Big ones
i guess
Michigan's landforms are hills, mountains, and inland swamps.
Michigan's landforms are hills, mountains, and inland swamps.
Pocupine Mountains, Huron Mountains, Belknap Hill, & Cooper Island
No, Michigan does not have any mountains. The state's terrain is generally characterized by low hills and flatlands. The highest point in Michigan, Mount Arvon, is only 1,979 feet above sea level.
Milwaukee is next to Lake Michigan.
They are folded mountains '____'
The Porcupine Mountains are located in the western-most part of the Upper Peninsula.
The Tetons are folded mountains.
The kind that swim.
A pine forest is in the rocky mountains
The Manistee River is a 190 mile-long river in Michigan. Houghton Lake is Michigan's largest inland lake. Mount Arvon has an elevation of 1,979 feet and is the highest natural point in Michigan.