List of physiographic regions

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The landforms of Earth are generally divided into physiographic regions, consisting of physiographic provinces, which in turn consist of physiographic sections, [1] [2] [3] though some others use different terminology, such as realms, regions and subregions. [4] Some areas have further categorized their respective areas into more detailed subsections. [5] [6]

LandmassRegion / DivisionProvinceSection


Africa African Alpine System [ citation needed ] Atlas Mountains Mediterranean Atlas
Southern Atlas
High Interior Plateaus
Canary Islands
African massive [ citation needed ] Sahara Central Sahara Domes
Encircling Plateaus And Lowlands
Central Sahara Ergs
Western Sahara
Eastern Sahara
Sudan Niger Basin
Chad Basin
Middle Nile Basin
Mid-African West Guinea Highlands
Guinea Coast
Cameroon Mountains
Ubangi-Shari Upland
South Guinea Highlands
Coastal Lowlands
Congo Basin
South African Platform[ citation needed ]
Kalahari Region Encircling Uplands
Lunda Swell
Matabele Upland
Veldt
High Karroo
Damara-Nama Upland
Namib Desert
Cape Mountains
Natal Terrace Belt
Mozambique Plain
Madagascar
East African Highlands [ citation needed ] Rift Valley Coastal Belt
High Interior Plateau
Western Rift Belt
Eastern Rift Belt
Abyssinian Somali Plateau
Ethiopian Massif
Abyssinian Graben
Etbai Range


Americas Appalachian Atlantic Coast Uplands
Eastern Newfoundland Atlantic
Maritime Acadian Highlands
Maritime Plain
Notre Dame and Mégantic Mountains
Western Newfoundland Mountains Newfoundland Highlands
Newfoundland Coastal Lowland
Piedmont province Piedmont Upland
Piedmont Lowlands
Blue Ridge province Northern section
Southern section
Valley And Ridge province Tennessee section
Middle section
Hudson Valley
St. Lawrence Valley Champlain section
Northern section
Appalachian Plateaus province Mohawk section
Catskill section
Southern New York section
Allegheny Mountain section
Kanawha section
Cumberland Plateau section
Cumberland Mountain section
New England province Seaboard Lowland section
New England Upland section
White Mountain section
Green Mountain section
Taconic section
Arctic LowlandsEastern Arctic Lowlands
Western Arctic Lowlands
Atlantic Plain Continental Shelf
Coastal Plain Embayed section
Sea Island section
Floridian section
East Gulf Coastal Plain
Mississippi Alluvial Plain
West Gulf Coastal Plain
Gulf Coast Plain And Yucatan Peninsula
Canadian Shield Laurentian Upland Superior Upland
Adirondack province
Kazan
Davis
Hudson Hudson Bay Lowlands
James
Innuitian Region Eastern High Arctic Glacier
Western High Arctic
Interior Highlands Ozark Plateaus Springfield-Salem Plateaus
Boston Mountains
Ouachita provinceArkansas Valley
Ouachita Mountains
Interior Plains Interior Low Plateaus Highland Rim section
Lexington Plain
Nashville Basin
Great Plains Missouri Plateau, Glaciated
Missouri Plateau, Unglaciated
Black Hills
High Plains
Plains Border
Arctic Coastal Plain
Colorado Piedmont
Raton section
Pecos Valley
Edwards Plateau
Central Texas section
Central Lowland Dissected Till Plains
Eastern Lake section
Osage Plains
Till Plains
Western Lake section
Wisconsin Driftless section
Mackenzie Delta Mackenzie River
Yukon Coastal Plain
Manitoba Lowlands
Northern Boreal PlainsGreat Slave Plain
Great Bear Plain
Anderson Plain
Peel Plain And Plateau
Colville Hills
Prairie GrasslandsAlberta Plain
Saskatchewan Hills
Southern Boreal Plains And PlateausAlberta Plateau
Saskatchewan Plain
Intermontane Plateaus Columbia Plateau Walla Walla Plateau
Blue Mountain section
Payette section
Snake River Plain
Harney section
Colorado Plateaus High Plateaus Of Utah
Uinta Basin
Canyon Lands
Navajo section
Grand Canyon section
Datil-Mogollon Section
Acoma-Zuni Section
Basin And Range Province Great Basin
Mojave DesertMojave Ranges
Salton TroughColorado Desert Ranges
Sonoran DesertSonoran Desert Ranges
Mexican Highland
Sacramento section
Mexican Altiplano
Northern Plateaus Interior Plateau
Yukon-Tanana Uplands Yukon Plateau
Cassiar Mountains
Skeena Mountains
Liard Plain
Hyland Plateau
Pelly Mountains
Pacific Coast Ranges Cascade-Sierra MountainsNorthern Cascade Mountains
Middle Cascade Mountains
Southern Cascade Mountains
Sierra Nevada
Pacific Border province Aleutian Islands
Boundary Ranges
Puget Trough
Olympic Mountains
Oregon Coast Range
Klamath Mountains
California Trough
California Coast Ranges
Transverse Ranges (Los Angeles Mountains)
Lower California province Peninsular Ranges
Rocky Mountain System Wyoming Basin
Columbia Mountains Columbia Highlands
Interior Plateau
Southern Rocky Mountain Trench
Arctic Mountains Brooks Range
Arctic Foothills
Northern Rocky Mountains
Middle Rocky Mountains
Southern Rocky Mountains
Sierra Madre System Sierra Madre Occidental Lava (Rhyolite) Plateau
Sonoran High Ranges
Eastern Upland With Basins
Sierra Madre Oriental Northern section
The High Sierra
Cross Ranges
Lower Ranges
Sierra Madre del Sur Balsas-Mexcala Basin
Oaxaca Upland
Northeast Folded Ranges
Southern Slope
Northern section
Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt
Southern Mexican Highlands
Baja California Peninsula Peninsular Ranges
Southern Horst
Llano De La Magdalena
Colorado Delta
The Buried Ranges Sonoran Desert
Deltas
Sinaloa Coast
Piedmont Ranges
Central Meseta
Gulf Coastal Lowland
Neovolcanic Plateau
Chiapas-Guatemala Highlands
Gulf Coast Plain And Yucatan Peninsula Pitted Lowlands
Yucatan Platform
East Coast
Andean Mountain System Northern Andes Cordillera Occidental
Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru
Cordillera Central
Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru
Middle Magdalena Basin
Maracaibo Basin
Central AndesCordillera Occidental
Atacama Desert
Altiplano
Cordillera Oriental
Southern AndesFuegian Andes
Patagonian Andes
Andean Piedmont
Brazilian Highlands Brazilian Oldland
Goyaz Massif
Mato Grosso Plateau
Guiana Shield
Chiquitos Plateau
Parana Plateau
Coastal Plain
Guiana Highlands Guiana Coastal Plain
Amazon Plain Llanos De Mojos
Orinoco Basin
Parana-Paraguay Plain Gran Chaco
Pantanal
Argentine Mesopotamia
Pampas
Monte
Patagonian Plateau


Antarctica East Antarctica
West Antarctica


Australia East Australian Basins Carpentaria Basin Gulf of Carpentaria
Kynuna Platform
Great Artesian Basin Wilcannia Threshold
Murray Basin Naracoorte Platform
Encounter Shelf
East Australian Cordillera Cape York Platform Coen Belt
Torres Strait Islands
North Queensland Highlands Chillagoe Belt
Normanby Platform
Atherton Tableland
Mount Emu Lava Plains
Cairns Littoral
Great Barrier Reef Murray Islands
Central Queensland HighlandsBowen-Springsure Belt
Buckland Basalt Tablelands
Rockhampton-Brisbane BeltMaryborough Basin
Toowoomba Basalt Plateaus
New England BlockClarence Basin
Hunter-Hawkesbury Sunkland Sydney Basin
Warrumbungle-Liverpool Basalt Ranges
Blue Mountains
Central Highlands Of New South WalesWestern Slopes
Cobar Platform
Kosciusko MassifGourock-Monaro Belt
Eastern Victorian Highlands
Western Victorian HighlandsGrampians
Western Basalt Plains Of VictoriaOtway Hills
GippslandSouth Gippsland Hills
Port Phillip Sunkland
Western Tasmanian HighlandsCentral Tasmanian Plateau
Bass-Midland GrabenBass Strait
Ben Lomond Block
Western Australian Shield Yilgarn Block Stirling-Mount Barren Block
Darling Hills
Recherche Shelf
Donnybrook SunklandNaturaliste-Leeuwin Horst
Swan Coastal Belt Dandaragan Plateau
Greenough Block
Rottnest-Abrolhos Shelf
Carnarvon Basin Shark Bay-Byro Plains
Nullagine Platform Pilbara Block
Fortescue Rift
Hamersley Plateau
Onslow Coastal Plain
Dampier Rise
Canning Basin Pindan Country
Fitzroy Valley
Rowley Depression
Kimberly Block Wunaamin Miliwundi Range
Durack Range
Leveque Rise
Browse Depression
Londonderry Rise
Antrim RegionOrd Basin
Cambridge Gulf Lowlands
Bonaparte Depression
Arnhem BlockPine Creek Belt
Van Dieman Rise
Arafura Shelf
Wessel Rise
Arunta-Sturt Block
Barkly Tableland Mueller Plateau
Sandover-Pituri Platform
Mount Isa-Cloncurry Fold Belt
MacDonnell Fold Belt
Amadeus Sunkland
Musgrave Block
Nurrari Plain
Eucla Basin Eyre Coastal Plain
Eucla Shelf
Gawler Block Stuart Range Basin
Pimba Platform
South Australian Shatter Belt Torrens Graben
Spencer Graben
Vincent Graben
Yorke Horst
Frome Graben
Willyama Block


Eurasia Fenno-Scandian Shield Norway Upland
Swedish Lowland
Lake Region
Karelian Trough
English Lowlands
Central European Uplands Hibernian Uplands
Cornish-Welsh Uplands
Pennine Chain
Scottish Highlands
Armorican Massive
South Central Plateau (Massif Central)
Central Plateau (Meseta Central)
Jura Range
Vosges Mountains and Black Forest Mountains
Swiss-Bavarian Plateau
Rhenish Massif
West Hesse Highlands
East Hesse Highlands
Weser Uplands
Bohemian Massif
Cantabrian Mountains
Alpine System Pyrenees
Alps Southern Alps
Western Alps
Eastern Alps
Cantabrian Mountains
Apennines
Ebro Lowlands
Volcanic Lowlands
Spanish Meseta
Dinaric-Grecian Mountains Pindus
Andalusian Lowlands
Corsardinian Highlands
Baetic Cordillera
Pannonian Basin Western Pannonian Plain
Eastern Pannonian Plain
Transylvanian Basin [7]
Central Balkan Ranges
Upper Thracian Plain
Carpathians Western Carpathians
Eastern Carpathians
Southern Carpathians
Serbian Carpathians
Western Romanian Carpathians
Crimean Mountains
Caucasus Greater Caucasus
Lesser Caucasus
Transcaucasian Depressian
Kolkhida Lowland
Great European Plain Aquitanian Plain
Netherlands
Northern European Lowlands
Polesian Lowland
Dnieper Lowland
Volhynian-Podolian Plateau Volhynian-Podolian Upland
Moldavian Plateau
Roztocze
Danubian Plain and Wallachian Plain
Black Sea-Azov Lowland Black Sea Lowland
Azov Lowland
Donets-Azov Upland Azov Upland
Donets Upland
Donets Ridge
Central Russian Upland
Central Russian Upland Kalach Upland
Oka–Don Lowland
Russian Plain
Ural Mountains Northern Urals
Central Urals
Southern Urals
Middle East Eastern Highlands Zagros Mountains
Bitlis Mountains
Kopet-Dag Mountains
Elburz Mountains Western Elburz
Central Elburz
Eastern Elburz
Central Iranian Plateau Dasht-e Kavir
Dasht-e Lut
Pontus Mountains
Taurus Mountains
Anatolian Plateau
Fertile Crescent
West Siberian Plain Taiga
Kazakh Steppe
Central Siberian Upland Yenisei Horst
Irkutsk Basin
Vilyuy Plain
Aldan Basin
Yakutsk Basin
Eastern Siberian Highlands Anadyr Highlands
Kolyma Mountains
Kamchatka Peninsula
Verkhoyansk Range
Aldan Highlands/Stanovoy Range
Sikhote-Alin Range
Sakhalin Island
Northern Asian Mountains Kentei Hills
Altai Mountains
Great Indian Plain
Himalayan Mountain System Hindu Kush Mountains
Lesser Himalayas
Great Himalayas
Tethys Himalayas
Pamirs
Tibetan Plateau
Deccan Plateau Western Ghats
Eastern Ghats
Nagpur Basin
Vindhya Range
Satpura Range
Bihar Hills
Central Asian Lowlands Taklamakan Desert
Baikal Basin
Junggar Basin
Gobi Desert
Qaidam Basin

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Appalachian Mountains</span> Mountain range in eastern North America

The Appalachian Mountains, often called the Appalachians, are a mountain range in eastern to northeastern North America. The term "Appalachian" refers to several different regions associated with the mountain range, and its surrounding terrain. The general definition used is one followed by the United States Geological Survey and the Geological Survey of Canada to describe the respective countries' physiographic regions. The U.S. uses the term Appalachian Highlands and Canada uses the term Appalachian Uplands; the Appalachian Mountains are not synonymous with the Appalachian Plateau, which is one of the provinces of the Appalachian Highlands.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Great Basin</span> Large depression in western North America

The Great Basin is the largest area of contiguous endorheic watersheds, those with no outlets to the ocean, in North America. It spans nearly all of Nevada, much of Utah, and portions of California, Idaho, Oregon, Wyoming, and Baja California. It is noted for both its arid climate and the basin and range topography that varies from the North American low point at Badwater Basin in Death Valley to the highest point of the contiguous United States, less than 100 miles (160 km) away at the summit of Mount Whitney. The region spans several physiographic divisions, biomes, ecoregions, and deserts.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Blue Ridge Mountains</span> Mountain range in the Eastern U.S.

The Blue Ridge Mountains are a physiographic province of the larger Appalachian Highlands range. The mountain range is located in the Eastern United States and extends 550 miles southwest from southern Pennsylvania through Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Georgia. The province consists of northern and southern physiographic regions, which divide near the Roanoke River gap. To the west of the Blue Ridge, between it and the bulk of the Appalachians, lies the Great Appalachian Valley, bordered on the west by the Ridge and Valley province of the Appalachian range.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cumberland Plateau</span> Plateau in the United States

The Cumberland Plateau is the southern part of the Appalachian Plateau in the Appalachian Mountains of the United States. It includes much of eastern Kentucky and Tennessee, and portions of northern Alabama and northwest Georgia. The terms "Allegheny Plateau" and the "Cumberland Plateau" both refer to the dissected plateau lands lying west of the main Appalachian Mountains. The terms stem from historical usage rather than geological difference, so there is no strict dividing line between the two. Two major rivers share the names of the plateaus, with the Allegheny River rising in the Allegheny Plateau and the Cumberland River rising in the Cumberland Plateau in Harlan County, Kentucky.

The Highland Rim is a geographic term for the area in Tennessee, North Alabama, and Kentucky which surrounds the Central Basin. Geologically, the Central Basin is a dome. The Highland Rim is a cuesta surrounding the basin, and the border where the difference in elevation is sharply pronounced is an escarpment.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Champlain Valley</span> Region of the United States around Lake Champlain

The Champlain Valley is a region of the United States around Lake Champlain in Vermont and New York extending north slightly into Quebec, Canada. It is part of the St. Lawrence River drainage basin, drained northward by the Richelieu River into the St. Lawrence at Sorel-Tracy, Quebec. The Richelieu valley is not generally referred to as part of the Champlain Valley.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dissected Till Plains</span> Physiographic section of the central United States

The Dissected Till Plains are physiographic sections of the Central Lowlands province, which in turn is part of the Interior Plains physiographic division of the United States, located in southern and western Iowa, northeastern Kansas, the southwestern corner of Minnesota, northern Missouri, eastern Nebraska, and southeastern South Dakota.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Smoky Hills</span> Region in the United States

The Smoky Hills are an upland region of hills in the central Great Plains of North America. They are located in the Midwestern United States, encompassing north-central Kansas and a small portion of south-central Nebraska.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Geography of North Dakota</span>

The Geography of North Dakota consists of three major geographic regions: in the east is the Red River Valley, west of this, the Missouri Plateau. The southwestern part of North Dakota is covered by the Great Plains, accentuated by the Badlands. There is also much in the way of geology and hydrology.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Osage Plains</span> Physiographic section extending through five U.S. states

The Osage Plains are a physiographic section of the larger Central Lowland province, which in turn is part of the larger Interior Plains physiographic division. The area is sometimes called the Lower Plains, North Central Plains,or Rolling Plains. The Osage Plains, covering west-central Missouri, the southeastern third of Kansas, most of central Oklahoma, and extending into north-central Texas, is the southernmost of three tallgrass prairie physiographic areas. It grades into savanna and woodland to the east and south, and into shorter, mixed-grass prairie to the west. The Osage Plains consist of three subregions. The Osage Plains proper occupy the northeast segment. Although sharply demarcated from the Ozark uplift, the plains are nonetheless a transitional area across which the boundary between prairie and woodland has shifted over time. In the central portion of the physiographic area lies the second subregion, the Flint Hills, commonly called "the Osage" in Oklahoma. This large remnant core of native tallgrass prairie is a rocky rolling terrain that runs from north to south across Kansas and extends into Oklahoma. To the west and south of these hills are the Blackland Prairies and Cross Timbers. This vegetatively complex region of intermixed prairie and scrubby juniper-mesquite woodland extends into north-central Texas. Bluestem prairies and oak-dominated savannas and woodlands characterize the natural vegetation in the Cross Timbers. Much of the area has been converted to agriculture, although expanses of oak forest and woodland are still scattered throughout the eastern portion of the subregion.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Geology of Minnesota</span> Overview of the geology of the U.S. state of Minnesota

The geology of Minnesota comprises the rock, minerals, and soils of the U.S. state of Minnesota, including their formation, development, distribution, and condition.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Geology of Georgia (U.S. state)</span> Overview of the geology of the U.S. state of Georgia

The U.S. state of Georgia is commonly divided into four geologic regions that influence the location of the state's four traditional physiographic regions. The four geologic regions include the Appalachian foreland, Blue Ridge, Piedmont, and Coastal Plain. These four geologic regions commonly share names with and typically overlap the four physiographic regions of the state: the Appalachian Plateau and adjacent Valley and Ridge; the Blue Ridge; the Piedmont and the Coastal Plain.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hogback (geology)</span> Long, narrow ridge

In geology and geomorphology, a hogback or hog's back is a long, narrow ridge or a series of hills with a narrow crest and steep slopes of nearly equal inclination on both flanks. Typically, the term is restricted to a ridge created by the differential erosion of outcropping, steeply dipping, homoclinal, and typically sedimentary strata. One side of a hogback consists of the surface of a steeply dipping rock stratum called a dip slope. The other side is an erosion face that cuts through the dipping strata that comprises the hogback. The name "hogback" comes from the Hog's Back of the North Downs in Surrey, England, which refers to the landform's resemblance in outline to the back of a hog. The term is also sometimes applied to drumlins and, in Maine, to both eskers and ridges known as "horsebacks".

The Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Lowlands, or simply St. Lawrence Lowlands, is a physiographic region of Eastern Canada that comprises a section of southern Ontario bounded on the north by the Canadian Shield and by three of the Great Lakes — Lake Huron, Lake Erie and Lake Ontario — and extends along the St. Lawrence River to the Strait of Belle Isle and the Atlantic Ocean. The lowlands comprise three sub-regions that were created by intrusions from adjacent physiographic regions — the West Lowland, Central Lowland and East Lowland. The West Lowland includes the Niagara Escarpment, extending from the Niagara River to the Bruce Peninsula and Manitoulin Island. The Central Lowland stretches between the Ottawa River and the St. Lawrence River. The East Lowland includes Anticosti Island, Îles de Mingan, and extends to the Strait of Belle Isle.

Physiographic regions are a means of defining Earth's landforms into distinct, mutually exclusive areas, independent of political boundaries. It is based upon the classic three-tiered approach by Nevin M. Fenneman in 1916, that separates landforms into physiographic divisions, physiographic provinces, and physiographic sections.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Navajo section</span> Physiographic section of the Colorado Plateaus Province

The Navajo Section is a physiographic section of the larger Colorado Plateaus Province, which in turn is part of the larger Intermontane Plateaus physiographic Division.

The Acoma-Zuni Section is a physiographic section of the larger Colorado Plateaus province, which in turn is part of the larger Intermontane Plateaus physiographic division. It is bounded on the east by the Albuquerque Basin, a Rio Grande Rift basin in the northern part of the Basin and Range Province. The Datil-Mogollon Section lies to the south. It is also a newly defined physiographic unit that includes the northern part of the area previously designated the Datil Section. The southeastern edge of the Colorado Plateau from Springerville, Arizona, northeastward to the tip of the Sierra Nacimiento comprises this area.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Geology of Kansas</span>

The geology of Kansas encompasses the geologic history and the presently exposed rock and soil. Rock that crops out in the US state of Kansas was formed during the Phanerozoic eon, which consists of three geologic eras: the Paleozoic, Mesozoic and Cenozoic. Paleozoic rocks at the surface in Kansas are primarily from the Mississippian, Pennsylvanian, and Permian periods.

The geology of Alabama is marked by abundant geologic resources and a variety of geologic structures from folded mountains in the north to sandy beaches along the Gulf of Mexico coast. Alabama spans three continental geologic provinces as defined by the United States Geological Survey, the Atlantic Plain, Appalachian Highlands, and Interior Plains. The Geological Survey of Alabama breaks these provinces down into more specific physiographic provinces.

Armin Kohl Lobeck (1886-1958) was a noted American Cartographer, Geomorphologist and Landscape Artist. He was born in New York City on August 16, 1886, but his family moved to Haworth, New Jersey, three years later.

References

  1. "Physiographic divisions of the conterminous U.S." U.S. Geological Survey. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  2. "Physiographic & Landform – World, U.S." Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Archived from the original on 2007-10-12. Retrieved 2007-12-07.
  3. "The Atlas of Canada – physiographic regions" . Retrieved 2007-12-07.
  4. "Defining Physiographic Realms and Regions: The Spatial Variation of Landscapes". Oxford University Press. Retrieved 2009-11-29.
  5. Fichter, Lynn S. (1999). "A Description of the Geology of Virginia". James Madison University. Retrieved 2007-12-07.
  6. Bluemle, John; Biek, Bob (2007). "No Ordinary Plain: North Dakota's Physiography and Landforms". North Dakota Geological Survey. Retrieved 2007-12-07.
  7. Sometimes is considered a section of Carpathians province.