ODNR Division of Natural Areas and Preserves - Rockbridge
OHIO'S SPECIAL PLACES

HERITAGE PROGRAM

INFORMATION

Mailing Address:
2045 Morse Road,
Building F-1
Columbus, OH 43229-6693
(614) 265-6453

For general information about the Division of Natural Areas and Preserves, e-mail your questions here.

 


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Rockbridge
State Nature Preserve

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202 acres - Hocking County

Address

11475 Dalton Rd
Rockbridge, OH  43149

Lat/Long Coordinates

N39 33.982'
W082 29.960'

Special Features

- Ohio's largest natural rock bridge
- excellent spring wildflowers

Facilities

Parking area and 2.75 mile trail system

Learn more

Rockbridge's natural arch or bridge is more than 100 feet long and 10 to 20 feet wide, and gracefully arches 50 feet across a ravine. It is considered the largest natural bridge in Ohio.

Ohio is a land of diverse geological features. Among the most unusual and spectacular formations are its natural rock bridges.Ohio has at least 12 such bridges.

These bridges (or stone arches) have been found primarily in the area characterized by massive sandstone outcroppings in south central and eastern Ohio. Very few have been discovered in the limestone region of southwest Ohio although natural bridges are often associated with such weathered limestone topography.

Rockbridge Natural Bridge originated millions of years ago, when Ohio lay under a warm inland sea.

Rivers flowed into the vast body of water, carrying both fine and coarse grained sands which settled to the sea bottom. Over the centuries, the accumulating sand thickened, compressed and formed the hard sedimentary rock known as Black Hand sandstone.

Eventually, great pressure from beneath the earth's surface caused the land in eastern North America to rise, forming the Appalachian Mountains.

The inland sea soon drained away, exposing the newly uncovered rock layers to steady erosional processes. The natural bridge soon began emerging in all its grandeur.

Wind, rain and percolating groundwater worked together for centuries, carving a deep cave-like recess in the softer midportion of the Mississippian Black Hand sandstone.

Gradually, erosional forces also worked along a natural joint plane some distance behind the brink of the cliff. Over the centuries, this ongoing process has widened the crevice, and all that remains of the overhanging ledge is the narrow rock arch.

 Local directions

Located in Hocking County, 1.5 miles from Rockbridge southeast on U.S. Route 33; proceed south on Crawford-Starner Road (Township Road 504); then turn immediately east on Dalton Road (Township Road 503) and proceed .5 mile to dead end.