Tennessee Geography: Tennessee Regions and Landforms (2024)

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Geography and Landforms of Tennessee

Find an overview of Tennessee geography, topography, geographic land regions, land areas, and major rivers.

Access Tennessee almanac furnishing more details on the state geography, geographical and land regions, climate and weather, elevation, land areas, bordering states, and other statistical data.

Stretching 440 miles from east to west, Tennessee characterized by 6 main land regions; The Blue Ridge, the Appalachian Ridge and Valley Region, the Appalachian Plateau, the Highland Rim, the Nashville Basin, and the Gulf Coastal Plain.

Tennessee Highest, Lowest, & Mean Elevations

Mean Elevation 900 ft.
Highest Point Clingmans Dome
6,643 ft.
Lowest Point Mississippi River
178 ft.

Tennessee Land Area (Square Miles)

Geographic Center In Rutherford County, 5 mi. NE of Murfreesboro
Longitude: 86° 37.3'W
Latitude: 35° 47.7'N
Total Area 42,143.27 sq. mi.
36th
Land Area 41,217.12 sq. mi.
Water Area 926.15 sq. mi.
2.19%
Forested Land Area 51.6%
Dimensions
(Length - Width)
440 miles - 120 miles

Tennessee: Physiographic Regions

Tennessee characterized by 6 main land regions;

  1. The Blue Ridge,
  2. the Appalachian Ridge and Valley Region,
  3. the Appalachian Plateau,
  4. the Highland Rim,
  5. the Nashville Basin, and the
  6. Gulf Coastal Plain.

Blue Ridge

On the border of North Carolina on the eastern edge of Tennessee is the Blue Ridge. High mountains in this area are The Great Smoky Mountains, the Chilhowee Mountains and the Snowbird Mountains. 5,000 feet above sea level is the average elevation of the Blue Ridge area. Clingman's Dome (6,643 feet above sea level) is the highest point in the state and is found in the Great Smoky Mountains.

Appalachian Ridge and Valley Region

Running west from the Blue Ridge for about 55 miles is the Appalachian Ridge and Valley Region. Fertile valleys separated by wooded ridges make up this area. The Great Valley where valleys become wider and the ridges are lower are also located in this region and are in the western section of the Appalachian Ridge and Valley Region.

Appalachian Plateau

Located to the west of the Appalachian Ridge and Valley Region is the Appalachian Plateau. It is also referred to as the Cumberland Plateau. It is covered with flat-topped mountains and is separated by sharp valleys. It rises from 1,500 feet to 1,800 feet above sea level. Southwest of Chattanooga and located in the southern part of the Appalachian Plateau is Lookout Mountain and provides views of seven states.

Highland Rim

Highland Rim lies west of the Appalachian Plateau. It is an elevated plain that surrounds the Nashville Basin. The Pennyroyal Region is located in the northern section of the Highland Rim.

Nashville Basin

The Nashville Basin, known for its rich, fertile farm country and is surrounded by the steep slopes of the Highland Rim.

Gulf Coastal Plain

The Gulf Coastal Plain lies west of the Highland Rim and Nashville Basin. It is the largest land region in terms of area in Tennessee. This area begins at the Gulf of Mexico and extends north into southern Illinois. The Gulf Coastal Plain (in Tennessee) is divided into three sections that extend from the Tennessee River, in the east, to the Mississippi River in the west. The western bank of the Tennessee River is hilly land that is the easternmost section. This section is only about 10 miles wide. An area called the Tennessee bottoms or the bottom land is to the west of this narrow strip of land. It is a wide area of rolling hills and streams that stretches all the way to Memphis in western Tennessee. The Tennessee Bottoms end in steep bluffs overlooking the Mississippi River in Memphis. The Mississippi Alluvial Plain (sometimes called The Delta Region) is to the west of the Tennessee Bottoms is less than 300 feet above sea level. This is an area of lowlands, flood plains and swamp land.

Tennessee Landscape and Landforms:

East Gulf Coastal Plain

The East Gulf Coastal Plain extends from the Florida Parishes of Louisiana over most of Mississippi, some of western Tennessee and Kentucky, the southwestern 2/3 of Alabama, and the western panhandle of Florida. Its southern boundary is the Gulf of Mexico and its western boundary the drop into the Mississippi Alluvial Valley. On the north it extends to the highlands of the Interior Low Plateaus and southern Appalachians. To the east, there is an arbitrary break with the South Atlantic Coastal Plain at the Alabama-Georgia border south through Florida along the Apalachicola River. The flat to rolling topography is broken by numerous streams and river bottoms. Uplands are dominated by pine, originally longleaf and slash in the south and shortleaf mixed with hardwoods in the north. These are fire-maintained systems that give way to loblolly pine and hardwoods in damper areas and bottomland hardwood forest in extensive lowland drainages.

Interior Low Plateaus

The Interior Low Plateaus constitute a diverse landscape that extends from north Alabama across central Tennessee and Kentucky into southern Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. It consists of six distinct subregions: the Shawnee Hills, Bluegrass region, Western Highland Rim, Central Basin, Eastern Highland Rim, and Tennessee Valley. Its hilly topography sets it apart from the Coastal Plain to the south and Prairie Peninsula to the north. To the west, the valley of the Mississippi River separates the Interior Low Plateaus from the Ozark Highlands, the two of which share many similarities. Western mesophytic, oak-hickory, and beech-maple forests were historically the most abundant cover types. There were also tallgrass prairie elements in the north and northwest, oak savannahs in the Bluegrass and other northern sections, barrens and glades in central regions, and forested wetlands along major waterways

Mississippi Alluvial Valley

This area includes the floodplain of the Mississippi River that cuts into the Gulf Coastal Plain, extending north to and including the delta at the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers and south toward the Gulf of Mexico. The Alluvial Valley includes most of eastern Louisiana, eastern Arkansas, northwest Mississippi, small portions of west Tennessee and Kentucky, the bootheel of Missouri, and the Cache River lowlands of Illinois. Nonforested marsh in southern portions of the floodplain is included in the Coastal Prairie physiographic area. Water shaped this land. The ridges and swales, levees, oxbows, and terraces of the Valley all resulted from meanderings and floods of the Mississippi River. Small changes in elevation determine how wet a site is, the plant community that grows there, and habitat conditions for birds.

Northern Cumberland Plateau

This is a largely forested, gently rolling tableland ranging from 300 m. To 580 m. in elevation. It is defined by the higher Eastern Highland Rim of the Interior Low Plateaus on the west and the Cumberland Mountains of the Ridge and Valley physiographic area on the east. The Cumberland Plateau extends south out of this physiographic area, where it is included with the Southern Ridge and Valley, and narrowly northward as well. As defined, the Northern Cumberland Plateau includes the eastern third of Kentucky, southwestern West Virginia, a small area in western Virginia, and a swath across Tennessee barely extending into Alabama and Georgia. Mixed mesophytic forest dominated by oaks, hickory, and, historically, American chestnut, is the most common cover type. Various pine species become more dominant on drier sites.

Southern Blue Ridge

The Southern Blue Ridge is an area of rugged mountains, long broad ridges, steep slopes, and deep ravines. It straddles the border between Tennessee and North Carolina, extending south into northeast South Carolina and northwest Georgia and north into Virginia. High Peaks spruce-fir forest grades at lower elevations into northern hardwood forest or hemlock-white pine forest on steep, north-facing slopes and Appalachian oaks on drier sites. The Appalachian oak type is the most widespread forest type in the area. Mixed mesophytic hardwood forests, also called cove forests, over on more mesic sites at low to mid-elevations. Various southern yellow pine mixes occur on dry ridges, often associated with a fire regime. There are also riparian forest types along valleys at various elevations, primarily in the lowlands. Disturbance, including fire, grazing, and storm damage, plays a major role in determining the distribution and successional status of many of these forest types.

Southern Ridge and Valley

This physiographic area consists of both the Southern end of the Ridge and Valley system as well as the tablelands of the Southern Cumberland Plateau. It descends to the Coastal Plain to the south and rises to the Blue Ridge to the east. It is located in eastern Tennessee, northwest Georgia, and northeast Alabama, and is arbitrarily separated from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and Valley at the Tennessee-Virginia border. Upland deciduous forest, the most common naturally-occurring cover type, is predominantly mixed mesophytic, oak-hickory, or oak-pine forest. There is also a considerable area dominated by pine, either shortleaf or loblolly.

Tennessee Geography: Tennessee Regions and Landforms (2024)

FAQs

What is the geography and landforms of Tennessee? ›

Its landforms range from the Blue Ridge Mountains in the eastern part of the state to flat and fertile plains along the Mississippi River. The state is geographically, legally, culturally, and economically divided into three Grand Divisions: East Tennessee, Middle Tennessee, and West Tennessee.

What is Tennessee's region? ›

Tennessee is geographically, culturally, and legally divided into three Grand Divisions of East, Middle, and West Tennessee. Nashville is the state's capital and largest city, and anchors its largest metropolitan area.

How many regions is TN split up into? ›

Tennessee spans approximately 500 miles east to west, 110 miles north to south, and is bordered by 8 other states. The state, comprised of 95 counties, is geographically, politically, and constitutionally divided into three Grand Divisions: East, Middle, and West.

What are the three zones of Tennessee? ›

The state of Tennessee is divided into three sections called the Grand Divisions, and people commonly refer to themselves as being from East, Middle, or West Tennessee.

What are the 4 regions of Tennessee? ›

Statistics
Grand DivisionPopulation (2020 census)Area in mi2 (km2)
East Tennessee2,470,10513,558 sq mi (35,120 km2)
Middle Tennessee2,883,08617,009 sq mi (44,050 km2)
West Tennessee1,557,64910,650 sq mi (27,600 km2)
State of Tennessee6,910,84041,217 sq mi (106,750 km2)

What is the geography of Tennessee for kids? ›

Eastern Tennessee lies within the Appalachian mountain chain. The Blue Ridge Mountains along the Tennessee–North Carolina border include the range known as the Great Smoky Mountains. West of the mountains is an area of low ridges. The central part of the state is a region with generally flat but sometimes rolling land.

How many mountains are in Tennessee? ›

Admirably referred to as “The Volunteer State,” Tennessee contains 1,799 named mountains, spans over 42,000 square miles, and is home to the most caves in the states.

Where can I stand in 3 states at once in Tennessee? ›

Tri-State Peak is a mountain located in the Cumberland Gap National Historical Park, near the "saddle" of the gap. It gets its name from being on the tripoint of the state of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia.

Why is Tennessee so rocky? ›

Most of the sedimentary rock across Middle Tennessee was deposited from the Ordovician to the Mississippian, roughly between 400 and 300 million years ago. The sediment was primarily deep ocean limestones with some shale layers.

What grow zone is TN in? ›

Average annual temperatures greatly differ across the state. Summer temperatures statewide average in the mid 70s and the winters average just below 40 degrees. Tennessee growing zones range from 5b to 8a. Finding what hardiness zone you are in is simple with Gilmour's Interactive Planting Zone Map.

What is the physical geography of Nashville Tennessee? ›

Nashville's elevation ranges from its lowest point, 385 feet (117 m) above sea level at the Cumberland River, to its highest point, 1,163 feet (354 m) above sea level in the Radnor Lake State Natural Area. Nashville also sits at the start of the Highland Rim, a geophysical region of very hilly land.

What are landforms in a state? ›

Mountains, hills, plateaus, and plains are the four major types of landforms. Minor landforms include buttes, canyons, valleys, and basins. Tectonic plate movement under Earth can create landforms by pushing up mountains and hills.

What is the geography and landforms of Georgia? ›

Georgia encompasses parts of five distinct physiographic provinces: the Appalachian Plateau, the Valley and Ridge, the Blue Ridge, the Piedmont, and the Coastal Plain. The form of the landscape and the climate of the area influenced the development of vegetation and animal life in each of these provinces.

What are the geographical features of Middle Tennessee? ›

The outer ring of Middle Tennessee is called the Highland Rim. It is dominated by rolling hills and valleys. Some of the hills are gradual, while some are quite steep. The Central Basin is lower than and completely surrounded by the Highland Rim.

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