Trout Brook Stone Bridge Creek | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | United States |
State | New York |
Region | Capital District |
County | Warren |
Town | Schroon Lake |
Physical characteristics | |
Mouth | Schroon River |
• location | Town of Chester |
• coordinates | 43°51′09″N 73°51′00″W / 43.8524570°N 73.8499260°W |
• elevation | 801[1] ft (244 m) |
Length | 15.7 miles (25.3 km) |
Basin size | 90 square miles (230 km2)[2] |
Basin features | |
Progression | Trout Brook → Schroon River → Hudson River → Atlantic Ocean |
Trout Brook, known in older sources as Stone Bridge Creek, is a river that is located in Warren County, New York. The river, located in the eastern Adirondack Mountains, is a third-order tributary which flows 15.7 miles (25.3 km) southeast into the Schroon River, just south of Schroon Lake.[1] The river has three branches, and is stocked with 1,300 yearling brook trout by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.[3]
The river is most notable for running through the Natural Stone Bridge and Caves, a series of marble solutional caves which was formed by the river over the course of 14,000 years.[4] The river briefly becomes a subterranean river around the caves, resurfacing after 200 metres (660 ft) underground.[2]