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Autumn in the Driftless Area of Cross Plains, Wisconsin 43°30′N 91°00′W / 43.5°N 91°W / 43. The Driftless Area , also known as Bluff Country and the Paleozoic Plateau , is a topographical and cultural region in the Midwestern United States [ 1 ] that comprises southwestern Wisconsin , southeastern Minnesota , northeastern ...
52 Driftless Area. 52a - Savanna Section; 52b - Coulee Section; 53 Southeastern Wisconsin Till Plains. 53a - Rock River Drift Plain; 53b - Kettle Moraines; 53c - Southeastern Wisconsin Savannah and Till Plain; 53d - Lake Michigan Lacustrine Clay Plain; 54 Central Corn Belt Plains 54e - Chiwaukee Prairie Region
Pages in category "Driftless Area" The following 110 pages are in this category, out of 110 total. ... Bagley, Wisconsin; Baraboo Range; Beaver Creek Valley State Park;
Ocooch Mountains are a place name for the Western Upland area of Wisconsin also known as the Driftless Region, meaning un-glaciated, lacking glacial drift or the Paleozoic Plateau, referring to a geologic era, Greek for "ancient life".
Located in southwestern Wisconsin, Mount Horeb is situated in a region referred to as the Driftless Area. While including parts of southeastern Minnesota, northeastern Iowa, and northwestern Illinois, the Driftless Area is a distinct feature of the Wisconsin landscape, stretching across eighteen different counties.
Blue Mound State Park is a state park in Wisconsin, United States, located atop the largest hill in the southern half of the state, near the village of Blue Mounds.The 1,153-acre (467 ha) park features a pair of observation towers affording views of the Wisconsin River valley and Baraboo Range to the north, the mounds, buttes, and rolling forests of the Driftless Area to the south and west ...
Baraboo Range in winter Looking east down the range on Wisconsin Highway 78. The Baraboo Range is a mountain range in Columbia County and Sauk County, Wisconsin. Geologically, it is a syncline fold consisting of highly eroded Precambrian metamorphic rock. It is about 25 miles (40 km) long and varies from 5 to 10 miles (16 km) in width.
Professor Lawrence Martin created a schema for dividing Wisconsin into geographical regions in his work "The Physical Geography of Wisconsin". [1] [2] Western Upland; Eastern Ridges and Lowlands; Central Plain; Northern Highland; Lake Superior Lowland; Three of these geographical provinces are uplands and two are lowlands.