Furnace Mountain (Virginia)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Furnace_Mountain_(Virginia) an entity of type: Thing

Furnace Mountain is the tallest peak of Catoctin Mountain in Loudoun County, Virginia. It rises steeply from the southern banks of the Potomac River across from Point of Rocks, Maryland and continues southward for 1 mile (1.6 km), reaching an elevation of 891 feet (272 m) before falling to a gap between it and an unnamed peak of 800 feet (240 m). Its name arises from the iron furnaces located at its base, which operated from the 1790s to the 1870s. The furnaces were used to process iron ore mined from the mountain, much of which was used to build the burgeoning city of Washington D.C. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Furnace Mountain (Virginia)
rdf:langString Furnace Mountain
rdf:langString Furnace Mountain
xsd:float 39.27000045776367
xsd:float -77.55000305175781
xsd:integer 12038670
xsd:integer 1071905954
rdf:langString bottom
rdf:langString Location of Furnace Mountain in Virginia
xsd:integer 300
rdf:langString Furnace Mountain.jpg
rdf:langString Furnace Mountain as seen from Point of Rocks, Maryland, with Point of Rocks Bridge in foreground
xsd:string 39.27 -77.55
rdf:langString Furnace Mountain is the tallest peak of Catoctin Mountain in Loudoun County, Virginia. It rises steeply from the southern banks of the Potomac River across from Point of Rocks, Maryland and continues southward for 1 mile (1.6 km), reaching an elevation of 891 feet (272 m) before falling to a gap between it and an unnamed peak of 800 feet (240 m). Its name arises from the iron furnaces located at its base, which operated from the 1790s to the 1870s. The furnaces were used to process iron ore mined from the mountain, much of which was used to build the burgeoning city of Washington D.C.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 1944
<Geometry> POINT(-77.550003051758 39.270000457764)

data from the linked data cloud