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Interior River Valleys and Hills

Summary

The Interior River Lowland is made up of many wide, flat-bottomed terraced valleys, forested valley slopes, and dissected glacial till plains. In contrast to the generally rolling to slightly irregular plains in adjacent ecological regions to the north (54), east (55) and west (40, 47), where most of the land is cultivated for corn and soybeans, a little less than half of this area is in cropland, about 30 percent is in pasture, and the remainder is in forest. Bottomland deciduous forests and swamp forests were common on wet lowland sites, with mixed oak and oak-hickory forests on uplands. Paleozoic sedimentary rock is typical and coal mining occurs in several areas.

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Added to ScienceBase on Sun Aug 09 10:28:46 MDT 2015 by processing file <b>OmernikL3Descriptions.xlsx</b>
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LME http://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/vocabulary/EcologicalContext 72

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