destructive, but they are the following locations:Stone Mtn.Providence CanyonFall LineGA's Barrier IslandBeachesCumberland PlateauBlue Ridge MountainsEmerson FaultAppalachian MountainsSand MountainsPine MountainsBrasstown BaldLookout MountainsChattahoochee RiverTallulah FallsLime SinksAltmaha River SystemCohutta Mtns.Brevard Fault ZoneTrail RidgeGeorgia's coastal plain
Water falls are important because they purify water. Without purified water animals could die.
Shoshone Falls
in georgia
Amicalola Falls are the highest waterfall in Georgia. Amicalola Falls is the highest waterfall east of the Mississippi, and at 729 feet is considered one of the 7 wonders of the world.
It's east of Jasper, Georgia and northeast of Atlanta, Georgia.
The area of Amicalola Falls State Park is 3.35 square kilometers.
yes
Amicalola Falls used to have the Cherokee Indians living there until they were forced to move out in 1838. (Trail of Tears)
By a Constructive Force like the techtonic plates combining and forming a new mountain and water running through it
yes
dawson county
1911....your welcome!!
In the Piedmont Region :)
Constructive. It places down minerals on the cliff as it falls.