Tennessee Physical Map
Tennessee drops from mountains to river. The Smokies rise in the east, hills roll through the middle, and the west flattens.
Tennessee drops from mountains to river. The Smokies rise in the east, hills roll through the middle, and the west flattens.
There’s a clear divide at the Missouri River. The east is mostly flat prairie while the west brings Great Plains rising into the Black Hills.
Our physical map of South Carolina shows it rising gently from coast to foothills. The Blue Ridge clips the far northwest corner with peaks.
Rhode Island packs coastal lowlands, Narragansett Bay, and gentle hills. Our physical map of Rhode Island shows this New England state.
Pennsylvania is Appalachian ridges and valleys from end to end. The mountains run diagonally across the state in our physical map.
Our physical map of Oregon shows peaks like Mount Hood, the Willamette Valley, and mountain ranges. Oregon splits at the Cascades.
Our physical map of Oklahoma shows the Ozark/Ouachita Mountains, Great Plains and Panhandle all squeezed into one state.
Ohio transitions from the Appalachian foothills and flattens out into farmland. The Lake Erie shoreline forms the northern border.
See flat prairie interrupted by the Badlands on our North Dakota physical map. It’s mostly Great Plains here with the Red River Valley.
Our physical map of North Carolina shows three worlds stacked with the Blue Ridge Mountains all the way to the Atlantic coast.
Our physical map of New York shows more than NYC. The Adirondack Mountains rise in the northeast, while the Catskills hold the southeast.
Explore high desert, mountains, and mesas with our physical map of New Mexico. The southern Rockies push through the north-central region.
Our physical map of New Jersey shows the Appalachian ridges and valleys in the northwest. The southeast is the Atlantic Coastal Plain.
Our New Hampshire physical map shows its rugged terrain including the White Mountains and Mount Washington hitting 6,288 feet.
Our physical map of Nevada shows one of America’s driest, most mountainous states with elevations below sea level to over 13,000 feet.