They sure do. The Appalachians in the US start in Maine and extend to just north of Atlanta, Georgia.
Yes it does run through the whole Northeast.
It's generally flat around Philadelphia...i believe that's called the Piedmont region. Anyway, the further west you go the more mountainous it gets. Also in the Northeast part of the state are the Pocono Mountains. Once you get through the Appalachians to the west though, it starts to flatten out a little
Daniel Boone
yes it runs through a part of it
through the Cumberland pass
The Appalachian Mountains
Go from the bottom, right corner of Michigan, through Ohio, and straight right. you'll hit Pennsylvania
No. In the late 19th and early 20th century the land in Northwest Pa. was clearcut leaving the land devoid of trees. The devastated landscape was nicknamed "The Pennsylvania Desert." It has since regrown through better forestry practices.There once was. After the logging industry removed virtually all of the timber across much of northern Pennsylvania in the late 19th and early 20th century, it was called the "Pennsylvania Desert."
The Appalachian Mountains run through the eastern United States. Mount Mitchell in North Carolina is the highest point of the Appalachians at 6,684 feet.
Negro Mountain http://www.brainygeography.com/features/PA.range/negromountain.html
The answer is: The Great Wagon Road.
The Appalachians is a mountain range that runs through the eastern U.S.