Magnetic Hill (Moncton)

View from the front
View in reverse
Photos of the Magnetic Hill. From the frontal view perspective, the white post in the middle of the 1st picture appears to be the lowest point in the road. When viewed in reverse from the white post, the lowest point is actually behind the car in the foreground of the 2nd picture.
Water appearing to run uphill at Magnetic Hill in New Brunswick

The Magnetic Hill is an example of a gravity hill, a type of optical illusion created by rising and descending terrain. It is located at the northwestern edge (In the Magnetic Hill Area) of the city of Moncton in the Canadian province of New Brunswick.

The general area is at the base of a ridge named “Lutes Mountain”, which rises several hundred feet above the surrounding Petitcodiac River valley.

History

In the 19th century, a cart path was built from the city in the south onto the ridge. The path was subsequently expanded during the early 20th century and during the age of the automobile, ca. 1931, it was noticed that at one point near the base of the ridge when driving south, motorists were required to accelerate in order to prevent rolling backward (i.e., what appears to be uphill). The novelty became known as “Magnetic Hill” and was more-or-less an amusing local attraction for residents and visitors to try.

Eventually with the rise in tourism after the Second World War, along with local highway construction which saw a “Mountain Road” bypass built further west from Magnetic Hill, the roughly 1 kilometre segment of gravel road became one of Moncton’s prime tourist attractions (along with the tidal bore on the Petitcodiac River). Magnetic Hill is now a historic property.[1]

To experience Magnetic Hill today, drivers must pay a fee to drive their cars to the end of the road (which has been preserved). When a car is placed in neutral, it will begin to roll backwards, apparently uphill. Observers will also note that water in the adjacent drainage ditches also seemingly runs “uphill.”

Magnetic Hill is mentioned in the Stompin' Tom Connors song "C-A-N-A-D-A", also covered by Raffi on his Bananaphone album.

See also

References

  1. Historic Places, of Canada.

Coordinates: 46°08′11″N 64°53′23″W / 46.136319°N 64.889696°W / 46.136319; -64.889696

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.