Arkansas's Six Natural Divisions: These Physiographic Regions Shape History, Nature and Life in Arkansas
Arkansas's Six Natural Divisions: These Physiographic Regions Shape History, Nature and Life in Arkansas
Arkansas's Six Natural Divisions: These Physiographic Regions Shape History, Nature and Life in Arkansas
Author:
Jennifer Cobb
Gravette School District
Ozark Mountain(Plateau) Region
Ozark Mountain
http://www.fourchecreek.org/
Information_maps.html
Tupelo on Rock Creek Fourche Creek under I-440
Little Rock
Area
Even though people have hurt
Fourche Creek by littering and not
taking care of it, it continues to
grow many different plants and
flowers and an 1,800 acre wetland.
The River Valley has several great state parks
Ouachita Mountains
Some cities found here are:
Little Rock, Mena, Mt. Ida,
Hot Springs and Waldron
This is a view of the rolling hills of Ouachita Mountains
The Ouachitas are true mountains, formed by the collision of
tectonic plates that caused massive folding and faulting creating
one of the most
unique places
on Earth.
Mississippi Alluvial
Plain Region
Arkansas grows
soybeans,
cotton,
and rice. Arkansas produces more
rice than any state in the nation.
Farmers also grow milo crop to feed their animals. These are a
few of examples of crops grown in Arkansas. What other foods
does Arkansas grow?
This region contains a floodways, drainage ditches, levees, lakes
and streams, and some of the most fertile farmland in the
country. Much of the forest that was here has been removed for
agriculture.
It also is home to some
of Arkansas's most
important historical sites.
Like the Arkansas Post
Museum State Park,
Crowley’sRidge
It is rises up to 200 feet higher than the Delta and can be seen for miles around in the flat
fields of eastern Arkansas.
It was created by years and years of river erosion and wind-blown dust piling up to
create a long ridge slicing through the flat Delta land.
Crowley’s Ridge is capped with many feet of dust blown in
from the Mississippi River that forms a rich but very
erodible soil. This rich soil grows a plant community that
is unlike anything else in Arkansas.
At Village Creek state park
you can enjoy the unique
land of Crowley's Ridge. This
the ridge is covered with a
lush hardwood forest
featuring oak, sugar maple,
beech, butternut, and tulip
poplar.
Chalk Bluffs, named for white clay that looks like chalk, this bluff is
an important landmark in Arkansas. Here the St. Francis River cuts
through Crowley’s Ridge east to west and forms the boundary
of Arkansas and Missouri.
Also, in 1857 the
first land survey of
Arkansas began here.
The Ouachita
River at Moro
Bay State Park in
the Gulf Coastal
Plain region.
The Gulf Coastal Plain has 200-year-old pines
that are part of the old growth forest protected
in in Logoly State Park north of Magnolia.
Logoly State
Park.
Look how
tall a pine
tree can
become!
Millwood Lake is used for boating, fishing and
bird watching.
The large, shallow Millwood Lake
is not a natural feature of the
Gulf Coastal Plain, but was made
by damming the Little Missouri
River. It is rapidly filling in. As it
changes from marsh to lake it is
creating new wildlife habitat.
The lake has been designated an
Arkansas Important Bird Area.
The Gulf Coastal Plain is the only
place in the world where you can
find and keep REAL diamonds.
Lake Ouachita
http://www.lakeouachita.org/
Terry Smith Images
http://www.terrysmithimages.com/photos/arkansas-
pictures.aspx
Audubon Arkansas
Cathy Mackey http://www.fourchecreek.org
Science Specialist http://ar.audubon.org
Arkansas Department of
Education
Arkansas: The World Around Us. Tom Greer and Lavell Cole
Macmillan/McGraw-Hill School Publishing Company 1991
Crowley’s Ridge photo p. 35
Lake Chicot Photo and information p. 14
Mississippi Alluvial Plain p. 32-34