Mississippi Alluvial Plain
The Mississippi River Alluvial Plain is an alluvial plain created by the Mississippi River on which lie parts of seven U.S. states, from southern Louisiana to southern Illinois (Illinois, Missouri, Kentucky,Tennessee, Arkansas,Mississippi, Louisiana).
The plain is divided into (a) the Mississippi River Delta in the southern half of Louisiana and (b) the upper Mississippi Embayment running from central Louisiana to Illinois.
The term Mississippi embayment is sometimes used more narrowly to refer to its section on the western side of the river, running through eastern Arkansas, southeastern Missouri, westernmost Tennessee (east side of the River), westernmost Kentucky (east side of the River) and southernmost Illinois, and excluding northwest Mississippi where the alluvial plain is known as the Mississippi Delta.
It is the largest ecoregion of Louisiana, covering 12,350 square miles (32,000 km2), and including all of the historic Mississippi River floodplain.
References
- Physiographic sections
- Mississippi River
- Landforms of the United States
- Landforms of Missouri
- Landforms of Illinois
- Landforms of Kentucky
- Landforms of Arkansas
- Landforms of Tennessee
- Landforms of Mississippi
- Landforms of Louisiana
- Illinois geography stubs
- Missouri geography stubs
- Kentucky geography stubs
- Tennessee geography stubs
- Arkansas geography stubs
- Mississippi geography stubs
- Louisiana geography stubs