Everything about U S Interior Highlands totally explained
The
U.S. Interior Highlands is a mountainous region spanning eastern
Oklahoma, western and northern
Arkansas, southern
Missouri, and the extreme southeast corner of
Kansas. The name is designated by the
United States Geological Survey to refer to the combined mountainous region of the
Ozarks and
Ouachita Mountains, which form a distinct
physiographic division. It is the only major highland region between the
Rocky Mountains and the
Appalachian Mountains in the
United States.
The region is occupied by the
Ozark mountain forests, an ecoregion of
temperate broadleaf and mixed forests. Parts of the area are protected by three
national forests: The
Ouachita National Forest in Oklahoma and Arkansas, the
Ozark-St. Francis National Forest in Arkansas, and the
Mark Twain National Forest in Missouri.
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