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Great Smoky Mountains

The Great Smoky Mountains (Cherokee: ᎡᏆ ᏚᏧᏍᏚ ᏙᏓᎸ, Equa Dutsusdu Dodalv) are a mountain range rising along the TennesseeNorth Carolina border in the southeastern United States. They are a subrange of the Appalachian Mountains and form part of the Blue Ridge Physiographic Province. The range is sometimes called the Smoky Mountains, and the name is commonly shortened to the Smokies. The Smokies are best known as the home of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, which protects most of the range. The park was established in 1934 and, with over 11 million visits per year, is the most visited national park in the United States.[1]

For the lunar range, see Smoky Mountains (Moon).

The Smokies are part of an International Biosphere Reserve. The range is home to an estimated 187,000 acres (76,000 ha) of old-growth forest, constituting the largest such stand east of the Mississippi River.[2][3] The coves hardwood forests in the range's lower elevations are among the most diverse ecosystems in North America, and the Southern Appalachian spruce–fir forest that covers the upper elevations is the largest of its kind.[4] The Smokies are home to the densest black bear population in the Eastern United States and the most diverse salamander population outside of the tropics.[5]


Along with the biosphere reserve, the Great Smoky Mountains have been designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The U.S. National Park Service preserves and maintains 78 structures within the national park that were once part of the numerous small Appalachian communities scattered throughout the range's river valleys and coves. The park contains five historic districts and nine individual listings on the National Register of Historic Places.


The name "Smoky" comes from the natural fog that often hangs over the range and presents as large smoke plumes from a distance. This fog is caused by the vegetation emitting volatile organic compounds, chemicals that have a high vapor pressure and easily form vapors at normal temperature and pressure.[6]

The cove hardwood forests in the stream valleys, coves, and lower mountain slopes

The northern hardwood forests on the higher mountain slopes

The spruce-fir or boreal forest at the very highest elevations

List of subranges of the Appalachian Mountains

Official website

Species Mapper

—official nonprofit partner of the park, maps, guides, photos, and videos

Great Smoky Mountains Association

(NWS Morristown, TN)

National Weather Service Southern Appalachian Precipitation study

Great Smoky Mountains Institute at Tremont

Cornell University study on invasive balsam woolly adelgid control

United States Geological Survey

Geologic Map of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park Region, Tennessee and North Carolina

History and maps

—a collection of documents and early photographs regarding the Great Smokies and surrounding communities

The Great Smoky Mountains Regional Project

—sound file samples of interviews of long-time residents of the Great Smokies conducted in 1939

Southern Appalachian English: Transcripts

Smokies Road Trip, circa 1938