MN Physical Geography. Minnesota from Space Minnesota’s Natural Boundaries.

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MN Physical Geography

Transcript of MN Physical Geography. Minnesota from Space Minnesota’s Natural Boundaries.

Page 1: MN Physical Geography. Minnesota from Space Minnesota’s Natural Boundaries.

MN Physical Geography

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Min

nesota

fro

m

Sp

ace

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Minnesota’s Natural Boundarie

s

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Northwest Angle

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Minnesota’s Topography

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Min

nesota

Relief

(Ele

vati

on)

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Eagle MountainHighest Point in MN (2,301’)

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Minnesota’s Glaciers• 4 continental

glaciers advanced and retreated across MN

• The Pleistocene ice age was the most recent and covered most of MN

• Along the way glaciers picked up rocks and soil and transported it to the south

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Minnesota’s Glaciers• The rocks and

soil left behind known as “glacial drift”

• The melting also left behind many shallow lakes

• Soils left behind are an “unsorted” mixture of soil, rocks and pebbles

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Gla

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Canadian Shield

• Physical region of mostly bare bedrock and little topsoil

• Covers much of central Canada, northeastern MN and northern Wisconsin

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Glacial Abrasion

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“Ice-Scoured” Surface

Most of the Arrowhead region is “ice-scoured”

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Boundary Waters Canoe

Area• Much bare bedrock• Soil pushed to the south

by glaciers• Little soil left behind is thin

and rocky

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Min

nesota

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Glacial Moraines

Glacial Lakes Moraine

Moraines are belts of hills that form at the edges of melting glaciers when boulders, stones and soil accumulates

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Moraine and Lakes

MN Moraine

Belts• Glaciers moved

across “Moraine and Lakes” region of central MN several times leaving many moraines

• Region is hilly with many shallow lakes

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• This region is covered by “Glacial drift” (soil, rocks, sand and pebbles) deposited on the land when glaciers melted

• Region is hilly with many shallow lakes

• Flattest areas are “outwash plains”

Moraine and Lakes Region

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MN Moraines

Powder Ridge

Monticello’s “Little Mountain”

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Buffalo Ridge

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Buffalo Ridge

Buffalo Ridge

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Driftless Area

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Driftless Area

• SE MN is described as “Driftless” because it was never touched by glaciers

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Driftless Area

• Driftless area has no glacial drift

• Few lakes and many rivers and streams

• Millions of years of erosion visible

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Min

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Red River Valley

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Minnesota’s 3 Continental Divides• A continental divide

is a high point of land separating the direction rivers flow

• Most of southern MN’s water drains into Mississippi and Gulf of Mexico

• Much of Arrowhead drains into Lake Superior eventually reaching Atlantic

• NW MN drains north to Lake Winnipeg and Hudson Bay

Laurentian Divide

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Laurentian DivideFrom Lookout Mountain

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MN

’s G

lacia

l Lakes

Lake Agassiz

Lake Duluth

Lake Minnesota

Brown’s Valley

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Glacial Lake

Agassiz• When last glacier

melted the drainage path of the melt water was blocked

• Lake Agassiz formed until glacier melted

• Overflow created Minnesota River

• Sediments settled to the bottom filling in low spots and creating an extremely flat surface

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Red River Valley• Red River Valley is an

extremely flat area that was once covered by Lake Agassiz

• Sediments fell to bottom creating thick and sticky soils known as “gumbo”

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Red River of the North

• Why is the path of the Red River Valley so crooked?

• The land is so level the river struggles to find a consistent downhill slope

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Red River of the NorthDowntown Moorhead/Fargo

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Moorhead Floods Spring 2009

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Red

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Arrowhead

Driftless

Buffalo Ridge

MN

’s P

hysic

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Reg

ion

sMoraine

and Lakes

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MN

Top

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Minnesota’s Climate

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Min

neap

olis

Clim

ate

Humid Continental

Wide ranges in temperatures

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MN Temperatures

Hot Summers and Cold Winters

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MN Precipitatio

n• Most of the

moisture that falls in MN comes from Gulf of Mexico

• Precipitation greatest in the SE and least in the NW

Jet Stream

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March 29, 18814 Distinct Seasons

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MN

Gro

win

g

Season

Consecutive Days Averaging 43oF or More

Only southern MN has a long enough growing season for corn

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Minnesota’s Natural

Vegetation

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MN

Natu

ral

Veg

eta

tion

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Coniferous Forests

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Deciduous Forests

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Prairie

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MN Natural Vegetation• Natural vegetation is an indicator of

a region’s precipitation, temperatures and soil

• NE MN mostly coniferous forest• Central MN mostly deciduous• S & W MN mostly prairie

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Perc

en

t of

MN

in

C

om

merc

ial Fore

sts

70% of MN’s commercial forest industry located in NE MN

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oil

Fert

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MN Soil Fertility

• Best soils are found in the southern and western MN

• Least fertile soils are found in northeast MN (thin, rocky and acidic podzol soils)

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Minnesota’s Natural Regions

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MN

Natu

ral

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eta

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Arrowhead

Dairy Belt

Corn Belt

Red

Riv

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MN’s Natural Regions

Arrowhead

Dairy Belt

Corn Belt

Red

Riv

er

Valley

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MN

Top

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Natu

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oil

Fert

ilit

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Percent of Land in

FarmsArrowhead

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Arrowhead• Ice-scoured by

glaciers• Thin and rocky

soils• Cool temps and short

growing season• Coniferous forest• Podzol (acidic) soils• Little agriculture• Much land remains

in forests• Paper, mining and

tourism impotant economic activities

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MN’s Natural Regions

Arrowhead

Dairy Belt

Corn Belt

Red

Riv

er

Valley

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Dairy Belt

• Hilly topography• Glacial moraines• Many lakes and

marshes• Soil better than

Arrowhead but not as good as the Corn Belt

• Most farmers raise livestock, particularly dairy cattle

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MN’s Agricultural Regions

Arrowhead

Dairy Belt

Corn Belt

Red

Riv

er

Valley

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Percent of Land in

Farms

Red

Riv

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Valle

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Red River Valley

• Once the bottom of glacial Lake Agassiz

• Extremely flat• Spring floods common• Thick and sticky

“gumbo” soils• Soils are soil to dry in

the spring• Short growing

season

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MN’s Natural Regions

Arrowhead

Dairy Belt

Corn Belt

Red

Riv

er

Valley

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Percent of Land in

Farms

Corn Belt

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Corn BeltBuffalo RidgeBuffalo Ridge

Rock CountyRock County

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Corn Belt

• Relatively flat topography except “Buffalo Ridge” in southwest corner

• Thick, black soils

• Long growing season

• Adequate precipitation

• One of the best agricultural regions in the nation

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MN

’s A

gri

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ltu

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Reg

ion

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Corn Belt

Dairy Belt

Arrowhead

Red

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