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New England Uplands information


The topography of the New England Uplands section is that of a maturely-dissected plateau with narrow valleys, and the entire area is greatly modified by glaciation. It is the most widespread of the geomorphic sections in the New England Province, extending from Canada through New England down to the Seaboard section and extending southwestward through New York and New Jersey as two narrow upland projections, the Reading Prong and the Manhattan Prong. Numerous hills and mountains rise above the general level of the upland; except in the presence of mountains, the horizon of the regional landscape is fairly level. Glaciation has resulted in the erosion and rounding off of the bedrock topography and numerous rock basin lakes. Glacial drift is thin, patchy, and stony, and ice-contact features such as kames, kame terraces, and eskers are abundant. The surface of the New England Uplands slopes southeast from maximum inland altitudes around 670 meters (2,200 feet), excluding the other mountainous sections of the province, to about 122 to 152 meters (400 to 499 ft) along its seaward edge at the narrow coastal Seaboard section, which goes down to sea level.

In the New York Bight watershed, the New England Uplands section is represented by a portion of the Taconic Mountains and its foothills, and by the Reading and Manhattan Prongs that extend southwestward from the New England states. Although geologists refer to the larger of these extensions as the Reading Prong, in this region it is more commonly known as the New York - New Jersey Highlands, and locally as the Hudson Highlands, the New Jersey Highlands, the Ramapo Mountains, or simply the Highlands. The Highlands are bounded on the southeast and on the northwest by the lowlands of the Piedmont and Great Valley provinces, respectively. The mountains and valleys that make up the Highlands are part of a relatively long, linear, and narrow regional geological feature that averages 16 to 32 kilometers (9.9 to 19.9 miles) in width, with a maximum width of 40 kilometers (25 miles), and extends in a southwest–northeast trending direction for nearly 225 kilometers (140 miles), from southeastern Pennsylvania near Reading to southwestern Connecticut near Danbury, where it joins the Taconic Mountains and Housatonic Highlands of the New England Uplands plateau. The Hudson River cuts a deep gorge through the Highlands in New York in the stretch of river between Peekskill on the south and Newburgh on the north.

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New England Uplands

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The topography of the New England Uplands section is that of a maturely-dissected plateau with narrow valleys, and the entire area is greatly modified...

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Reading Prong

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Reading Prong is a physiographic subprovince of the New England Uplands section of the New England province of the Appalachian Highlands. The prong consists...

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Appalachian Highlands

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subdivisions: the New England Uplands, New England Seaboard Lowland, Green Mountain, White Mountain, and Taconic. The New England Uplands is the area runs...

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List of subranges of the Appalachian Mountains

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the Appalachian Highlands page for American sections and the Appalachian Uplands page for Canadian sections. Due to the lack of solid distinctions in the...

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Geology of Manhattan Prong

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United States, the Manhattan Prong of the New England Uplands is a smaller belt of ancient rock in southern New York (including Manhattan, the Bronx, and...

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New England Seaboard

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The Seaboard Lowland section is bounded to the northwest by the New England Uplands, and to the southwest by the Atlantic Ocean. "The physiographic regions...

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New England province

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of the Seaboard Lowland, New England Upland, White Mountain, Green Mountain, and Taconic sections. Much of the New England province's bedrock aquifers...

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England

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England's landscape consists of low hills and plains, with upland and mountainous terrain in the north and west of the country. The northern uplands include...

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Upland

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riparian zone or lakeshore Upland, Queensland, a locality in the Barcaldine Region Desert Uplands, a bio-region in Queensland CFB Uplands, a former Canadian Forces...

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Geography of England

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Dales – an upland area of the northern Pennines. North Pennines - uplands forming the northern end of the Pennines. Howgill Fells - uplands in Cumbria...

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List of mountain ranges

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Pocono Mountains Shaver's Fork Mountains Appalachian Uplands New Brunswick Highlands New England Uplands Belknap Mountains Berkshires Mountains Green Mountains...

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Geography of Massachusetts

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Nantucket to the south of Cape Cod. Upland elevations increase dramatically in Western Massachusetts. These uplands are interrupted by the downfaulted...

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Uplands School

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Uplands School may refer to: Uplands Elementary School (Langley), a public elementary school in Langley, British Columbia Uplands Elementary School (Terrace)...

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Physiographic regions of the United States

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section 9. New England Province 9a. Seaboard Lowland section 9b. New England Upland section 9c. White Mountain section 9d. Green Mountain section 9e....

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Appalachian Mountains

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Highlands, Atlantic Uplands, and Central Lowlands Nova Scotia contains the Atlantic Uplands, Nova Scotia Uplands, and the Annapolis Lowlands New Brunswick contains...

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Rhode Island

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Rhode Island (/ˌroʊd-/ ROHD) is a state in the New England region of the Northeastern United States. It borders Connecticut to its west; Massachusetts...

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Staten Island Serpentinite

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Staten Island Serpentinite locality is a southward extension of the New England Uplands, adjacent to the Manhattan Prong. It includes Todt Hill on Staten...

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List of physiographic regions

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Shield Norway Upland Swedish Lowland Lake Region Karelian Trough English Lowlands Central European Uplands Hibernian Uplands Cornish-Welsh Uplands Pennine Chain...

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New Brunswick

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much of New Brunswick's uplands with only shallow, acidic soils which have discouraged settlement but which are home to enormous forests. New Brunswick's...

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List of waterfalls in England

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The uplands of the north and west of England enjoy the wettest climate and are home to the majority of waterfalls in the country. In areas such as the...

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Tourism in England

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national park stretching from Hampshire to East Sussex and comprising chalk uplands and sea cliffs. Center Parcs, a European network of rural holiday parks...

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Highland

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Highlands or uplands are areas of high elevation such as a mountainous region, elevated mountainous plateau or high hills. Generally, upland refers to a...

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North East England

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web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) "Biodiversity in the North East:In the uplands". Northeast Biodiversity Forum. Archived from the original on 7 August...

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Saw Mill River

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": 35–38  The Saw Mill's basin is part of the Manhattan Hills in the New England Uplands physiographic region. It is primarily underlain by metamorphic rock...

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Northern England

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from the Tyne Gap to the Peak District. Other uplands in the North include the Lake District with England's highest mountains, the Cheviot Hills adjoining...

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England in the Middle Ages

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England in the Middle Ages concerns the history of England during the medieval period, from the end of the 5th century through to the start of the early...

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