chumley wrote: ↑Jan 21 2021 8:49 am
*Nerd Alert*
I saw a cool infographic on a social site yesterday and it got me thinking ... what's the highest elevation that occurs on a state border?
(boarders sleep, ski, and surf
)
Check out the graphic if you want to cheat a little bit, but it doesn't actually answer the question.
I did some research and think I've got it answered, but haven't confirmed it. There are two that are very close to the same, and I haven't taken the time to scan thousands of miles of borders on a topo map.
Even worse nerd alert.
I'd like to see the details on how that map was calculated. I suspect doesn't depict the elevation exactly at the border, but some average, median, or maximum within a small distance from the border.
What gave me this idea is the NJ/PA border, which is the Delaware River, and where it intersects with the NJ/NY border, which is mostly land, except at the tri-state junction near Port Jervis. I don't think the Delaware drops so much in elevation between the northern edge and the Water Gap, and the NJ/NY border elevation takes a sudden dip at the Delaware, rather than peaking at that location.
The highest point of NJ is only a handful of miles from that point, but it's about 1400 feet up from the river at a 1804 feet, but I expect that's the elevation depicted at the border.
The actual difference in border elevation between the upper corner of NJ and the Delaware Water Gap is less than 65 feet.
ETA: The NJ/NY border starts at sea level and rises to something 1600 feet before suddenly dropping to 400 feet in the space of two miles from the three-state junction.
(Elevation of Port Jervis NY is 400 ft, Delaware Water Gap elevation is 335 feet, High Point is 1804 feet)