No, plans are areas of flat ground and mountains are areas of ground with steeply soaping topography. However it is possible to get plains that are flat low lying areas (e.g. coastal planes) and plains that are at the top of mountainous areas (e.g. the plains of Tibet).
Mountains, Plains and valleys are examples of Landforms
The Appalachian Mountains lie east of the Interior Plains in North America.
Rocky Mountains --->Great Plains--->Mississippi River---> Appalachian Mountains
The high flat plains where the Andes mountains are the widest are called the Altiplano.
Plains and mountains are examples of landforms. Plains are relatively flat expanses of land, while mountains are elevated landforms with a peak or ridge that typically rise steeply from the surrounding terrain.
no mountains but have plains
no they are not the same thing
They are both the same thing but people just call them different names.
They are both the same thing but people just call them different names.
Plains are FLAT areas with NO mountains.
Not even close. Geography is a study of the physical components of land- mountains, valley, plains, rivers, oceans. A photograph is a permanent copy of a visual image.
Mountains, Plains and valleys are examples of Landforms
Great Plains
No, the Appalachian Mountains are further East. :)
Mountains, Plains and valleys are examples of Landforms
In Canada, the land form that lies between the Rocky Mountains and the Appalachian Mountains is called the Interior Plains. In the US, it is the Central and Great Plains. An interesting geological fact is that the Rocky Mountains contain rocks and sediments that could only have come from the Appalachian Mountains.
British Columbia has plenty of mountains. It also has plains in its northeast corner.