The
Niagara Falls are voluminous waterfalls on the Niagara River
, straddling the international border
between the Canadian
province of Ontario
and the
U.S. state of New York
.
The falls
are 17 miles (27 km) north-northwest of Buffalo, New
York
and 75 miles (120 km) south-southeast of
Toronto, Ontario
, between the twin cities of Niagara Falls,
Ontario
, and Niagara Falls, New York
.
Niagara
Falls is composed of two major sections separated by Goat
Island
: Horseshoe
Falls
, the majority of which lies on the Canadian side of
the border, and American
Falls
on the American side. The smaller Bridal Veil
Falls
are also located on the American side, separated
from the main falls by Luna Island
.
Niagara
Falls were formed when glaciers receded at the end of the Wisconsin glaciation (the last ice age), and water from the newly-formed Great Lakes
carved a path through the Niagara Escarpment en route to the
Atlantic Ocean. While not exceptionally high, the Niagara
Falls are very wide. More than six million cubic feet (168,000 m³)
of water falls over the crest line every minute in high flow, and
almost 4 million cubic feet (110,000 m³) on average. It is the
most powerful waterfall in North America.
The Niagara Falls are renowned both for their beauty and as a
valuable source of
hydroelectric
power. Managing the balance between recreational, commercial,
and industrial uses has been a challenge for the stewards of the
falls since the 1800s.
Characteristics
Niagara
Falls is divided into the Horseshoe Falls
and the American Falls
. The Horseshoe Falls drop about , the height
of the American Falls varies between because of the presence of
giant boulders at its base. The larger Horseshoe Falls are about
wide, while the American Falls are wide.
The volume of water approaching the falls during peak flow season
may sometimes be as much as per second.
Since the flow is a
direct function of the Lake
Erie
water elevation, it typically peaks in late spring
or early summer. During the summer months, per second of
water actually traverses the Falls, some 90% of which goes over the
Horseshoe Falls, while the balance is diverted to hydroelectric
facilities. This is accomplished by employing a
weir with movable gates upstream from the Horseshoe
Falls. The Falls flow is further halved at night, and during the
low tourist season in the winter, remains a flat per second. Water
diversion is regulated by the 1950 Niagara Treaty and is
administered by the International Niagara Board of Control
(IJC).Viewpoints on the American shore generally are astride or
behind the falls. The falls face directly toward the Canadian
shore.
Geology
The features that became Niagara Falls were created by the
Wisconsin glaciation, about 10,000
years ago.
The same forces also created the North
American Great Lakes
and the Niagara River. All were dug by a
continental
ice sheet that drove through the
area, deepening some river channels to form lakes, and damming
others with debris.
Scientists believe that there is an old
valley, buried by glacial drift, at
the approximate location of the present Welland Canal
.
When the ice melted, the upper Great Lakes emptied into the Niagara
River, which followed the rearranged topography across the
Niagara Escarpment. In time, the river
cut a gorge through the north facing cliff, or
cuesta. Because of the interactions of three major
rock formations, the rocky bed did not erode evenly. The top rock
formation was composed of erosion-resistant
limestone and Lockport
dolostone. That hard layer of stone eroded more
slowly than the underlying materials. The aerial photo clearly
shows the hard caprock, the Lockport Formation (Middle
Silurian), which underlies the rapids above the
Falls, and approximately the upper third of the high gorge
wall.

Aerial view of Niagara Falls, showing
parts of Canada and the United States
Immediately below the hard-rock formation, comprising about two
thirds of the cliff, lay the weaker, softer, sloping Rochester
Formation (Lower Silurian). This formation was composed mainly of
shale, though it has some thin limestone
layers. It also contains ancient
fossils. In
time, the river eroded the soft layer that supported the hard
layers, undercutting the hard caprock, which gave way in great
chunks. This process repeated countless times, eventually carving
out the Falls.
Submerged in the river in the lower valley, hidden from view, is
the Queenston Formation (Upper
Ordovician), which is composed of shales and fine
sandstones. All three formations were laid
down in an ancient sea, their differences of character deriving
from changing conditions within that sea.
The
Niagara Falls at one time in history was located between
present-day Queenston, Ontario
, and Lewiston, New York
, but erosion of their crest
has caused the waterfalls to retreat approximately 6.8 miles or 11
kilometers southward. The Horseshoe Falls, which are
approximately wide, have also changed their shape through the
process of erosion; evolving from a small arch, to a horseshoe
bend, to the present day gigantic inverted V.
Just upstream from
the Falls' current location, Goat Island
splits the course of the Niagara River, resulting
in the separation of the Canadian Horseshoe Falls to the west from
the American and Bridal Veil Falls to the east. Engineering
has slowed erosion and recession.
History

1837 woodcut of Falls, from
États
Unis d'Amérique by Roux de Rochelle.
There are differing theories as to the origin of the name of the
falls. According to Iroquoian scholar
Bruce Trigger, "Niagara" is derived from the
name given to a branch of the locally residing native
Neutral Confederacy, who are described as
being called the "Niagagarega" people on several late 17th century
French maps of the area.
A number of figures have been suggested as first circulating an
eyewitness description of Niagara Falls. Frenchman
Samuel de Champlain visited the area as
early as 1604 during his exploration of Canada, and members of his
party reported to him the spectacular waterfalls, which he
described in his journals. Finnish-Swedish naturalist
Pehr Kalm explored the area in the early 1700s and
wrote of the experience. The consensus honoree is Belgian Father
Louis Hennepin, who observed and
described the Falls in 1677, earlier than Kalm, after traveling
with explorer
René Robert
Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle, thus bringing the Falls to the
attention of Europeans. Further complicating matters, there is
credible evidence that French Jesuit Reverend
Paul Ragueneau visited the Falls some 35
years before Hennepin's visit, while working among the
Huron First Nation in Canada.
Jean de Brébeuf also may have visited
the Falls, while spending time with the
Neutral Nation.

Man and woman on Canadian side of
Niagara Falls, circa 1858
During the 18th century, tourism became popular, and by
mid-century, it was the area's main industry.
Napoleon Bonaparte's brother
Jérôme visited with his bride in the early
19th century. In 1837 during the
Caroline affair a rebel supply ship, the
Caroline, was burned and sent over the Falls. Demand for
passage over the Niagara River led in 1848 to the building of a
footbridge and then
Charles
Ellet's Niagara Suspension Bridge. This was supplanted by
German-born
John Augustus
Roebling's
Niagara
Falls Suspension Bridge in 1855. After the
American Civil War, the
New York Central railroad publicized
Niagara Falls as a focus of pleasure and honeymoon visits. With
increased railroad traffic, in 1886, Leffert Buck replaced
Roebling's wood and stone bridge with the predominantly steel
bridge that still carries trains over the Niagara River today. The
first steel archway bridge near the Falls was completed in 1897.
Known
today as the Whirlpool Rapids Bridge
, it carries vehicles, trains, and pedestrians
between Canada (through Canadian Customs Border Control) and the
U.S.A. just below the Falls. In 1941 the Niagara Falls Bridge
Commission completed the third current crossing in the immediate
area of Niagara Falls with the Rainbow
Bridge
, carrying both pedestrian and vehicular traffic
between the two countries and Canadian and U.S. customs for each
country.
After the
First World War, tourism
boomed again as automobiles made getting to the Falls much easier.
The story of Niagara Falls in the 20th century is largely that of
efforts to harness the energy of the Falls for
hydroelectric power, and to control the
development on both sides that threaten the area's natural
beauty.
Impact on industry and commerce
Power
The enormous energy of Niagara Falls has long been recognized as a
potential source of power. The first known effort to harness the
waters was in 1759, when Daniel Joncaire built a small canal above
the Falls to power his sawmill. Augustus and Peter Porter purchased
this area and all of American Falls in 1805 from the New York state
government, and enlarged the original canal to provide hydraulic
power for their gristmill and tannery. In 1853, the Niagara Falls
Hydraulic Power and Mining Company was chartered, which eventually
constructed the canals which would be used to generate electricity.
In 1881,
under the leadership of Jacob Schoellkopf, Niagara River
's first hydroelectric
generating station was built. The water fell and generated
direct current electricity, which ran
the machinery of local
mills and lit up
some of the village streets.
When
Nikola Tesla, for whom a memorial
was later built at Niagara Falls, NY (USA), invented the
three-phase system of
alternating current power transmission,
distant transfer of electricity became possible. In 1883, the
Niagara Falls Power Company, a descendant of Schoellkopf's firm,
hired
George Westinghouse to
design a system to generate alternating current. The world's first
AC power generating and transmission plant was built at Ames, below
Telluride, Colorado, by Westinghouse, Tesla and L.L. Nunn and
proved effective by transmitting AC two miles at a loss of less
than 5%. Four years later, by 1896, with financing from moguls like
J.P. Morgan, John Jacob Astor IV, and the Vanderbilts, they had constructed giant
underground conduits leading to turbines generating upwards of ,
and were sending power as far as Buffalo
, away. The original designs for the power
generating and transmission plants were created by the Swiss firm
Faesch & Piccard. Private companies on the Canadian side also
began to harness the energy of the Falls.
The Government of the
province of Ontario
, Canada
eventually brought power transmission operations under public
control in 1906, distributing Niagara's energy to various parts of
the Canadian province.
Other hydropower plants were also being built along the Niagara
River. But in 1956, disaster struck when the region's largest
hydropower station was partially destroyed in a landslide. The
landslide drastically reduced power
production and tens of thousands of
manufacturing jobs were at stake. In
1957,
Congress passed the
Niagara Redevelopment Act, which granted the
New York Power Authority the right
to fully develop the United States' share of the Niagara River's
hydroelectric potential.
In 1961, when the Niagara Falls hydroelectric project first went on
line, it was the largest hydropower facility in the Western world.
Today, Niagara is still the largest electricity producer in New
York State, with a generating capacity of 2.4 gigawatts (million
kilowatts).
Up to of water a second
is diverted from the Niagara River through conduits under the City
of Niagara Falls to the Lewiston and Robert
Moses
power plants. Currently between 50% and 75%
of the Niagara River's flow is diverted via four huge tunnels that
arise far upstream from the waterfalls. The water then passes
through
hydroelectric turbines that
supply power to nearby areas of the Canada and the USA before
returning to the river well past the Falls. This water spins
turbines that power generators, converting
mechanical energy into
electrical energy. When electricity demand is
low, the Lewiston units can operate as pumps, to transporting water
from the lower bay back up to the plant's
reservoir allowing this water to be used again
during the daytime, when electricity use peaks. During peak
electrical demand, the same Lewiston pumps are reversed and
actually become generators, similar to those at the Moses
plant.
During
tourist season, water usage by the power plant is limited by a
treaty signed by the U.S. and Canada
in 1950 in
order to preserve this natural attraction. On average the
Niagara
river
contains of water per second, half of which must
flow over the falls during daylight hours from April through
October. During other times the power plant may use up to
three fourths of the total available water.
During winter the
Power Authority of New York works with Ontario
Power
Generation, to prevent ice on the Niagara River from interfering
with power production and causing the flooding of shoreline
property. One of their joint efforts is an –long ice boom,
which prevents the buildup of ice, yet allows water to continue
flowing downstream.
The most
powerful hydroelectric stations on the Niagara River are Sir Adam Beck 1 and 2
on the Canadian side, and the Robert Moses
Niagara Power Plant
and the Lewiston Pump Generating Plant on the
American side. All together, Niagara's generating stations
can produce about 4.4
GW of power. Edward
Dean Adams is the engineer credited with designing the
system.
In August 2005
Ontario Power
Generation, which is responsible for the Sir Adam Beck
stations, announced plans to build a new tunnel to tap water from
farther up the Niagara river than is possible with the existing
arrangement. The project is expected to be completed in 2009, and
will increase Sir Adam Beck's output by about 182 MW (4.2%).
Transport
Ships can bypass Niagara Falls by means of the Welland Canal
, which was improved and incorporated into the
Saint Lawrence Seaway in the
middle 1950s. While the seaway diverted water traffic from
nearby Buffalo
and led to the demise of its steel and grain mills,
other industries in the Niagara River valley flourished with the
help of the electric power produced by the river. However,
since the 1970s the region has declined economically.
The
cities of Niagara Falls, Ontario
, Canada and
Niagara Falls, New York, USA are connected by three bridges: the
Rainbow
Bridge
, just downriver from the Falls, which affords the
closest view of the Falls and is open to non-commercial vehicle
traffic and pedestrians; the Whirlpool Rapids Bridge
, one mile (1.5 km) down from the Rainbow
bridge and the oldest bridge over the Niagara river. The
newest bridge, the Lewiston-Queenston Bridge, is located near the
escarpment.
Nearby Niagara Falls International Airport
and Buffalo Niagara International
Airport
were named after the waterfall, as were Niagara
University
, countless local businesses, and even an
asteroid.
Preservation efforts
Niagara Falls has long been a source of inspiration for explorers,
travelers, artists, authors, filmmakers, residents and visitors,
few of whom realize that the falls were nearly to be solely devoted
to industrial and commercial use. In the 1870s, sightseers had
limited access to Niagara Falls and often had to pay merely for a
glimpse, and industrialization threatened to carve up Goat Island
in an effort to further expand commercial development. Other
industrial encroachments and lack of public access led to a
conservation movement in the U.S. known as
Free Niagara,
led by such notables as Hudson River school artist
Frederic Edwin Church, landscape
designer
Frederick Law
Olmsted, and architect
Henry
Hobson Richardson. Mr Church approached
Lord Dufferin, governor-general of Canada,
with a proposal for international discussions on the establishment
of a public park.
Goat Island was one of the inspirations for the American side of
the effort.
William Dorsheimer,
moved by the scene from the island, brought Olmsted to Buffalo in
1868 to design a city park system and helped promote Olmstead's
career. Later, in 1879, the New York state legislature commissioned
Olmsted and James T. Gardner to survey the falls and to create the
single most important document in the Niagara preservation
movement, a Special Report on the preservation of Niagara Falls.
The report advocated for State purchase, restoration and
preservation through public ownership of the scenic lands
surrounding Niagara Falls. Restoring the former beauty of the falls
was described in the report as a "sacred obligation to mankind." In
1883, Governor
Grover Cleveland
drafted legislation authorizing acquisition of lands for a state
reservation at Niagara and
The Niagara Falls Association,
a private citizens group founded in 1882, mounted a great letter
writing campaign and petition drive in support of the park.
Professor
Charles Eliot Norton
and Olmsted were among the leaders of the public campaign, while
New York Governor
Alonzo Cornell
opposed.
Preservationists' efforts were rewarded on April 30, 1885, when
Governor
David B. Hill signed legislation creating the Niagara
Reservation, New York's first state park.
New York State began
to purchase land from developers, under the charter of the Niagara
Reservation State Park
. In the same year, the province of Ontario
established the Queen Victoria Niagara Falls Park for the same
purpose. On the Canadian side, the
Niagara Parks Commission governs
land usage along the entire course of the Niagara River, from Lake
Erie to Lake Ontario.
In 1887, Olmsted and
Calvert Vaux
issued a supplemental report detailing plans to restore the falls.
Their intent was "to restore and conserve the natural surroundings
of the Falls of Niagara, rather than to attempt to add anything
thereto", and the report anticipated fundamental questions. How
would preservationists provide access without destroying the beauty
of the falls? How would they restore natural landscapes damaged by
man? They planned a park with scenic roadways, paths and a few
shelters designed to protect the landscape while allowing large
numbers of visitors to enjoy the falls. Commemorative statues,
shops, restaurants, and a 1959 glass and metal observation tower
were added later. Preservationists continue to strive to strike a
balance between Olmsted's idyllic vision, and the realities of
administering a popular scenic attraction.
Preservation efforts continued well into the 20th century. J.
Horace McFarland, the
Sierra Club, and
the
Appalachian Mountain
Club persuaded the
United
States Congress in 1906 to enact legislation to preserve the
Falls by regulating the waters of Niagara River. The act sought, in
cooperation with the Canadian government, to restrict diversion of
water, and a treaty resulted in 1909 that limited the total amount
of water diverted from the Falls by both nations to approximately
56,000 cubic feet (1,600 m³) per second. That limitation
remained in effect until 1950.

American Falls "shut off" during
erosion control efforts in 1969 (see text)
Erosion control efforts have always been of extreme importance.
Underwater
weirs redirect the most damaging
currents, and the top of the falls have also been strengthened. In
June 1969, the Niagara River was completely diverted away from the
American Falls for several months through construction of a
temporary rock and earth dam (clearly visible in the photo at
left). While the Horseshoe Falls absorbed the extra flow, the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers studied
the riverbed and mechanically bolted and strengthened any faults
they found; faults which would, if left untreated, have hastened
the retreat of the American Falls. A plan to remove the huge mound
of
talus deposited in 1954 was abandoned owing
to cost, and in November 1969, the temporary dam was
dynamited, restoring flow to the American Falls.
Even
after these undertakings, Luna Island
, the small piece of land between the main waterfall
and the Bridal Veil, remained off limits to the public for years
owing to fears that it was unstable and could collapse into the
gorge at any time.
Commercial interests have prevailed on the land surrounding the
state park, however, with the recent construction of several tall
buildings (most of them hotels) on the Canadian side. The result is
a remarkable alteration and urbanisation of the landscape. It has
also caused the airflow over the Falls to change direction. The
result is that the viewing areas on the Canadian side are now often
obscured by a layer of mist.
In entertainment and popular culture
Over The Falls

Blondin carrying his manager, Harry
Colcord, on a tightrope
In October 1829,
Sam Patch, who called
himself
"the Yankee Leapster", jumped from a high tower
into the gorge below the falls and survived; this began a long
tradition of
daredevils trying to go
over the Falls.
On October 24, 1901, 63-year-old Michigan
school teacher Annie
Edson Taylor was the first person to go over the Falls in a
barrel as a publicity stunt; she
survived, bleeding, but virtually unharmed. Soon after
exiting the barrel, she said, "No one should ever try that again."
Previous to Taylor's own attempt, on October 19 a domestic cat
named Iagara was sent over the Horseshoe Falls in her barrel to
test its strength. Contrary to rumours at the time, the cat
survived the plunge unharmed and later was posed with Taylor in
photographs. Since Taylor's historic ride, 14 other people have
intentionally gone over the Falls in or on a device, despite her
advice. Some have survived unharmed, but others have drowned or
been severely injured. Survivors of such stunts face charges and
stiff fines, as it is illegal, on both sides of the border, to
attempt to go over the Falls.
In 1918,
there was a near disaster when a barge, known locally as the
Niagara
Scow
, working up-river broke its tow, and almost plunged
over the falls. Fortunately, the two workers on board saved
their own lives by grounding the vessel on rocks just short of the
falls.
Other daredevils have made
crossing the Falls their goal,
starting with the successful passage by
Jean
François "Blondin" Gravelet in 1859. These
tightrope walkers drew huge crowds to
witness their exploits. Their wires ran across the gorge, near the
current Rainbow Bridge, not over the waterfall itself. Among the
many was Ontario's William Hunt, who billed himself as "Signor
Fanini" and competed with Blondin in performing outrageous stunts
over the gorge.
Englishman Captain
Matthew Webb, the first man to swim the English
Channel
, drowned in 1883 after unsuccessfully trying to
swim the rapids down river from the Falls.
In the "Miracle at Niagara", Roger Woodward, a seven-year-old
American boy, was swept over the Horseshoe Falls protected only by
a life vest on July 9, 1960, as two tourists pulled his 17-year-old
sister Deanne from the river only 20 feet (6 m) from the lip
of the Horseshoe Falls at Goat Island. Minutes later, Woodward was
plucked from the roiling plunge pool beneath the Horseshoe Falls
after grabbing a life ring thrown to him by the crew of the
Maid of the Mist boat.
On July
2, 1984, Canadian Karel Soucek from
Hamilton,
Ontario
successfully plunged over the Horseshoe Falls in a
barrel with only minor injuries. Soucek was fined $500 for
performing the stunt without a license.
In 1985, he was
fatally injured while attempting to re-create the Niagara drop at
the Houston
Astrodome
. His aim was to climb into a barrel hoisted
to the rafters of the Astrodome and to drop into a water tank on
the floor. After his barrel released prematurely, it hit the side
of the tank and he died the next day from his injuries.
In August 1985,
Steve Trotter, an
aspiring stunt man from Rhode Island, became the youngest person
ever (age 22) and the first American in 25 years to go over the
Falls in a barrel. Ten years later, Trotter went over the Falls
again, becoming the second person to go over the Falls twice and
survive. It was also the second-ever "duo"; Lori Martin joined
Trotter for the barrel ride over the Falls. They survived the fall
but their barrel became stuck at the bottom of the falls, requiring
a rescue.
On September 28, 1989 Niagara's own Peter DeBernardi (42) and
JefferyJames Petkovich (25) became the first "team" to successfully
make it over the falls in a two person barrel. The stunt was
conceived by Peter DeBenardi, who wanted to discourage the youth of
the time from following in his path of addictive drug use. Peter
was also trying to leave a
legacy and
discourage his son Kyle Lahey DeBernardi (2) from using addictive
drugs. Peter DeBernardi had initially expected
to have a different passenger, however Peter's original partner
backed out and Peter was forced to look for an alternative, and
Jeffery Petkovich agreed to the stunt. Peter claims he spent an
estimated $30,000 making his barrel including; harness's
steel and
fiberglass
construction with steel bands and viewing ports. Peter's Barrel
also included a radio for music and news reports, rudders to help
steer the barrel through the falls,
oxygen,
and a well protected video camera to record the journey over the
edge. They emerged shortly after going over with minor injuries and
were charged with performing an illegal
stunt
under the Niagara Parks Act.

Niagara Falls at night
On September 27, 1993 John "David" Munday, of Caistor Centre,
Ontario, became the first person to survive going over the falls
twice.
Kirk
Jones of Canton,
Michigan
became the first known person to survive a plunge
over the Horseshoe Falls without a flotation device on October 20,
2003. While it is still not known whether Jones was
determined to commit suicide, he survived the 16-story fall with
only battered ribs, scrapes, and bruises.
A second person survived an unprotected trip over the Horseshoe
Falls on March 11, 2009 and when rescued from the river, was
reported to be suffering from severe hypothermia and a large wound
to his head. His identity has not been released. Eyewitnesses
reported seeing the man intentionally enter the water.
A newspaper account in the late 19
th century does cite a
bulldog believed to have successfully, though accidentally, endured
the passage.
Movies and television
Already a huge tourist attraction and favorite spot for
honeymooners, Niagara Falls visits rose sharply in 1953 after the
release of
Niagara, a
movie starring
Marilyn Monroe and
Joseph Cotten. Later in the 20th
century, the Falls was a featured location in 1980s movie
Superman II, and was itself the
subject of a popular
IMAX movie,
Niagara: Miracles, Myths and
Magic. Much of the episode
Return of the Technodrome in
the
1987
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon series take place near the
Niagara Falls and its hydroelectric plant.
Illusionist David Copperfield performed
a trick in which he appeared to travel over the Horseshoe
Falls
in 1990. The Falls, or more particularly,
the tourist-supported complex near the Falls, was the setting of
the short-lived Canadian television show
Wonderfalls in early 2004. More recently,
location footage of the Falls was shot in October 2006 to portray
"World's End" of the movie
Pirates of the
Caribbean: At World's End.
The fourth episode of the sixth season of the
NBC comedy
The Office, Niagara, took place here in celebration
of a wedding between two of the characters on the show.
Literature
The
Niagara Falls area features as the base camp for a German
aerial
invasion of the United States in the H. G. Wells novel
The
War in the Air.
Tourism
Peak numbers of visitors occur in the summertime, when Niagara
Falls are both a daytime and evening attraction. From the Canadian
side, floodlights illuminate both sides of the Falls for several
hours after dark (until midnight). The number of visitors in 2008
is expected to total 20 million and by 2009, the annual rate is
expected to top 28 million tourists a year. The oldest and best
known tourist attraction at Niagara Falls is the
Maid of the Mist boat cruise, named
for an ancient Ongiara Indian mythical character, which has carried
passengers into the rapids immediately below the Falls since 1846.
Cruise boats operate from boat docks on both sides of the
falls.
American side
From the U.S. side, the American Falls can be viewed from walkways
along Prospect Point Park, which also features the
Prospect Point Park
observation tower and a boat dock for the
Maid of the
Mist.
Goat Island
offers more views of the falls and is accessible by
foot and automobile traffic by bridge above the American
Falls. From Goat Island, the Cave of the
Winds
is accessible by elevator
and leads hikers to a point beneath Bridal Veil
Falls
. Also on Goat Island are the Three Sisters
Islands, the Power Portal where a huge statue of Nikola Tesla can
be seen, and a walking path which enables views of the rapids, the
Niagara River, the gorge, and all of the Falls.
Most of these
attractions lie within the Niagara Falls State Park
.
The Niagara Scenic Trolley offers guided trips along the American
Falls and around Goat Island. Panoramic and aerial views of the
falls can also be viewed from the Flight of Angels helium balloon
ride, or by helicopter. The Niagara Gorge Discovery Center
showcases the natural and local history of Niagara Falls and the
Niagara Gorge. A casino and luxury hotel was opened in Niagara
Falls, New York, by the Seneca Indian tribe. The
Seneca Niagara Casino occupies the
former Niagara Falls Convention Center.
The new hotel is the
first addition to the city's skyline since completion of the
United
Office Building
in the
twenties.Image:Niagara_falls_at_Night.jpg|American Falls
From USA SideImage:Maid_Of_Mist_Tour.jpg|Maid Of the Mist
TourImage:Cave_Of_the_Winds_Niagara.jpg|Cave Of the Winds
TourImage:Cave of the Winds at Niagara Falls IMG_1366.JPG|The
turbulent Cave of the Winds creates conditions similar to a
hurricaneImage:Aquarium at Niagara Falls
IMG_1390.JPG|Niagara Falls State Park maintains a small
aquarium.Image:Niagara Center at Niagara Falls, NY
IMG_1325.JPG|Niagara Center with aerial view from the top
floorImage:Trolley service at Niagara Falls IMG_1407.JPG|Trolley
service is offered throughout Niagara Falls State
Park.Image:American_and_Bridal_Falls.jpg|The American Side of the
Falls and Bridal Veil Falls taken from the Canadian side.
Canadian side

The Canadian Horseshoe falls is better
viewed from the Canadian side.
On the Canadian side, Queen Victoria Park features manicured
gardens, platforms offering spectacular views of both the American
and Horseshoe Falls, and underground walkways leading into
observation rooms which yield the illusion of being within the
falling waters.
The observation deck of the nearby Skylon Tower
offers the highest overhead view of the Falls, and
in the opposite direction gives views as far as distant Toronto
.
Along
with the Minolta
Tower
(formerly the Seagrams Tower, currently the Konica
Minolta Tower), it is one of two towers in Canada with a view of
the Falls.Let's Go Travel Guide, 2004
Along the
Niagara River, the Niagara River Recreational Trail runs the 35
miles (56 km) from Fort
Erie
to Fort George
, and includes many historical sites from the
War of 1812.
The
Whirlpool
Aero Car
, built in 1916 from a design by Spanish engineer
Leonardo Torres y Quevedo,
is a cable car which takes passengers
over the whirlpool on the Canadian side. The Journey
Behind the Falls
- accessible by elevators from the street
level entrance - consists of an observation platform and series of
tunnels near the bottom of the Horseshoe Falls on the Canadian
side.
There are
two casinos on the Canadian side of Niagara
Falls, the Niagara Fallsview Casino
Resort
and Casino Niagara
. The former is situated in the Fallsview Tourist Area, alongside
many of the area's hotels, whilst the latter is adjacent to
Clifton
Hill
, on Falls Avenue, a major
tourist promenade.
Image:American_and_Bridal_with_a_full_moon.jpg|American and Bridal
Falls on a full moon as seen from the Canadian
sideImage:Canadian_Horshoe_at_Night.jpg|Looking over the brink of
Horseshoe falls at nightFile:American Niagara Falls 1.jpg|American
Falls and the Bridal Veil Falls from Maid of the MistFile:Horseshoe
Falls from helicopter.jpg|The Horseshoe from
helicopterFile:Horseshoe Falls from Fallsview hotel.jpg|View of the
Horseshoe from a Fallsview hotel roomFile:Niagara Falls
rapids.jpg|Niagara Falls rapids (White water walk, Canadian
side)
Image:Cliftnon Hill33.JPG|The popular
Clifton
Hill
on the Canadian side lit up at
nightImage:Niagara Rainbowbridge2006 edit1.jpg|View from the
Rainbow BridgeImage:NiagaraFallsAndMaidOfTheMistShip.jpg|Maid of
the Mist leisure boat in front of the fallsImage:Maid of the
mist10.JPG|Horseshoe Falls viewed from Maid of the Mist
Image:Niagara Falls -
Canada - Closeup.JPG|Observation platform of the Journey
Behind the Falls
below Table RockImage:Journey behind the
falls 02.JPG|A portal looking out on the back of Horseshoe
FallsImage:Niagara Falls March 2008.JPG|Niagara Falls in
winterImage:Niagra_Falls_at_night2.jpg|American and Canadian Falls
at dusk
See also
References
Footnotes
- InfoNiagara.com, Niagara Falls Geological History. Retrieved
March 3, 2007.
- Irving H. Tesmer, Jerold C. Bastedo, Colossal Cataract: The
Geologic History of Niagara Falls(SUNY Press,1981,ISBN
0873955226), pp.75.
- Bruce Trigger, The Children of Aataentsic
(McGill-Queen's University Press, Kingston and Montreal,1987, ISBN
0-7735-0626-8), pgs.95.
- The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents Volume
33
- NYPA Niagara
- Honor For E.D. Adams : Engineers to Award the John Fritz Medal
for Niagara Development.. (1926, March 17). New York Times
(1857-Current file), 6. ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York
Times (1851 - 2004) database. (Document ID: 119063396).
- Asteroid 12382 Niagara Falls was named for the
Falls.
- Laura Wood Roper, FLO: A Biography of Frederick Law Olmsted
[Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1973], pp.
378–81.)
- New York (State). Commissioners of state reservation at
Niagara, Albany, The Argus company, printers, 1887
- The New York State Preservationist, Vol. 6/No. 1, Fall/Winter
2002, "Falling for Niagara", page 14+15
- Burton Act.
- U.S. Statutes at Large, Vol. 34, Part 1, Chap. 3621, pp.
626-28. "An Act For the control and regulation of the waters of
Niagara River, for the preservation of Niagara Falls, and for other
purposes." H.R. 18024; Public Act No. 367
- This remarkable event had actually occurred only once before,
when an upstream ice jam stopped almost all water flow over Niagara
Falls on March 29, 1848.
- Students at the University of Guelph demonstrated,
using scale models, that the air passes over the top of the new
hotels, causing a breeze to roll down the south sides of the
buildings and spill into the gorge below the Falls, where it feeds
into a whirlpool of moisture and air.
- Parish, Charles Carlin, Queen of the Mist:The Story of
Annie Edson Taylor, First Person Ever To Go Over Niagara Falls and
Survive (Empire State Books, Interlaken NY, 1987, ISBN
0-932334-89-X), pgs.55.
- STRANDED ON BRINK OF NIAGARA FALLS; Scow with Two
Workmen Aboard It Fa... - Article Preview - The New York
Times
- http://www.imaxniagara.com/IMAX-theater/the-movie.cfm
- Ninjaturtles - Return of the
Technodrome
- Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (2007) - Filming
locations
External links