- Pembina Escarpment
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The Manitoba Escarpment (known in the United States as the Pembina Escarpment) is a scarp that marks the boundary of glacial Lake Agassiz.[1] It occurs in South Dakota, North Dakota, and Manitoba.
Originally formed by the undercutting of Cretaceous sandstones by the ancestral Red River, the escarpment was later steepened bysections of New England. Streams flowing off the escarpment have high gradients and a cobble substrate.[2]
Native plants to the escarpment include burr oak, beaked hazel, high bush cranberry, serviceberry, and red osier dogwood.[2]
The scarp forms the eastern edge of Riding Mountain National Park and Duck Mountain Provincial Park in Manitoba.[1] Turtle Mountain Provincial Park and the Porcupine Hills are also part of the southern portion of the Manitoba Escarpment.
Notes
- ^ a b "Manitoba's Escarpment". Deerwood. http://www.deerwood.mb.ca/escarpment.html.
- ^ a b "Pembina Escarpment". NPWRC Ecoregions of North Dakota and South Dakota. http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/habitat/ndsdeco/46a.htm.
Coordinates: 50°37′02″N 99°31′35″W / 50.617232°N 99.52652°W
External links
Categories:- Landforms of Manitoba
- Landforms of North Dakota
- Landforms of South Dakota
- Escarpments of the United States
- Escarpments of Canada
- North Dakota geography stubs
- Manitoba geography stubs
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