U.S. Interior Highlands

The U.S. Interior Highlands is a mountainous region in the Central United States spanning northern and western Arkansas, southern Missouri, eastern Oklahoma, and extreme southeastern Kansas. The name is designated by the United States Geological Survey to refer to the combined subregions of the Ouachita Mountains south of the Arkansas River and the Ozark Plateaus north of the Arkansas. The U.S. Interior Highlands is one of few mountainous regions between the Appalachians and Rockies.

Template:Unreferefnced

U.S. Interior Highlands
1:1000000 scale DEM of the U.S. Interior Highlands
LocationUnited States
Highest point
  elevation
Mount Magazine
2,753 ft (839 m)

Geography

There are three distinct mountain ranges within the U.S. Interior Highlands:

The U.S. Interior Highlands is dominated by temperate broadleaf and mixed forests. Three national forests are located here: The Ouachita National Forest in Arkansas and Oklahoma; the Ozark-St. Francis National Forest in Arkansas; and the Mark Twain National Forest in Missouri.

gollark: I'm availableish now, but I have to do a thing before [TIME EXPUNGED].
gollark: Yes, freer.
gollark: I'm not playing either, waiting until I have freer time.
gollark: We have that much excess capacity *now* and can cheaply upscale the coal site.
gollark: Given what you've said of it I doubt it exceeds 20MWish.

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.