content
United States physiographic region
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "United_States_physiographic_region" .
Continental U.S physiographic regions
There are eight distinct physiographic divisions within the continental United States . Each is composed of smaller physiographic areas called provinces and sections respectively.[1]
These eight divisions are:
See Physical geography of the U.S. for descriptions.
Laurentian Upland
1. Superior Upland
Atlantic Plain
2. Continental Shelf (not on map)
3. Coastal Plain
3a. Embayed section
3b. Sea Island section
3c. Floridian section
3d. East Gulf Coastal Plain
3e. Mississippi Alluvial Plain
3f. West Gulf Coastal Plain
Appalachian Highlands
4. Piedmont province
4a. Piedmont Upland
4b. Piedmont Lowlands
5. Blue Ridge province
5a. Northern section
5b. Southern section
6. Valley and Ridge province
6a. Tennessee section
6b. Middle section
6c. Hudson Valley
7. St. Lawrence Valley
7a. Champlain section
7b. Northern section (not on map)
8. Appalachian Plateaus province
8a. Mohawk section
8b. Catskill section
8c. Southern New York section
8d. Allegheny Plateau section
8e. Kanawha section
8f. Cumberland Plateau section
8g. Cumberland Mountain section
9. New England Province
9a. Seaboard Lowland section
9b. New England Upland section
9c. White Mountain section
9d. Green Mountain section
9e. Taconic section
10. Adirondack province
Interior Plains
11. Interior Low Plateaus
11a. Highland Rim section
11b. Lexington Plain
11c. Nashville Basin
12. Central Lowland
12a. Eastern Lake section
12b. Western Lake section
12c. Wisconsin Driftless section
12d. Till Plains
12e. Dissected Till Plains
12f. Osage Plains
13. Great Plains
13a. Missouri Plateau , glaciated
13b. Missouri Plateau , unglaciated
13c. Black Hills
13d. High Plains
13e. Plains Border
13f. Colorado Piedmont
13g. Raton section
13h. Pecos Valley
13i. Edwards Plateau
13j. Central Texas section
Interior Highlands
14. Ozark Plateaus
14a. Springfield-Salem plateaus
14b. Boston Mountains
15. Ouachita province
15a. Arkansas Valley
15b. Ouachita Mountains
Rocky Mountain System
16. Southern Rocky Mountains
17. Wyoming Basin
18. Middle Rocky Mountains
19. Northern Rocky Mountains
Intermontane Plateaus
20. Columbia Plateau
20a. Walla Walla Plateau
20b. Blue Mountain section
20c. Payette section
20d. Snake River Plain
20e. Harney section
21. Colorado Plateaus
21a. High Plateaus of Utah
21b. Uinta Basin
21c. Canyon Lands
21d. Navajo section
21e. Grand Canyon section
21f. Datil section
22. Basin and Range province
22a. Great Basin
22b. Sonoran Desert
22c. Salton Trough
22d. Mexican Highland
22e. Sacramento section
Pacific Mountain System
23. Cascade-Sierra Mountains
23a. Northern Cascade Mountains
23b. Middle Cascade Mountains
23c. Southern Cascade Mountains
23d. Sierra Nevada
24. Pacific Border province
24a. Puget Trough
24b. Olympic Mountains
24c. Oregon Coast Range
24d. Klamath Mountains
24e. California Trough
24f. California Coast Ranges
24g. Los Angeles Ranges
25. Lower California province
See also
Physiographic regions of the world
Notes
External link and source