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Driftless Area

43°30′N 91°00′W / 43.5°N 91°W / 43.5; -91The Driftless Area, also known as Bluff Country and the Paleozoic Plateau, is a topographical and cultural region in the Midwestern United States[1] that comprises southwestern Wisconsin, southeastern Minnesota, northeastern Iowa, and the extreme northwestern corner of Illinois. The Driftless Area is a USDA Level III Ecoregion: Ecoregion 52. The Driftless Area takes up a large portion of the Upper Midwest forest–savanna transition. The Blufflands refers to the eastern section of the Driftless area in Minnesota, due to the steep bluffs and cliffs around the river valleys. The western half is known as the Rochester Plateau, which is flatter than the Blufflands.[2] The Coulee Region refers to the southwestern part of the Driftless Area in Wisconsin. It is named for its numerous ravines.

  Driftless Region
topographic map
Autumn in the Driftless Area of Cross Plains, Wisconsin

Never covered by ice during the last ice age, the area lacks the characteristic glacial deposits known as drift. Its landscape is characterized by steep hills, forested ridges, deeply carved river valleys, and karst geology with spring-fed waterfalls and cold-water trout streams. Ecologically, the Driftless Area's flora and fauna are more closely related to those of the Great Lakes region and New England than those of the broader Midwest and central Plains regions. The steep riverine landscape of both the Driftless Area proper and the surrounding Driftless-like region are the result of early glacial advances that forced preglacial rivers that flowed into the Great Lakes southward, causing them to carve a gorge across bedrock cuestas,[1] thereby forming the modern incised upper Mississippi River valley.[3][4] The region has elevations ranging from 603 to 1,719 feet (184 to 524 m) at Blue Mound State Park, and together with the Driftless-like region, covers 24,000 square miles (62,200 km2).[5]

Geologic origin edit

 
1911 Map showing extent of the Driftless Area as well as the Driftless region in Minnesota and Iowa.
 
Typical terrain of The Driftless Area as viewed from Wildcat Mountain State Park in Vernon County, Wisconsin
 
Glacial map of the Great Lakes region; the dark area near left center was not covered by drift. Areas with diagonal hatching were glaciated previously.

Retreating glaciers leave behind material called drift composed of silt, clay, sand, gravel, and boulders. Glacial drift includes unsorted material called till and layers deposited by meltwater streams called outwash.[6] While drift from early (pre-Illinoian) glaciations has been found in some parts of the region,[7][8][9] much of the incised Paleozoic Plateau of Wisconsin and northwestern Illinois has no evidence of glaciation.

Numerous glacial advances throughout the world occurred during the most recent Quaternary glaciation (also known as the Pleistocene glaciation). The Upper Midwest and Great Lakes region of North America was repeatedly covered by advancing and retreating glaciers throughout this period. The Driftless Area escaped much of the scouring and depositional action by the continental glaciers that occurred during the last ice age, which produced significant differences in the topography and drainage patterns within the unglaciated area compared to adjacent glaciated regions.

The region has been subjected to large floods from the melting Laurentide Ice Sheet and subsequent catastrophic discharges from its proglacial lakes, such as Glacial Lake Wisconsin, Glacial Lake Agassiz, Glacial Lake Grantsburg, and Glacial Lake Duluth.

The last phases of the Wisconsin Glaciation involved several major lobes of the Laurentide Ice Sheet: the Des Moines lobe, which flowed down toward Des Moines on the west; the Superior lobe and its sublobes on the north; and the Green Bay lobe and Lake Michigan lobes on the east.[10] The northern and eastern lobes were in part diverted around the area by the Watersmeet Dome, an ancient uplifted area of Cambrian rock underlain by basalt in northern Wisconsin and western upper Michigan. The southward movement of the continental glacier was also hindered by the great depths of the Lake Superior basin and the adjacent highlands of the Bayfield Peninsula, Gogebic Range, Porcupine Mountains, Keweenaw Peninsula, and the Huron Mountains along the north rim of the Superior Upland bordering Lake Superior. The Green Bay and Lake Michigan lobes were also partially blocked by the bedrock of the Door Peninsula, which presently separates Green Bay from Lake Michigan.[10]

Another factor that may have contributed to the lack of glaciation of the Driftless area is the fractured, permeable bedrock within the Paleozoic Plateau underlying it, which would have promoted below-ground drainage of subglacial water that would otherwise have lubricated the underside of the glacial ice sheet. The dewatering of the underside of the ice sheet would have inhibited forward movement of the glacier into the Driftless Area, especially from the west.

In the adjacent glaciated regions, the glacial retreat left behind drift, which buried all former topographical features. Surface water was forced to carve out new stream beds.[11] This process was absent in the Driftless Area, where the original drainage systems persisted during and after the ice age. Water erosion continued carving the existing gullies, ravines, stream beds, and river valleys ever deeper into the paleozoic plateau, following the original drainage patterns.

Characteristic landforms edit

 
Typical Driftless Area Scenery near Mazomanie, Wisconsin

Geology edit

 
Tablet Rock Overlook in Wisconsin's Devils Lake State Park, located in the Baraboo Range

Overall, the region is characterized by an eroded plateau, with bedrock overlain by varying thicknesses of loess. Most characteristically, the branching river valleys are deeply dissected. The bluffs lining this reach of the Mississippi River currently climb to nearly 600 feet (180 m). In Minnesota, pre-Illinoian-age till was probably removed by natural means prior to the deposition of loess. The sedimentary rocks of the valley walls date to the Paleozoic Era and are often covered with colluvium or loess.[12] Bedrock, where not directly exposed, is very near the surface and is composed of "primarily Ordovician dolomite, limestone, and sandstone in Minnesota, with Cambrian sandstone, shale, and dolomite exposed along the valley walls of the Mississippi River."[12] In the east, the Baraboo Range, an ancient, profoundly eroded monadnock in south central Wisconsin, consists primarily of Precambrian quartzite and rhyolite. The area has not undergone much tectonic action, as all the visible layers of sedimentary rock are approximately horizontal.

Karst topography is found throughout the Driftless area. This is characterized by caves and cave systems, disappearing streams, blind valleys, underground streams, sinkholes, springs, and cold streams. Disappearing streams occur where surface waters sink down into the earth through fractured bedrock or a sinkhole, either joining an aquifer, or becoming an underground stream. Blind valleys are formed by disappearing streams and lack an outlet to any other stream. Sinkholes result from the collapse of a cave's roof, and surface water can flow directly into them. Disappearing streams can re-emerge as large, cold springs. Cold streams with cold springs as their sources are superb trout habitat. Due to the rapid movement of underground water through regions with karst topography, groundwater contamination is a major concern in the Driftless area.

 
Minnesota sunset in Pleasant Hill Township

Rivers edit

 
Driftless Area Mississippi River by Genoa, Wisconsin

The Mississippi River passes through the Driftless Area between and including Pool 2 and Pool 13.

As rivers and streams approach their confluence with the Mississippi, their canyons grow progressively steeper and deeper, particularly in the last 25 miles (40 km) in their journey to their mouths. The change in elevation above sea level from ridgetops lining a stream to its confluence with the main-stem Mississippi can reach well past 650 feet (200 m) in only a few miles. The Waukon Municipal Airport is reliably established as being 1,281 feet (390 m) above sea level.[13] The Army Corps of Engineers maintains a river level in Pool 9 of about 619 feet (189 m) above sea level,[14] which covers Lansing. Maps and signs issued by the Iowa Department of Transportation indicate Waukon and Lansing are 17 miles (27 km) apart on Iowa Highway 9. This is a drop of more than 660 feet (200 m) in less than 20 miles (32 km) (and this along a very minor tributary of the Mississippi). "The role of isostatic rebound on the process of stream incision in the area is not clearly understood."[15]

There are many small towns in the Driftless Area, especially in river valleys, at or upstream from the Mississippi. Small towns in a deep steep valley going down to the Mississippi are at risk every 50 to 100 years or so of a major flood, as with the wreck of Gays Mills, Wisconsin, in August 2007, or the holding of the levee in Houston, Minnesota, (on the South Fork Root River) at the same time. Metropolitan areas have flood walls (See 2007 Midwest flooding). In August 2018, the region yet again experienced record-breaking flooding in valley towns such as Coon Valley, Wisconsin, La Farge, Wisconsin and Viola, Wisconsin. The Kickapoo River flood stage is 13 feet but was recorded as high as 23 feet during the 2018 flood which was declared a statewide emergency.[16] Many community members were rescued by boats sent by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.[17] Days later, when two dams in Ontario, Wisconsin broke, it produced flood water downstream in Readstown, Wisconsin, Soldiers Grove, Wisconsin, and Gays Mills, Wisconsin.[18]

The history of this portion of the Upper Mississippi River dates back to an origin "as an ice-marginal stream during what had been referred to as the “Nebraskan glaciation.”" Current terminology would place this outdated and abandoned period in the Pre-Illinoian Stage.[15] The level of erosion often exposes Cambrian limestone of about 510 million years of age.[19] Evidence from soil borings and recent Lidar imagery in the lower Wisconsin River valley in the Driftless area suggests that the river in the valley used to flow towards the east, rather than its present westerly course towards its confluence with the Mississippi River. This has led to the new hypothesis that the ancient Upper Mississippi River (also named the Wyalusing River) at one time flowed east through the current Wisconsin River valley and into the Great Lakes/Saint Laurence River system somewhere near the Door Peninsula. The hypothesis posits that the flow of the ancient Wyalusing River was ultimately captured by the ancestral Mississippi River to the south when that river eroded through the Military Ridge near Wyalusing State Park, possibly as a result of an ancient ice sheet in a previous continental glaciation blocking the Wyalusing River to the east. The resulting Proglacial lake would have filled the Wyalusing River valley until it overtopped the Military Ridge, ultimately carving through the ridge and draining the lake. This resulted in the ancient Upper Mississippi River changing course and flowing south towards the Gulf of Mexico, as it does currently, instead of east into the Saint Lawrence River and the North Atlantic Ocean. The Stream capture hypothesis for the Upper Mississippi River would have produced a substantial diversion of water from the Great Lakes Basin and the Saint Lawrence River, reducing the inflow of fresh water into the North Atlantic with possible impacts to Ocean currents and Climate.

The Mississippi River trench is one of the few places in the Driftless Area where the bedrock is very deep below the surface, and is overlain by large amounts of sediment.[20] As home to the formation of a substantial portion of the gorge of the Upper Mississippi, this enormous quantity of sediment goes down at least 300 feet (91 m) under the present riverbottom at the confluence of the Wisconsin River.[21] In contrast, as the Mississippi exits the Driftless Area "between Fulton and Muscatine, [... (Pool 13)], it flows over or near bedrock."[22] "The course of the upper Mississippi River along the margin of the Driftless Area of southeastern Minnesota is believed to have been established during pre-Wisconsin time, when a glacial advance from the west displaced the river eastward from central Iowa to its present position."[23]

 
Wisconsin River near Marietta, Wisconsin

Other rivers affected by this geologic process are:

Although lying just to the north of the Driftless Area, the Saint Croix in Wisconsin and Minnesota is another important river that affected the area, as it was the outlet for Glacial Lake Duluth, forerunner to Lake Superior, when the eastern outlet was blocked by the continental ice sheet. All major rivers in and adjacent to the Driftless Area have deep, dramatic canyons giving testimony to the immense quantity of water which once surged through them as a result of the nearby melting Glaciers associated with the miles-high Ice sheets during recurring Ice ages. Other examples include the Wisconsin River, which drained Glacial Lake Wisconsin, and Glacial River Warren (whose bed is now occupied by the Minnesota River), which drained the colossal Glacial Lake Agassiz. There was ample water to dig a very deep, hundreds-of-miles-long gash into the North American bedrock where the Upper Mississippi River now flows.

Ecosystem edit

 
USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Regional Map - North Central US

The climate is humid continental, displaying both the cool summer and warm summer subtypes as one travels from north to south.[24] The United States Department of Agriculture has the region falling mainly in zone 5a, with the northern fringe being 4b. A few patches in Wisconsin are 4a.

Prior to European settlement in the 19th century, the vegetation consisted of tallgrass prairie and bur oak savanna on ridgetops and dry upper slopes, sugar maple-basswood-oak forest on moister slopes, sugar maple-basswood forests in protected valleys and on north-facing slopes, wet prairies along the rivers, and some mesic prairie on the floodplain farther back from the river.[citation needed] There were probably also oak forests that contained no sugar maple. Marsh and floodplain forests were also common on river flood plains. Prairie was restricted primarily to the broader ridge tops, which were unfavorable sites for trees due to thin soils and shallow bedrock, rapid drainage, and desiccating winds; all these conditions were also good for carrying fires across the landscape. Prairies also occurred on steep slopes with south or southwest aspect (see goat prairie[12]). Natural fire, which has long been vigorously suppressed, was essential for the regeneration of such prairies.

Evidence of ancient extinct ice age animals that once inhabited the Driftless Area has been discovered over the years. An example of extinct Pleistocene megafauna in the area is the Boaz mastodon, a composite skeleton of two separate mastodons found in the 1890s in southwestern Wisconsin. Although evidence exists that mastodons inhabited mostly coniferous spruce forests associated with the taiga biome, it is likely that most or all of the Driftless Area was at times covered by tundra and permafrost during periods of glacial maximums.

 
Relief map of the central Driftless Area emphasizing the high density of trout waters in the region.

The Midwest Driftless Area Restoration Effort is a multi-agency cooperative effort to restore the landscape.[25] The main issues are water pollution from agricultural and animal runoff, and erosion.[citation needed] Many farmers in the region utilize contour plowing, strip cropping, and other agricultural practices to reduce soil erosion due to the hilly terrain. Water pollution is particularly critical in karsted regions such as this, in that it can degrade or destroy prime cold water fish habitat. Soil erosion presents the Army Corps of Engineers with a particular problem, in that it requires them to dredge the Mississippi River shipping channels to keep them open. Trout Unlimited is part of this effort, if only because of the superb cold-water streams the region supports.[26] A symposium was held in October 2007 in Decorah, Iowa, "to share the results of research, management and monitoring work in the Driftless Area."[27] The Nature Conservancy is also interested.

 
Iowa Pleistocene snail
 
Northern monkshood

The Driftless Area contains more than half of the world's algific talus slopes, a type of small, isolated ecosystem.[28] These refugia create cool summer and fall microclimates which host species usually found further north. They contain at least one endangered species, the Iowa Pleistocene Snail, and a threatened plant, the Northern monkshood.[29] The Driftless Area National Wildlife Refuge was primarily carved out of the Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife and Fish Refuge in order to protect these species and their associated ecosystems.

Isolated relic stands of pines and associated northern vegetation are found in some locations where algific talus slopes are present. These trees survive in the cooler microclimate produced at these locations outside of their current range further north.

A particularly noteworthy annual event is the rising of fishflies, a kind of mayfly endemic to the Mississippi valley in the region. These are aquatic insects attracted to light, which rise by the millions as adults to mate, only to die within hours.[30]

Wildlife is abundant with opportunities for hunting whitetail deer and wild turkey. Fishing, particularly for brown trout, brook trout, and rainbow trout in tributaries, and species such as channel catfish in the Mississippi is available, with ice fishing in winter.[31]

Other characteristics edit

The Driftless Area is part of the Mississippi Flyway. Many birds fly over the river in large flocks, going north in spring and south in autumn.

There are very few natural lakes in the region, these being found in adjoining areas of glacial till, drift, and in moraines; the region is extraordinarily well drained, and there is rarely a place where even a pond can naturally form. There are also very few dams in that the valley walls and floors are very often fissured or crumbly, or very porous, providing very poor anchors for a dam or making it difficult to keep any kind of reservoir appropriately filled. There are no real waterfalls, but some very strong springs bear the name.

A modern, man-made characteristic is the comparatively twisty nature of highways in the region, such as in Kentucky, in contrast to the usually rigid east-west/north-south alignment elsewhere in the Midwest[citation needed]. Here, the roads switchback up stream valleys or travel over ridge tops. The route of U.S. Highway 20 through the Driftless, and particularly in Illinois, is a good example.

Economy edit

Agriculture edit

The natural characteristics of the Driftless Area provide good conditions for growing crops and grazing livestock. In recent years, the region has generated much public interest in the organic and artisanal food market.

Organic dairy and beef production is of particular economic significance to the Driftless. Organic Valley, the largest organic dairy cooperative in the United States, was founded and is headquartered in La Farge, Wisconsin. The region's cheese production boasts specialty cheeses such as raw-milk artisan cheese, which is made from unpasteurized milk.[32] Organic dairy generally fits best with a grass-based milk production system.[33]

 
Primrose Winery, located in New Glarus, Wisconsin

The bioregion's economic and cultural characteristics were federally recognized with the granting of the Upper Mississippi River Valley (UMRV) viticultural area, the largest designated winemaking region in the country, by the Treasury Division's Tax and Trade Bureau in 2009. The petition for designation maintains the position that the region is a cohesive whole for marketing wine, and is now used to market other products.[34]

In addition to wine-grape production and wine-making, the region, especially in southeast Minnesota, is known for apple, maple syrup, and honey production. Tobacco was also once a key crop of the Driftless, as its topography and sandy, nutrient-rich soil are suitable for its growth.[35]

The Driftless Region Food and Farm Project, in partnership with the University of Wisconsin-Madison Center for Integrated Agricultural Systems, is a coalition of sustainable-agriculture farmers, processors, distributors, chefs, planning commissions, and other participants. The project seeks to define the culinary identity of the region and further direct the development of agritourism.[36]

Mining edit

Fine-grained silica sand is typical of the Driftless and is mined for use primarily in hydraulic fracturing, commonly known as "fracking".

 
Fine-grained silica sand is typical of the Driftless Area and is mined for use in hydraulic fracturing.

Due to the presence of sandstone bedrock at or near the surface, sand mining is an industrial activity in the Driftless, with Wisconsin at the forefront of the industry.[37] The sandstone contains quartz (silica) sand grains of the ideal hardness, shape, and size, which make it optimal for use in hydraulic fracturing by the petroleum and natural gas industries. The mining activity involves quarrying the sandstone bedrock by blasting with dynamite, crushing the rock, washing, drying, and grading the resulting sand, and transporting the sand out of the region via barge or train.[38] In 2017, there were 73 frac sand mines in operation in Wisconsin alone,[39] and there are currently five operating industrial sand mines in Minnesota;[40] the proliferation of sand mines in the region created new jobs and generated economic activity. But the prominence of industry has raised concerns about impacts on water quality, air pollution caused by silica dust, noise and light pollution, heavy truck traffic, and the destruction of hills and ridges for which the region is known.[41] Recently, industry changes have caused companies such as Hi-Crush, Covia, Superior Silica Sands— all with operations in Wisconsin—to liquidate their frac sand mines and declare bankruptcy.[42]

Geographic extent edit

Minnesota edit

 
Mississippi River from Frontenac State Park, Minnesota (USDA, Natural Resources Conservation Service)

Corresponding to the southeast geological region of Minnesota, the colloquial "Driftless Area" (though the whole region was glaciated) begins at about Fort Snelling. Starting as a narrow sliver against the Mississippi, it widens to the west as one goes south. The western boundary is the Bemis-Altamont moraine.[43][44] Another more easily located reference to the western boundary is the approximate line of Minnesota State Highway 56.

The upland plateau lies west of the incised tributaries to the Mississippi. The historic vegetation was mixed woodland, with occasional goat prairies on southwesterly facing slopes.[45] In the western section is "an old plateau covered by loess [...] along the eastern border and pre-Wisconsin age glacial till in the central and western parts. The western portion is a gently rolling glacial till plain that is covered by loess in places."[44]

The counties involved include all or part of Dakota, Goodhue, Rice, Wabasha, Winona, Olmsted, Dodge, Houston, Fillmore, and Mower. Aside from the southeastern suburban sprawl of the Twin Cities, Rochester is the main urban area. Additional communities include Red Wing, Lake City, Winona, La Crescent, Chatfield, Lanesboro, Rushford, Houston, and Caledonia.

Glacial River Warren, in whose bed the Minnesota River now flows, entered the "Driftless Area" just downriver from present-day Minneapolis-Saint Paul, at Fort Snelling, over River Warren Falls, "an impressive 2700 feet (823 m) across and 175 feet (53 m) tall, over 10 times as wide as Niagara falls"[46] (this has since receded to become Saint Anthony Falls). The region is characterized "by the absence of glacial drift deposits, the sculpted topography, and the presence of the ancient limestone immediately beneath the soil and in cliff outcroppings."[47] The Minnesota Driftless Area did not reach the Twin Cities or any areas to the north or west of them; rather, the Twin Cities marked the edge of glaciation, with substantial terminal moraines overlying the region.[48]

The largest protected area is Richard J. Dorer Memorial Hardwood State Forest, which contains some state-owned land, but is mostly private, controlled by state conservation easements.

Wisconsin edit

 
Sugar Creek Bluffs in Crawford County, Wisconsin
 
Extent of glaciation in Wisconsin
 
Driftless Area by Bangor, Wisconsin
 
Driftless Region Eastern side where I-90 enters the Driftless area

Around 85% of the Driftless Area lies within Wisconsin, comprising much of the southwestern quarter of the state. The border is defined by the catchment of the Chippewa River on the north, and somewhat west (or east, depending on if the southwestern portion of Wisconsin's Central Plain is included) of the north-south line of the Wisconsin River. Where the Wisconsin River turns west to join the Mississippi, the area to the south, including the whole of Grant County as well as most of Lafayette County, are part of the Driftless Area.

The rugged terrain comprising most of the Driftless Area is distinct from the rest of Wisconsin, and is known locally as the Coulee Region. The steep ridges, numerous rock outcroppings, and deep, narrow valleys in the Driftless Area are in marked contrast with the rest of the state, where glaciers have modified the landscape. The hilly unglaciated landscape is well represented in Wisconsin's Coulee Experimental State Forest, Wildcat Mountain State Park, Governor Dodge State Park, Perrot State Park, and the Kickapoo Valley Reserve.

Karst topography is most prominent in Wisconsin. Eagle Cave in Blue River, WI and Cave of the Mounds, near Blue Mounds, WI, are better known examples.

The Driftless Area is located in all or part of Pierce, Pepin, Eau Claire, Buffalo, Trempealeau, Jackson, La Crosse, Monroe, Juneau, Vernon, Richland, Sauk, Crawford, Iowa, Dane, Green, Grant, and Lafayette counties. If the less restrictive definition of the Driftless Area is used (which includes the unglaciated southwestern portion of Wisconsin's Central Plain), then Adams and portions of southern Wood and Portage counties are also included. La Crosse is the principal urban area wholly within the Driftless Area, while the larger Madison's far western suburbs are located on the edges of the area. Small cities and towns are scattered throughout the region. Numerous Amish settlements are also located within Wisconsin's Driftless Area.

The U.S. Army maintains a presence at Fort McCoy, Wisconsin in Monroe County between Sparta and Tomah immediately south of the Black River State Forest. The property is used mainly for military training exercises, although troops have also been based there for deployments overseas.

The Coulee Region portion of the Driftless Area comprises much of Wisconsin's Western Upland geographical region. The most rugged part of Wisconsin's Driftless area is also called the Ocooch Mountains.

Largely rural in character, land cover is forest, farmland, and grassland/pasture; modest wetlands are found in river valleys, and along the Mississippi.[49] Row crop farming is less encountered than elsewhere in the state.[50] Away from the Mississippi, Wisconsin, and other major rivers, much of the terrain is gently rolling, supporting dairy farms. In other areas, the rugged nature of the topography in the region is not conducive to farming, except on ridge tops and in river valleys. The sides of the ridges are often too steep for farming, and are usually forested. The Coulee Experimental State Forest near La Crosse was created in part to test soil conservation practices to prevent soil erosion in the hilly Driftless Area.

The northeastern portion of the Driftless area was covered by or bordered by Glacial Lake Wisconsin during the Wisconsin glaciation. The steep-sided rocky bluffs present in Roche-a-Cri State Park and Mill Bluff State Park are Cambrian outliers of the Franconia cuesta to the southwest and were once islands or sea stacks in the ancient lake. The flat plain in which these bluffs lie is located in the southwest portion of Wisconsin's Central Plain geographic region, and was formed in part by sediments falling to the bottom of Glacial Lake Wisconsin. This flat plain consists of sandy deposits and contains many bogs that were left over from Glacial Lake Wisconsin. Many of these bogs have been converted into cranberry marshes, helping to make Wisconsin a leader in cranberry production. The remainder of the sand plain consists of forest and irrigated farmland. The Dells of the Wisconsin River were carved through the bedrock during the sudden draining of Glacial Lake Wisconsin at the end of the last ice age.

Due to the lack of natural lakes in the Coulee region, several large artificial lakes have been constructed for flood control and recreational purposes, including Dutch Hollow Lake and Lake Redstone in Sauk County, Blackhawk Lake in Iowa County, and Yellowstone Lake (in Yellowstone State Park) in Lafayette County. Plans for a large reservoir on the Kickapoo River at La Farge, Wisconsin were dropped in 1975 after much controversy due to cost-benefit and environmental concerns. Land previously acquired for the reservoir became the Kickapoo Valley Reserve, an 8,569 acre public forest and wildlife area.

Wazee Lake, at 355 feet (108 m) deep, is Wisconsin's deepest inland lake, and is located in Jackson County in the northeast portion of the Driftless area. The artificial lake lies in the former open pit Jackson County Iron Mine and is the centerpiece of the Wazee Lake Recreation Area. Due to its great depth, vertical underwater cliffs, clear water, and submerged mining features, the lake is popular with scuba divers.

The highest point in the Driftless area is West Blue Mound, with an elevation of 1,719 feet (524 m).[51][52] The feature is located in Blue Mound State Park, in Iowa County.

During the 19th and early 20th centuries, lead and zinc mining was a major industrial activity in the Driftless Area, drawing many foreign immigrants to settle in the region to work in the mines. Early miners often lived in the mine tunnels, leading outsiders to compare them to the burrowing badger; a nickname that eventually came to be used for all Wisconsin residents. An example of an early lead shot tower and smelting house is preserved in Tower Hill State Park.

Due to the influx of early miners, the lead mining region became Wisconsin's most populous area at the time. The first capitol of the Wisconsin Territory was located for a short time at Belmont, Lafayette County in the heart of the lead mining region. The site of the first capitol is preserved at the First Capitol Historic Site.

Three units of the Ice Age National Scientific Reserve are located within or adjacent to the Driftless Area: Devil's Lake State Park, Mill Bluff State Park, and Cross Plains State Park. In addition, the Ice Age Trail follows the Terminal moraine of the maximum glacial extent from the last ice age and enters the Driftless Area in several locations.

Other notable natural features include the Baraboo Range (consisting of two heavily forested, steep, rocky quartzite ridges with mountain-type scenery), rock formations in Natural Bridge State Park (Wisconsin), the forested bluffs, floodplains, islands, and sandbars in the Lower Wisconsin River State Riverway, the confluence of the Wisconsin River with the Mississippi River at Wyalusing State Park, Trempealeau Mountain State Natural Area in the Mississippi River valley at Perrot State Park, and the gorge and rock formations surrounding the Wisconsin River at the Dells of the Wisconsin River. The Black River State Forest protects a large area of the North Woods, rocky bluffs, sandy plains, and river shoreline on the northeastern edge of the Driftless Area that provides habitat for several wolf packs and one of Wisconsin's reintroduced elk herds.

Iowa edit

 
Aerial view looking north, April 14, 2001, with the Upper Mississippi River at floodstage. At center, the Black Hawk Bridge is visible. Big Lake is immediately north. Just south of the bridge one can see the mouth of Clear Creek, and just south of this, the mouth of Village Creek. The rugged nature of the Driftless Area is evident.

An area in northeast Iowa that shares similar topographic characteristics to the Driftless Area in southeastern Wisconsin is the Paleozoic Plateau.[53] For counties inland from the Mississippi, evidence is largely confined to the valleys of streams and rivers. It encompasses all of Allamakee, and part of Clayton, Fayette, Delaware, Winneshiek, Howard, Dubuque, and Jackson Counties. Dubuque is the only metropolitan area.

The region is distinct from the "Iowan Erosion Surface to the west and the Southern Iowa Drift Plain to the south."[15] A line east of the most easterly tributaries of the Wapsipinicon River defines the western boundary of the landform region, with the catchment of the Maquoketa River south of Bellevue serving as a southern boundary. The most western tributaries of the Upper Iowa, Yellow, and Turkey Rivers flow east and south from the vicinity of this moraine.

Outside of Dubuque, this region of Iowa is thinly populated. In the western section, agriculture and livestock raising are the norm. As one travels east, and as the valleys tumble down to the Mississippi, much of the land is virtually wild, with a great deal of it publicly owned. The state maintains an extensive number of wildlife management areas, along with state forests and state parks.

The most impressive area is on the Mississippi, between Pikes Peak State Park, opposite the Wisconsin River down to Guttenberg, where bluffs lining the river reach their maximum height. This is apparently an Iowa continuation of Military Ridge, a catchment-defining divide in Wisconsin that was used for the Military Ridge Road, a portion of which is included in Military Ridge State Trail, both across the River in Wisconsin.

Effigy Mounds National Monument is at the heart of a network of adjacent parks, state forests, preserves, as well as national wildlife refuges, all of which preserve and illustrate the features of the Driftless, where "patchy remnants of Pre-Illinoian glacial drift more than 500,000 years old recently have been discovered in the area."[54] Additional protected areas are Cold Water Spring State Preserve near Decorah, Maquoketa Caves State Park northwest of Maquoketa, Bellevue State Park adjacent to Bellevue, White Pine Hollow State Forest (which protects Iowa's only remaining groves of old-growth white pine trees) near Dubuque, and the Yellow River State Forest in the southeastern corner of Allamakee County, Iowa.

Illinois edit

 
Charles Mound, the highest natural point in Illinois at 1,235 feet (376 m) NAVD 88,[55] is located in the Illinois portion of the Driftless Area.

The Illinois portion of the Driftless Area is confined mainly to Jo Daviess County; western parts of Carroll County (the Mississippi River bluffs characteristic of the Driftless terminate around Savanna) and a tiny portion of northwest Whiteside County are also included.[56] The region contains the highest points in the state, of which "the most notable are Charles Mound and Benton Mound, rising to heights of 1,246 feet (380 m) and 1,226 feet (374 m) respectively."[57] The region "has many sinkholes and sinkhole ponds."[58]

The valley of the Apple River has a major canyon, with Apple River Canyon occupying much of it. The mouth of this river, near Hanover adjacent to the former Savanna Army Depot, comes close to the southern end of the Driftless Area on the eastern side of the Mississippi (see Lock and Dam No. 13).[citation needed]

As in Wisconsin, the Illinois portion of the driftless area was a major early center for lead and zinc mining.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Geology of the Driftless Area". The Physical Geography and Geology of the Driftless Area: The Career and Contributions of James C. Knox. 2019. pp. 1–35. doi:10.1130/2019.2543(01). ISBN 9780813725437. S2CID 204258118.
  2. ^ "Rochester Plateau and Blufflands". Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. Retrieved 2023-11-28.
  3. ^ Carson, Eric C.; Rawling, J. Elmo III; Attig, John W.; Bates, Benjamin R. (2018). "Late Cenozoic Evolution of the Upper Mississippi River, Stream Piracy, and Reorganization of North American Mid-Continent Drainage Systems". GSA Today: 4–11. doi:10.1130/GSATG355A.1.
  4. ^ Wickert, Andrew D.; Anderson, Robert S.; Mitrovica, Jerry X.; Naylor, Shawn; Carson, Eric C. (2019). "The Mississippi River records glacial-isostatic deformation of North America". Science Advances. 5 (1): eaav2366. Bibcode:2019SciA....5.2366W. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aav2366. PMC 6353627. PMID 30729164.
  5. ^ U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service. Driftless Area Landscape Conservation Initiative 2017-08-26 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved August 25, 2017.
  6. ^ "The Driftless Area" 2007-08-25 at the Wayback Machine, Minnesota Conservation Volunteer, March 2007 (popular article from the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (MDNR)), Retrieved July 7, 2007
  7. ^ "Regional Landscape Ecosystems of Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin: Section IV. Driftless Area" 2008-03-27 at the Wayback Machine, USGS, Retrieved July 13, 2007; another government site, "Driftless Area Initiative" 2008-03-28 at the Wayback Machine, USDA, retrieved July 15, 2007, gives 24,103 square miles (62,430 km2) and 15,425,063 acres (6,242,302 ha)
  8. ^ "Yellow River State Forest" July 14, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, Iowa Department of Natural Resources (IDNR), Retrieved July 7, 2007
  9. ^ Byron Crowns. "Wisconsin through 5 Billion Years of Change", Wisconsin Earth Science Center, 1976, Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin, p. 131, LCCN 76-46151
  10. ^ a b [1] May 3, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ "Native American use of the Mississippi River" 2020-02-12 at the Wayback Machine. Archaeology Education Program, vol. 22, no. 2 (Fall 2004):1. Retrieved January 25, 2018.
  12. ^ a b c Regional Landscape Ecosystems of Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, Section IV, Driftless Area 2008-03-27 at the Wayback Machine, National Park Service, Retrieved July 9, 2007 (A statement from this copyright-free site has been freely paraphrased.)
  13. ^ "Y01 - Waukon Municipal Airport". AirNav.com. AirNav, LLC. Retrieved May 1, 2014.
  14. ^ "Station Information for Mississippi River at Lock and Dam 9 (Lynxville, WI)". Rivergages.com. Army Corps of Engineers. Retrieved May 1, 2014.
  15. ^ a b c Stephanie A. Tassier-Surine, (Iowa Department of Natural Resources, Geological Survey Bureau), Quaternary Geology of the Paleozoic Plateau Region of Northeastern Iowa 2011-07-26 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved July 30, 2007
  16. ^ "Walker Declares Statewide Emergency After Storms Ravage Communities". Wisconsin Public Radio. 2018-08-29. Retrieved 2019-02-06.
  17. ^ Tribune, Mike Tighe La Crosse. "La Farge grapples not only with flooding but also no power". La Crosse Tribune. Retrieved 2019-02-06.
  18. ^ Broadcaster, Angela Cina Vernon County. "Vernon County's Jersey Valley, Mlsna dams fail due to heavy rains". La Crosse Tribune. Retrieved 2019-02-06.
  19. ^ Watershed Description 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine of the Upper Iowa River, Northeastiowarcd.org, Retrieved August 5, 2007
  20. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-07-11. Retrieved 2007-07-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  21. ^ "Geology of Pikes Peak State Park 2007-07-11 at the Wayback Machine, Iowa Department of Natural Resources, Retrieved July 13, 2007
  22. ^ Charles Theiling, "River Geomorphology and Floodplain Habitats", p. 1 (*.pdf), USGS, Retrieved July 12, 2007
  23. ^ Thomas Madigan, "The Geology of the MNRRA Corridor", p. 26, National Park Service, Retrieved July 23, 2007
  24. ^ Michael E. Ritter,"Humid Continental Climate" May 30, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point, 2006, Retrieved August 11, 2007
  25. ^ "Driftless Area Restoration Effort". Trout Unlimited. Retrieved May 1, 2014.
  26. ^ [2] March 26, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  27. ^ “Science in the Driftless Area”, Announcement and Call for Papers, Deadline August 24, 2007 March 26, 2008, at the Wayback Machine (press release), Again retrieved with different URL, November 16, 2007
  28. ^ Epstein, E.E. (2017). "Natural communities, aquatic features, and selected habitats of Wisconsin" (PDF). The ecological land- scapes of Wisconsin: An assessment of ecological resources and a guide to planning sustainable management. Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  29. ^ Driftless Area National Wildlife Refuge Comprehensive Conservation Plan 2007-08-10 at the Wayback Machine, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Retrieved July 23, 2007
  30. ^ Parfin, Sophy I. (1952). "The Megaloptera and Neuroptera of Minnesota". The American Midland Naturalist. University of Notre Dame. 47 (2): 421–34. doi:10.2307/2422271. ISSN 1938-4238. JSTOR 2422271.; other more anecdotal sites give a fuller feeling for the scope of the annual invasion, e.g., Wonderful Wacky Water Critters 2007-08-10 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 8, 2007
  31. ^ Dahlke 2018-10-01T12:55:00-04:00, Josh (23 January 2019). "Fishing the Driftless Area: The Best Kept Secret in the Trout World". Outdoor Life. Retrieved 2019-04-09.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  32. ^ CDC (2017-09-01). "Raw Milk Questions and Answers". Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Retrieved 2021-11-11.
  33. ^ "Transitioning to Organic Dairy Production" (PDF). Midwest Organic and Sustainable Education Service. 2012.
  34. ^ "T.D. TTB-77, Establishment of the Upper Mississippi River Valley Viticultural Area". Regulations.gov. June 21, 2009. from the original on 2021-11-09.
  35. ^ Raitz, Karl B.; Mather, Cotton (1971). "Norwegians and Tobacco in Western Wisconsin". Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 61 (4): 684–696. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8306.1971.tb00818.x. ISSN 0004-5608. JSTOR 2562390.
  36. ^ "About | Driftless Region Food & Farm Project". Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  37. ^ "Overview of Frac Sand Mining". www.uwrf.edu. Retrieved 2021-11-11.
  38. ^ "Wisconsin Geological & Natural History Survey » Frac sand: How is it mined?". wgnhs.wisc.edu. Retrieved 2021-11-11.
  39. ^ "Sand Rush in Wisconsin". earthobservatory.nasa.gov. 2018-03-14. Retrieved 2021-11-11.
  40. ^ "DNR and Silica Sand". Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  41. ^ "Air Quality: Respirable Crystalline Silica from Sand Mining". Wisconsin Department of Health Services. 2021-01-12. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  42. ^ Kremer, Rich (2021-05-24). "Frac Sand Company Liquidating Western Wisconsin Mine". Wisconsin Public Radio. Retrieved 2021-11-11.
  43. ^ . Archived from the original on March 28, 2008. Retrieved July 9, 2007.
  44. ^ a b "Rochester Plateau Subsection", Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, Retrieved July 23, 2007
  45. ^ "ECS: Paleozoic Plateau Section: Minnesota DNR". Dnr.state.mn.us. Retrieved 2015-03-01.
  46. ^ Scott Anfinson, "Archaeology of the Central Minneapolis Riverfront", The Institute for Minnesota Archaeology, 1989, Retrieved July 8, 2007
  47. ^ Nancy Kleven, "The Driftless Area Of Minnesota", Winter 1989, Minnesota Plant Press, 8(2) (online)
  48. ^ "Map of moraines in Twin Cities area". Winona.edu. Retrieved 2015-03-01.
  49. ^ "Blufflands and Driftless Area" 2007-06-26 at the Wayback Machine, Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin, Retrieved July 30, 2007
  50. ^ Regional Assessment of the Wisconsin Driftless Natural Division 2007-08-10 at the Wayback Machine, Illinois Department of Natural Resources, Retrieved July 30, 2007
  51. ^ (PDF). Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau. July 2005. pp. 691–694. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 24, 2009. Retrieved May 1, 2014. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  52. ^ Find Maps | Find Maps 2009-01-05 at the Wayback Machine. Sco.wisc.edu. Retrieved on July 21, 2013.
  53. ^ "Landforms of Iowa" (PDF). Uni.edu. Retrieved 2015-03-01.
  54. ^ "Effigy Mounds Historic Resource Study", Chapter 3, Environment 2007-05-19 at the Wayback Machine, National Park Service, Retrieved July 8, 2007
  55. ^ "Charles". NGS Data Sheet. National Geodetic Survey, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, United States Department of Commerce. Retrieved 2008-12-17.
  56. ^ "Illinois Natural History Survey, 1996". Inhs.uiuc.edu. Retrieved July 7, 2007.
  57. ^ . Illinois Department of Natural Resources. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved July 9, 2014.
  58. ^ "Illinois' Natural Divisions" 2008-01-12 at the Wayback Machine, Illinois Department of Natural Resources, Retrieved July 12, 2007

External links edit

  • "Decoding the Driftless" movie, 2018, created by Sustainable Driftless, Inc., dedicated to inspiring resource conservation and sustainable growth in the Driftless Region.
  • A Sand County Almanac: A book written by Aldo Leopold about the flora and fauna in the Coulee region.
  • "Driftless Area National Wildlife Refuge", Retrieved July 23, 2007
  • Retrieved July 7, 2007
  • Retrieved July 7, 2007
  • Retrieved July 2, 2014
  • Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey map showing extent of last glaciation
  • Driftless Region Food and Farm Project
  • Driftless Area Magazine

driftless, area, movie, also, known, bluff, country, paleozoic, plateau, topographical, cultural, region, midwestern, united, states, that, comprises, southwestern, wisconsin, southeastern, minnesota, northeastern, iowa, extreme, northwestern, corner, illinois. For the movie see The Driftless Area 43 30 N 91 00 W 43 5 N 91 W 43 5 91 The Driftless Area also known as Bluff Country and the Paleozoic Plateau is a topographical and cultural region in the Midwestern United States 1 that comprises southwestern Wisconsin southeastern Minnesota northeastern Iowa and the extreme northwestern corner of Illinois The Driftless Area is a USDA Level III Ecoregion Ecoregion 52 The Driftless Area takes up a large portion of the Upper Midwest forest savanna transition The Blufflands refers to the eastern section of the Driftless area in Minnesota due to the steep bluffs and cliffs around the river valleys The western half is known as the Rochester Plateau which is flatter than the Blufflands 2 The Coulee Region refers to the southwestern part of the Driftless Area in Wisconsin It is named for its numerous ravines Driftless Region topographic mapAutumn in the Driftless Area of Cross Plains WisconsinNever covered by ice during the last ice age the area lacks the characteristic glacial deposits known as drift Its landscape is characterized by steep hills forested ridges deeply carved river valleys and karst geology with spring fed waterfalls and cold water trout streams Ecologically the Driftless Area s flora and fauna are more closely related to those of the Great Lakes region and New England than those of the broader Midwest and central Plains regions The steep riverine landscape of both the Driftless Area proper and the surrounding Driftless like region are the result of early glacial advances that forced preglacial rivers that flowed into the Great Lakes southward causing them to carve a gorge across bedrock cuestas 1 thereby forming the modern incised upper Mississippi River valley 3 4 The region has elevations ranging from 603 to 1 719 feet 184 to 524 m at Blue Mound State Park and together with the Driftless like region covers 24 000 square miles 62 200 km2 5 Contents 1 Geologic origin 2 Characteristic landforms 2 1 Geology 2 2 Rivers 2 3 Ecosystem 2 4 Other characteristics 3 Economy 3 1 Agriculture 3 2 Mining 4 Geographic extent 4 1 Minnesota 4 2 Wisconsin 4 3 Iowa 4 4 Illinois 5 References 6 External linksGeologic origin edit nbsp 1911 Map showing extent of the Driftless Area as well as the Driftless region in Minnesota and Iowa nbsp Typical terrain of The Driftless Area as viewed from Wildcat Mountain State Park in Vernon County Wisconsin nbsp Glacial map of the Great Lakes region the dark area near left center was not covered by drift Areas with diagonal hatching were glaciated previously Retreating glaciers leave behind material called drift composed of silt clay sand gravel and boulders Glacial drift includes unsorted material called till and layers deposited by meltwater streams called outwash 6 While drift from early pre Illinoian glaciations has been found in some parts of the region 7 8 9 much of the incised Paleozoic Plateau of Wisconsin and northwestern Illinois has no evidence of glaciation Numerous glacial advances throughout the world occurred during the most recent Quaternary glaciation also known as the Pleistocene glaciation The Upper Midwest and Great Lakes region of North America was repeatedly covered by advancing and retreating glaciers throughout this period The Driftless Area escaped much of the scouring and depositional action by the continental glaciers that occurred during the last ice age which produced significant differences in the topography and drainage patterns within the unglaciated area compared to adjacent glaciated regions The region has been subjected to large floods from the melting Laurentide Ice Sheet and subsequent catastrophic discharges from its proglacial lakes such as Glacial Lake Wisconsin Glacial Lake Agassiz Glacial Lake Grantsburg and Glacial Lake Duluth The last phases of the Wisconsin Glaciation involved several major lobes of the Laurentide Ice Sheet the Des Moines lobe which flowed down toward Des Moines on the west the Superior lobe and its sublobes on the north and the Green Bay lobe and Lake Michigan lobes on the east 10 The northern and eastern lobes were in part diverted around the area by the Watersmeet Dome an ancient uplifted area of Cambrian rock underlain by basalt in northern Wisconsin and western upper Michigan The southward movement of the continental glacier was also hindered by the great depths of the Lake Superior basin and the adjacent highlands of the Bayfield Peninsula Gogebic Range Porcupine Mountains Keweenaw Peninsula and the Huron Mountains along the north rim of the Superior Upland bordering Lake Superior The Green Bay and Lake Michigan lobes were also partially blocked by the bedrock of the Door Peninsula which presently separates Green Bay from Lake Michigan 10 Another factor that may have contributed to the lack of glaciation of the Driftless area is the fractured permeable bedrock within the Paleozoic Plateau underlying it which would have promoted below ground drainage of subglacial water that would otherwise have lubricated the underside of the glacial ice sheet The dewatering of the underside of the ice sheet would have inhibited forward movement of the glacier into the Driftless Area especially from the west In the adjacent glaciated regions the glacial retreat left behind drift which buried all former topographical features Surface water was forced to carve out new stream beds 11 This process was absent in the Driftless Area where the original drainage systems persisted during and after the ice age Water erosion continued carving the existing gullies ravines stream beds and river valleys ever deeper into the paleozoic plateau following the original drainage patterns Characteristic landforms edit nbsp Typical Driftless Area Scenery near Mazomanie WisconsinGeology edit nbsp Tablet Rock Overlook in Wisconsin s Devils Lake State Park located in the Baraboo RangeOverall the region is characterized by an eroded plateau with bedrock overlain by varying thicknesses of loess Most characteristically the branching river valleys are deeply dissected The bluffs lining this reach of the Mississippi River currently climb to nearly 600 feet 180 m In Minnesota pre Illinoian age till was probably removed by natural means prior to the deposition of loess The sedimentary rocks of the valley walls date to the Paleozoic Era and are often covered with colluvium or loess 12 Bedrock where not directly exposed is very near the surface and is composed of primarily Ordovician dolomite limestone and sandstone in Minnesota with Cambrian sandstone shale and dolomite exposed along the valley walls of the Mississippi River 12 In the east the Baraboo Range an ancient profoundly eroded monadnock in south central Wisconsin consists primarily of Precambrian quartzite and rhyolite The area has not undergone much tectonic action as all the visible layers of sedimentary rock are approximately horizontal Karst topography is found throughout the Driftless area This is characterized by caves and cave systems disappearing streams blind valleys underground streams sinkholes springs and cold streams Disappearing streams occur where surface waters sink down into the earth through fractured bedrock or a sinkhole either joining an aquifer or becoming an underground stream Blind valleys are formed by disappearing streams and lack an outlet to any other stream Sinkholes result from the collapse of a cave s roof and surface water can flow directly into them Disappearing streams can re emerge as large cold springs Cold streams with cold springs as their sources are superb trout habitat Due to the rapid movement of underground water through regions with karst topography groundwater contamination is a major concern in the Driftless area nbsp Minnesota sunset in Pleasant Hill Township Rivers edit nbsp Dresbach Minnesota on the Upper Mississippi River nbsp Driftless Area Mississippi River by Genoa Wisconsin The Mississippi River passes through the Driftless Area between and including Pool 2 and Pool 13 As rivers and streams approach their confluence with the Mississippi their canyons grow progressively steeper and deeper particularly in the last 25 miles 40 km in their journey to their mouths The change in elevation above sea level from ridgetops lining a stream to its confluence with the main stem Mississippi can reach well past 650 feet 200 m in only a few miles The Waukon Municipal Airport is reliably established as being 1 281 feet 390 m above sea level 13 The Army Corps of Engineers maintains a river level in Pool 9 of about 619 feet 189 m above sea level 14 which covers Lansing Maps and signs issued by the Iowa Department of Transportation indicate Waukon and Lansing are 17 miles 27 km apart on Iowa Highway 9 This is a drop of more than 660 feet 200 m in less than 20 miles 32 km and this along a very minor tributary of the Mississippi The role of isostatic rebound on the process of stream incision in the area is not clearly understood 15 There are many small towns in the Driftless Area especially in river valleys at or upstream from the Mississippi Small towns in a deep steep valley going down to the Mississippi are at risk every 50 to 100 years or so of a major flood as with the wreck of Gays Mills Wisconsin in August 2007 or the holding of the levee in Houston Minnesota on the South Fork Root River at the same time Metropolitan areas have flood walls See 2007 Midwest flooding In August 2018 the region yet again experienced record breaking flooding in valley towns such as Coon Valley Wisconsin La Farge Wisconsin and Viola Wisconsin The Kickapoo River flood stage is 13 feet but was recorded as high as 23 feet during the 2018 flood which was declared a statewide emergency 16 Many community members were rescued by boats sent by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources 17 Days later when two dams in Ontario Wisconsin broke it produced flood water downstream in Readstown Wisconsin Soldiers Grove Wisconsin and Gays Mills Wisconsin 18 The history of this portion of the Upper Mississippi River dates back to an origin as an ice marginal stream during what had been referred to as the Nebraskan glaciation Current terminology would place this outdated and abandoned period in the Pre Illinoian Stage 15 The level of erosion often exposes Cambrian limestone of about 510 million years of age 19 Evidence from soil borings and recent Lidar imagery in the lower Wisconsin River valley in the Driftless area suggests that the river in the valley used to flow towards the east rather than its present westerly course towards its confluence with the Mississippi River This has led to the new hypothesis that the ancient Upper Mississippi River also named the Wyalusing River at one time flowed east through the current Wisconsin River valley and into the Great Lakes Saint Laurence River system somewhere near the Door Peninsula The hypothesis posits that the flow of the ancient Wyalusing River was ultimately captured by the ancestral Mississippi River to the south when that river eroded through the Military Ridge near Wyalusing State Park possibly as a result of an ancient ice sheet in a previous continental glaciation blocking the Wyalusing River to the east The resulting Proglacial lake would have filled the Wyalusing River valley until it overtopped the Military Ridge ultimately carving through the ridge and draining the lake This resulted in the ancient Upper Mississippi River changing course and flowing south towards the Gulf of Mexico as it does currently instead of east into the Saint Lawrence River and the North Atlantic Ocean The Stream capture hypothesis for the Upper Mississippi River would have produced a substantial diversion of water from the Great Lakes Basin and the Saint Lawrence River reducing the inflow of fresh water into the North Atlantic with possible impacts to Ocean currents and Climate The Mississippi River trench is one of the few places in the Driftless Area where the bedrock is very deep below the surface and is overlain by large amounts of sediment 20 As home to the formation of a substantial portion of the gorge of the Upper Mississippi this enormous quantity of sediment goes down at least 300 feet 91 m under the present riverbottom at the confluence of the Wisconsin River 21 In contrast as the Mississippi exits the Driftless Area between Fulton and Muscatine Pool 13 it flows over or near bedrock 22 The course of the upper Mississippi River along the margin of the Driftless Area of southeastern Minnesota is believed to have been established during pre Wisconsin time when a glacial advance from the west displaced the river eastward from central Iowa to its present position 23 nbsp Wisconsin River near Marietta WisconsinOther rivers affected by this geologic process are In Wisconsin the Chippewa Trempealeau La Crosse Black Baraboo Pecatonica and Wisconsin Rivers along with the Wisconsin River s tributary the Kickapoo River In Minnesota the Whitewater Cannon Zumbro and Root rivers In Iowa the Upper Iowa and Paint Creek Yellow Turkey and Maquoketa rivers In Illinois the Apple River and the Galena River a k a the Fever River Although lying just to the north of the Driftless Area the Saint Croix in Wisconsin and Minnesota is another important river that affected the area as it was the outlet for Glacial Lake Duluth forerunner to Lake Superior when the eastern outlet was blocked by the continental ice sheet All major rivers in and adjacent to the Driftless Area have deep dramatic canyons giving testimony to the immense quantity of water which once surged through them as a result of the nearby melting Glaciers associated with the miles high Ice sheets during recurring Ice ages Other examples include the Wisconsin River which drained Glacial Lake Wisconsin and Glacial River Warren whose bed is now occupied by the Minnesota River which drained the colossal Glacial Lake Agassiz There was ample water to dig a very deep hundreds of miles long gash into the North American bedrock where the Upper Mississippi River now flows Ecosystem edit nbsp USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Regional Map North Central USThe climate is humid continental displaying both the cool summer and warm summer subtypes as one travels from north to south 24 The United States Department of Agriculture has the region falling mainly in zone 5a with the northern fringe being 4b A few patches in Wisconsin are 4a Prior to European settlement in the 19th century the vegetation consisted of tallgrass prairie and bur oak savanna on ridgetops and dry upper slopes sugar maple basswood oak forest on moister slopes sugar maple basswood forests in protected valleys and on north facing slopes wet prairies along the rivers and some mesic prairie on the floodplain farther back from the river citation needed There were probably also oak forests that contained no sugar maple Marsh and floodplain forests were also common on river flood plains Prairie was restricted primarily to the broader ridge tops which were unfavorable sites for trees due to thin soils and shallow bedrock rapid drainage and desiccating winds all these conditions were also good for carrying fires across the landscape Prairies also occurred on steep slopes with south or southwest aspect see goat prairie 12 Natural fire which has long been vigorously suppressed was essential for the regeneration of such prairies Evidence of ancient extinct ice age animals that once inhabited the Driftless Area has been discovered over the years An example of extinct Pleistocene megafauna in the area is the Boaz mastodon a composite skeleton of two separate mastodons found in the 1890s in southwestern Wisconsin Although evidence exists that mastodons inhabited mostly coniferous spruce forests associated with the taiga biome it is likely that most or all of the Driftless Area was at times covered by tundra and permafrost during periods of glacial maximums nbsp Relief map of the central Driftless Area emphasizing the high density of trout waters in the region The Midwest Driftless Area Restoration Effort is a multi agency cooperative effort to restore the landscape 25 The main issues are water pollution from agricultural and animal runoff and erosion citation needed Many farmers in the region utilize contour plowing strip cropping and other agricultural practices to reduce soil erosion due to the hilly terrain Water pollution is particularly critical in karsted regions such as this in that it can degrade or destroy prime cold water fish habitat Soil erosion presents the Army Corps of Engineers with a particular problem in that it requires them to dredge the Mississippi River shipping channels to keep them open Trout Unlimited is part of this effort if only because of the superb cold water streams the region supports 26 A symposium was held in October 2007 in Decorah Iowa to share the results of research management and monitoring work in the Driftless Area 27 The Nature Conservancy is also interested nbsp Iowa Pleistocene snail nbsp Northern monkshoodThe Driftless Area contains more than half of the world s algific talus slopes a type of small isolated ecosystem 28 These refugia create cool summer and fall microclimates which host species usually found further north They contain at least one endangered species the Iowa Pleistocene Snail and a threatened plant the Northern monkshood 29 The Driftless Area National Wildlife Refuge was primarily carved out of the Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife and Fish Refuge in order to protect these species and their associated ecosystems Isolated relic stands of pines and associated northern vegetation are found in some locations where algific talus slopes are present These trees survive in the cooler microclimate produced at these locations outside of their current range further north A particularly noteworthy annual event is the rising of fishflies a kind of mayfly endemic to the Mississippi valley in the region These are aquatic insects attracted to light which rise by the millions as adults to mate only to die within hours 30 Wildlife is abundant with opportunities for hunting whitetail deer and wild turkey Fishing particularly for brown trout brook trout and rainbow trout in tributaries and species such as channel catfish in the Mississippi is available with ice fishing in winter 31 Other characteristics edit The Driftless Area is part of the Mississippi Flyway Many birds fly over the river in large flocks going north in spring and south in autumn There are very few natural lakes in the region these being found in adjoining areas of glacial till drift and in moraines the region is extraordinarily well drained and there is rarely a place where even a pond can naturally form There are also very few dams in that the valley walls and floors are very often fissured or crumbly or very porous providing very poor anchors for a dam or making it difficult to keep any kind of reservoir appropriately filled There are no real waterfalls but some very strong springs bear the name A modern man made characteristic is the comparatively twisty nature of highways in the region such as in Kentucky in contrast to the usually rigid east west north south alignment elsewhere in the Midwest citation needed Here the roads switchback up stream valleys or travel over ridge tops The route of U S Highway 20 through the Driftless and particularly in Illinois is a good example Economy editAgriculture edit See also Organic Valley The natural characteristics of the Driftless Area provide good conditions for growing crops and grazing livestock In recent years the region has generated much public interest in the organic and artisanal food market Organic dairy and beef production is of particular economic significance to the Driftless Organic Valley the largest organic dairy cooperative in the United States was founded and is headquartered in La Farge Wisconsin The region s cheese production boasts specialty cheeses such as raw milk artisan cheese which is made from unpasteurized milk 32 Organic dairy generally fits best with a grass based milk production system 33 nbsp Primrose Winery located in New Glarus WisconsinThe bioregion s economic and cultural characteristics were federally recognized with the granting of the Upper Mississippi River Valley UMRV viticultural area the largest designated winemaking region in the country by the Treasury Division s Tax and Trade Bureau in 2009 The petition for designation maintains the position that the region is a cohesive whole for marketing wine and is now used to market other products 34 In addition to wine grape production and wine making the region especially in southeast Minnesota is known for apple maple syrup and honey production Tobacco was also once a key crop of the Driftless as its topography and sandy nutrient rich soil are suitable for its growth 35 The Driftless Region Food and Farm Project in partnership with the University of Wisconsin Madison Center for Integrated Agricultural Systems is a coalition of sustainable agriculture farmers processors distributors chefs planning commissions and other participants The project seeks to define the culinary identity of the region and further direct the development of agritourism 36 Mining edit Fine grained silica sand is typical of the Driftless and is mined for use primarily in hydraulic fracturing commonly known as fracking nbsp Fine grained silica sand is typical of the Driftless Area and is mined for use in hydraulic fracturing Due to the presence of sandstone bedrock at or near the surface sand mining is an industrial activity in the Driftless with Wisconsin at the forefront of the industry 37 The sandstone contains quartz silica sand grains of the ideal hardness shape and size which make it optimal for use in hydraulic fracturing by the petroleum and natural gas industries The mining activity involves quarrying the sandstone bedrock by blasting with dynamite crushing the rock washing drying and grading the resulting sand and transporting the sand out of the region via barge or train 38 In 2017 there were 73 frac sand mines in operation in Wisconsin alone 39 and there are currently five operating industrial sand mines in Minnesota 40 the proliferation of sand mines in the region created new jobs and generated economic activity But the prominence of industry has raised concerns about impacts on water quality air pollution caused by silica dust noise and light pollution heavy truck traffic and the destruction of hills and ridges for which the region is known 41 Recently industry changes have caused companies such as Hi Crush Covia Superior Silica Sands all with operations in Wisconsin to liquidate their frac sand mines and declare bankruptcy 42 Geographic extent editMinnesota edit Further information Glacial history of Minnesota nbsp Mississippi River from Frontenac State Park Minnesota USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service Corresponding to the southeast geological region of Minnesota the colloquial Driftless Area though the whole region was glaciated begins at about Fort Snelling Starting as a narrow sliver against the Mississippi it widens to the west as one goes south The western boundary is the Bemis Altamont moraine 43 44 Another more easily located reference to the western boundary is the approximate line of Minnesota State Highway 56 The upland plateau lies west of the incised tributaries to the Mississippi The historic vegetation was mixed woodland with occasional goat prairies on southwesterly facing slopes 45 In the western section is an old plateau covered by loess along the eastern border and pre Wisconsin age glacial till in the central and western parts The western portion is a gently rolling glacial till plain that is covered by loess in places 44 The counties involved include all or part of Dakota Goodhue Rice Wabasha Winona Olmsted Dodge Houston Fillmore and Mower Aside from the southeastern suburban sprawl of the Twin Cities Rochester is the main urban area Additional communities include Red Wing Lake City Winona La Crescent Chatfield Lanesboro Rushford Houston and Caledonia Glacial River Warren in whose bed the Minnesota River now flows entered the Driftless Area just downriver from present day Minneapolis Saint Paul at Fort Snelling over River Warren Falls an impressive 2700 feet 823 m across and 175 feet 53 m tall over 10 times as wide as Niagara falls 46 this has since receded to become Saint Anthony Falls The region is characterized by the absence of glacial drift deposits the sculpted topography and the presence of the ancient limestone immediately beneath the soil and in cliff outcroppings 47 The Minnesota Driftless Area did not reach the Twin Cities or any areas to the north or west of them rather the Twin Cities marked the edge of glaciation with substantial terminal moraines overlying the region 48 The largest protected area is Richard J Dorer Memorial Hardwood State Forest which contains some state owned land but is mostly private controlled by state conservation easements Wisconsin edit Further information Wisconsin Glaciation nbsp Sugar Creek Bluffs in Crawford County Wisconsin nbsp Extent of glaciation in Wisconsin nbsp Driftless Area by Bangor Wisconsin nbsp Driftless Region Eastern side where I 90 enters the Driftless area Around 85 of the Driftless Area lies within Wisconsin comprising much of the southwestern quarter of the state The border is defined by the catchment of the Chippewa River on the north and somewhat west or east depending on if the southwestern portion of Wisconsin s Central Plain is included of the north south line of the Wisconsin River Where the Wisconsin River turns west to join the Mississippi the area to the south including the whole of Grant County as well as most of Lafayette County are part of the Driftless Area The rugged terrain comprising most of the Driftless Area is distinct from the rest of Wisconsin and is known locally as the Coulee Region The steep ridges numerous rock outcroppings and deep narrow valleys in the Driftless Area are in marked contrast with the rest of the state where glaciers have modified the landscape The hilly unglaciated landscape is well represented in Wisconsin s Coulee Experimental State Forest Wildcat Mountain State Park Governor Dodge State Park Perrot State Park and the Kickapoo Valley Reserve Karst topography is most prominent in Wisconsin Eagle Cave in Blue River WI and Cave of the Mounds near Blue Mounds WI are better known examples The Driftless Area is located in all or part of Pierce Pepin Eau Claire Buffalo Trempealeau Jackson La Crosse Monroe Juneau Vernon Richland Sauk Crawford Iowa Dane Green Grant and Lafayette counties If the less restrictive definition of the Driftless Area is used which includes the unglaciated southwestern portion of Wisconsin s Central Plain then Adams and portions of southern Wood and Portage counties are also included La Crosse is the principal urban area wholly within the Driftless Area while the larger Madison s far western suburbs are located on the edges of the area Small cities and towns are scattered throughout the region Numerous Amish settlements are also located within Wisconsin s Driftless Area The U S Army maintains a presence at Fort McCoy Wisconsin in Monroe County between Sparta and Tomah immediately south of the Black River State Forest The property is used mainly for military training exercises although troops have also been based there for deployments overseas The Coulee Region portion of the Driftless Area comprises much of Wisconsin s Western Upland geographical region The most rugged part of Wisconsin s Driftless area is also called the Ocooch Mountains Largely rural in character land cover is forest farmland and grassland pasture modest wetlands are found in river valleys and along the Mississippi 49 Row crop farming is less encountered than elsewhere in the state 50 Away from the Mississippi Wisconsin and other major rivers much of the terrain is gently rolling supporting dairy farms In other areas the rugged nature of the topography in the region is not conducive to farming except on ridge tops and in river valleys The sides of the ridges are often too steep for farming and are usually forested The Coulee Experimental State Forest near La Crosse was created in part to test soil conservation practices to prevent soil erosion in the hilly Driftless Area The northeastern portion of the Driftless area was covered by or bordered by Glacial Lake Wisconsin during the Wisconsin glaciation The steep sided rocky bluffs present in Roche a Cri State Park and Mill Bluff State Park are Cambrian outliers of the Franconia cuesta to the southwest and were once islands or sea stacks in the ancient lake The flat plain in which these bluffs lie is located in the southwest portion of Wisconsin s Central Plain geographic region and was formed in part by sediments falling to the bottom of Glacial Lake Wisconsin This flat plain consists of sandy deposits and contains many bogs that were left over from Glacial Lake Wisconsin Many of these bogs have been converted into cranberry marshes helping to make Wisconsin a leader in cranberry production The remainder of the sand plain consists of forest and irrigated farmland The Dells of the Wisconsin River were carved through the bedrock during the sudden draining of Glacial Lake Wisconsin at the end of the last ice age Due to the lack of natural lakes in the Coulee region several large artificial lakes have been constructed for flood control and recreational purposes including Dutch Hollow Lake and Lake Redstone in Sauk County Blackhawk Lake in Iowa County and Yellowstone Lake in Yellowstone State Park in Lafayette County Plans for a large reservoir on the Kickapoo River at La Farge Wisconsin were dropped in 1975 after much controversy due to cost benefit and environmental concerns Land previously acquired for the reservoir became the Kickapoo Valley Reserve an 8 569 acre public forest and wildlife area Wazee Lake at 355 feet 108 m deep is Wisconsin s deepest inland lake and is located in Jackson County in the northeast portion of the Driftless area The artificial lake lies in the former open pit Jackson County Iron Mine and is the centerpiece of the Wazee Lake Recreation Area Due to its great depth vertical underwater cliffs clear water and submerged mining features the lake is popular with scuba divers The highest point in the Driftless area is West Blue Mound with an elevation of 1 719 feet 524 m 51 52 The feature is located in Blue Mound State Park in Iowa County During the 19th and early 20th centuries lead and zinc mining was a major industrial activity in the Driftless Area drawing many foreign immigrants to settle in the region to work in the mines Early miners often lived in the mine tunnels leading outsiders to compare them to the burrowing badger a nickname that eventually came to be used for all Wisconsin residents An example of an early lead shot tower and smelting house is preserved in Tower Hill State Park Due to the influx of early miners the lead mining region became Wisconsin s most populous area at the time The first capitol of the Wisconsin Territory was located for a short time at Belmont Lafayette County in the heart of the lead mining region The site of the first capitol is preserved at the First Capitol Historic Site Three units of the Ice Age National Scientific Reserve are located within or adjacent to the Driftless Area Devil s Lake State Park Mill Bluff State Park and Cross Plains State Park In addition the Ice Age Trail follows the Terminal moraine of the maximum glacial extent from the last ice age and enters the Driftless Area in several locations Other notable natural features include the Baraboo Range consisting of two heavily forested steep rocky quartzite ridges with mountain type scenery rock formations in Natural Bridge State Park Wisconsin the forested bluffs floodplains islands and sandbars in the Lower Wisconsin River State Riverway the confluence of the Wisconsin River with the Mississippi River at Wyalusing State Park Trempealeau Mountain State Natural Area in the Mississippi River valley at Perrot State Park and the gorge and rock formations surrounding the Wisconsin River at the Dells of the Wisconsin River The Black River State Forest protects a large area of the North Woods rocky bluffs sandy plains and river shoreline on the northeastern edge of the Driftless Area that provides habitat for several wolf packs and one of Wisconsin s reintroduced elk herds Iowa edit nbsp Aerial view looking north April 14 2001 with the Upper Mississippi River at floodstage At center the Black Hawk Bridge is visible Big Lake is immediately north Just south of the bridge one can see the mouth of Clear Creek and just south of this the mouth of Village Creek The rugged nature of the Driftless Area is evident An area in northeast Iowa that shares similar topographic characteristics to the Driftless Area in southeastern Wisconsin is the Paleozoic Plateau 53 For counties inland from the Mississippi evidence is largely confined to the valleys of streams and rivers It encompasses all of Allamakee and part of Clayton Fayette Delaware Winneshiek Howard Dubuque and Jackson Counties Dubuque is the only metropolitan area The region is distinct from the Iowan Erosion Surface to the west and the Southern Iowa Drift Plain to the south 15 A line east of the most easterly tributaries of the Wapsipinicon River defines the western boundary of the landform region with the catchment of the Maquoketa River south of Bellevue serving as a southern boundary The most western tributaries of the Upper Iowa Yellow and Turkey Rivers flow east and south from the vicinity of this moraine Outside of Dubuque this region of Iowa is thinly populated In the western section agriculture and livestock raising are the norm As one travels east and as the valleys tumble down to the Mississippi much of the land is virtually wild with a great deal of it publicly owned The state maintains an extensive number of wildlife management areas along with state forests and state parks The most impressive area is on the Mississippi between Pikes Peak State Park opposite the Wisconsin River down to Guttenberg where bluffs lining the river reach their maximum height This is apparently an Iowa continuation of Military Ridge a catchment defining divide in Wisconsin that was used for the Military Ridge Road a portion of which is included in Military Ridge State Trail both across the River in Wisconsin Effigy Mounds National Monument is at the heart of a network of adjacent parks state forests preserves as well as national wildlife refuges all of which preserve and illustrate the features of the Driftless where patchy remnants of Pre Illinoian glacial drift more than 500 000 years old recently have been discovered in the area 54 Additional protected areas are Cold Water Spring State Preserve near Decorah Maquoketa Caves State Park northwest of Maquoketa Bellevue State Park adjacent to Bellevue White Pine Hollow State Forest which protects Iowa s only remaining groves of old growth white pine trees near Dubuque and the Yellow River State Forest in the southeastern corner of Allamakee County Iowa Illinois edit nbsp Charles Mound the highest natural point in Illinois at 1 235 feet 376 m NAVD 88 55 is located in the Illinois portion of the Driftless Area The Illinois portion of the Driftless Area is confined mainly to Jo Daviess County western parts of Carroll County the Mississippi River bluffs characteristic of the Driftless terminate around Savanna and a tiny portion of northwest Whiteside County are also included 56 The region contains the highest points in the state of which the most notable are Charles Mound and Benton Mound rising to heights of 1 246 feet 380 m and 1 226 feet 374 m respectively 57 The region has many sinkholes and sinkhole ponds 58 The valley of the Apple River has a major canyon with Apple River Canyon occupying much of it The mouth of this river near Hanover adjacent to the former Savanna Army Depot comes close to the southern end of the Driftless Area on the eastern side of the Mississippi see Lock and Dam No 13 citation needed As in Wisconsin the Illinois portion of the driftless area was a major early center for lead and zinc mining citation needed References edit a b Geology of the Driftless Area The Physical Geography and Geology of the Driftless Area The Career and Contributions of James C Knox 2019 pp 1 35 doi 10 1130 2019 2543 01 ISBN 9780813725437 S2CID 204258118 Rochester Plateau and Blufflands Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Retrieved 2023 11 28 Carson Eric C Rawling J Elmo III Attig John W Bates Benjamin R 2018 Late Cenozoic Evolution of the Upper Mississippi River Stream Piracy and Reorganization of North American Mid Continent Drainage Systems GSA Today 4 11 doi 10 1130 GSATG355A 1 Wickert Andrew D Anderson Robert S Mitrovica Jerry X Naylor Shawn Carson Eric C 2019 The Mississippi River records glacial isostatic deformation of North America Science Advances 5 1 eaav2366 Bibcode 2019SciA 5 2366W doi 10 1126 sciadv aav2366 PMC 6353627 PMID 30729164 U S Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service Driftless Area Landscape Conservation Initiative Archived 2017 08 26 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 25 2017 The Driftless Area Archived 2007 08 25 at the Wayback Machine Minnesota Conservation Volunteer March 2007 popular article from the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources MDNR Retrieved July 7 2007 Regional Landscape Ecosystems of Michigan Minnesota and Wisconsin Section IV Driftless Area Archived 2008 03 27 at the Wayback Machine USGS Retrieved July 13 2007 another government site Driftless Area Initiative Archived 2008 03 28 at the Wayback Machine USDA retrieved July 15 2007 gives 24 103 square miles 62 430 km2 and 15 425 063 acres 6 242 302 ha Yellow River State Forest Archived July 14 2007 at the Wayback Machine Iowa Department of Natural Resources IDNR Retrieved July 7 2007 Byron Crowns Wisconsin through 5 Billion Years of Change Wisconsin Earth Science Center 1976 Wisconsin Rapids Wisconsin p 131 LCCN 76 46151 a b 1 Archived May 3 2007 at the Wayback Machine Native American use of the Mississippi River Archived 2020 02 12 at the Wayback Machine Archaeology Education Program vol 22 no 2 Fall 2004 1 Retrieved January 25 2018 a b c Regional Landscape Ecosystems of Michigan Minnesota and Wisconsin Section IV Driftless Area Archived 2008 03 27 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service Retrieved July 9 2007 A statement from this copyright free site has been freely paraphrased Y01 Waukon Municipal Airport AirNav com AirNav LLC Retrieved May 1 2014 Station Information for Mississippi River at Lock and Dam 9 Lynxville WI Rivergages com Army Corps of Engineers Retrieved May 1 2014 a b c Stephanie A Tassier Surine Iowa Department of Natural Resources Geological Survey Bureau Quaternary Geology of the Paleozoic Plateau Region of Northeastern Iowa Archived 2011 07 26 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved July 30 2007 Walker Declares Statewide Emergency After Storms Ravage Communities Wisconsin Public Radio 2018 08 29 Retrieved 2019 02 06 Tribune Mike Tighe La Crosse La Farge grapples not only with flooding but also no power La Crosse Tribune Retrieved 2019 02 06 Broadcaster Angela Cina Vernon County Vernon County s Jersey Valley Mlsna dams fail due to heavy rains La Crosse Tribune Retrieved 2019 02 06 Watershed Description Archived 2007 09 28 at the Wayback Machine of the Upper Iowa River Northeastiowarcd org Retrieved August 5 2007 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2007 07 11 Retrieved 2007 07 10 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Geology of Pikes Peak State Park Archived 2007 07 11 at the Wayback Machine Iowa Department of Natural Resources Retrieved July 13 2007 Charles Theiling River Geomorphology and Floodplain Habitats p 1 pdf USGS Retrieved July 12 2007 Thomas Madigan The Geology of the MNRRA Corridor p 26 National Park Service Retrieved July 23 2007 Michael E Ritter Humid Continental Climate Archived May 30 2007 at the Wayback Machine University of Wisconsin Stevens Point 2006 Retrieved August 11 2007 Driftless Area Restoration Effort Trout Unlimited Retrieved May 1 2014 2 Archived March 26 2008 at the Wayback Machine Science in the Driftless Area Announcement and Call for Papers Deadline August 24 2007 Archived March 26 2008 at the Wayback Machine press release Again retrieved with different URL November 16 2007 Epstein E E 2017 Natural communities aquatic features and selected habitats of Wisconsin PDF The ecological land scapes of Wisconsin An assessment of ecological resources and a guide to planning sustainable management Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Retrieved 1 October 2018 Driftless Area National Wildlife Refuge Comprehensive Conservation Plan Archived 2007 08 10 at the Wayback Machine U S Fish and Wildlife Service Retrieved July 23 2007 Parfin Sophy I 1952 The Megaloptera and Neuroptera of Minnesota The American Midland Naturalist University of Notre Dame 47 2 421 34 doi 10 2307 2422271 ISSN 1938 4238 JSTOR 2422271 other more anecdotal sites give a fuller feeling for the scope of the annual invasion e g Wonderful Wacky Water Critters Archived 2007 08 10 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 8 2007 Dahlke 2018 10 01T12 55 00 04 00 Josh 23 January 2019 Fishing the Driftless Area The Best Kept Secret in the Trout World Outdoor Life Retrieved 2019 04 09 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link CDC 2017 09 01 Raw Milk Questions and Answers Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Retrieved 2021 11 11 Transitioning to Organic Dairy Production PDF Midwest Organic and Sustainable Education Service 2012 T D TTB 77 Establishment of the Upper Mississippi River Valley Viticultural Area Regulations gov June 21 2009 Archived from the original on 2021 11 09 Raitz Karl B Mather Cotton 1971 Norwegians and Tobacco in Western Wisconsin Annals of the Association of American Geographers 61 4 684 696 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8306 1971 tb00818 x ISSN 0004 5608 JSTOR 2562390 About Driftless Region Food amp Farm Project Retrieved 2021 11 16 Overview of Frac Sand Mining www uwrf edu Retrieved 2021 11 11 Wisconsin Geological amp Natural History Survey Frac sand How is it mined wgnhs wisc edu Retrieved 2021 11 11 Sand Rush in Wisconsin earthobservatory nasa gov 2018 03 14 Retrieved 2021 11 11 DNR and Silica Sand Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Retrieved 2021 11 16 Air Quality Respirable Crystalline Silica from Sand Mining Wisconsin Department of Health Services 2021 01 12 Retrieved 2021 11 16 Kremer Rich 2021 05 24 Frac Sand Company Liquidating Western Wisconsin Mine Wisconsin Public Radio Retrieved 2021 11 11 Glacial Geology of the Driftless Region Archived from the original on March 28 2008 Retrieved July 9 2007 a b Rochester Plateau Subsection Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Retrieved July 23 2007 ECS Paleozoic Plateau Section Minnesota DNR Dnr state mn us Retrieved 2015 03 01 Scott Anfinson Archaeology of the Central Minneapolis Riverfront The Institute for Minnesota Archaeology 1989 Retrieved July 8 2007 Nancy Kleven The Driftless Area Of Minnesota Winter 1989 Minnesota Plant Press 8 2 online Map of moraines in Twin Cities area Winona edu Retrieved 2015 03 01 Blufflands and Driftless Area Archived 2007 06 26 at the Wayback Machine Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin Retrieved July 30 2007 Regional Assessment of the Wisconsin Driftless Natural Division Archived 2007 08 10 at the Wayback Machine Illinois Department of Natural Resources Retrieved July 30 2007 Statistical Information on Wisconsin PDF Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau July 2005 pp 691 694 Archived from the original PDF on March 24 2009 Retrieved May 1 2014 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Find Maps Find Maps Archived 2009 01 05 at the Wayback Machine Sco wisc edu Retrieved on July 21 2013 Landforms of Iowa PDF Uni edu Retrieved 2015 03 01 Effigy Mounds Historic Resource Study Chapter 3 Environment Archived 2007 05 19 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service Retrieved July 8 2007 Charles NGS Data Sheet National Geodetic Survey National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration United States Department of Commerce Retrieved 2008 12 17 Illinois Natural History Survey 1996 Inhs uiuc edu Retrieved July 7 2007 Driftless Area Critical Trends Assessment The Area at a Glance Illinois Department of Natural Resources Archived from the original on July 14 2014 Retrieved July 9 2014 Illinois Natural Divisions Archived 2008 01 12 at the Wayback Machine Illinois Department of Natural Resources Retrieved July 12 2007External links edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Driftless Area Decoding the Driftless movie 2018 created by Sustainable Driftless Inc dedicated to inspiring resource conservation and sustainable growth in the Driftless Region A Sand County Almanac A book written by Aldo Leopold about the flora and fauna in the Coulee region The Driftless Area A Landscape of Opportunities Driftless Area National Wildlife Refuge Retrieved July 23 2007 US Geological Survey description Retrieved July 7 2007 National atlas description and map Retrieved July 7 2007 Driftless Area Initiative Retrieved July 2 2014 Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey map showing extent of last glaciation Driftless Region Food and Farm Project Driftless Area Magazine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Driftless Area amp oldid 1207269076, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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