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A forest is an expanse of naturally-growing trees of various species, along with plant and animal life that form an ecosystem. A park is a natural or semi-natural area for people to visit; it may or may not have trees or forests within it, and if entirely man-made, may not have a fully functioning ecosystem.
The Coyote Peaks are located on the southern border of Sequoia National Park along the border with Golden Trout Wilderness in Sequoia National Forest. Source - summitpost.org
forest have many trees and mountains have snow
how do forest soils different from prairie soils
A tree is one tree and a forest is many trees.
Ones underwater ones on land
Ibeere
Grants Pass located in the Rogue River Valley -- from there heading west is mostly Burial of Land Management Forest -- to say there is a forest called after the Rogue River would not be totally correct -- there is three areas of forest west of Grants Pass -- the "Wild Rogue Wilderness" is north of the Rogue River -- the Siskiyou National Forest, to include the Kalmiopsis Wilderness, is south of the Rogue River -- all the forests pretty much run all the way to the Pacific Ocean along both sides of the Rogue River.
a tropical forest has a lot of rain. a coastal forest has no rain.
The Tropical Rain Forest has more rain than a tropical forest.
It does, including: Arapahoe and Roosevelt National Forest. Grand Mesa National Forest. Gunnison National Forest. Medecine Bow-Routt National Forest. Pike/San Isabel National Forest. Rio Grande National Forest. San Juan National Forest. Uncompahgre National Forest. White River National Forest.