land forms
Landform
A range of connected mountains is called a mountain range. These formations can stretch for long distances and are made up of multiple peaks and valleys. Examples include the Rocky Mountains and the Himalayas.
Mountains are named for a variety of reasons, such as geographical location, distinctive features, historical events, or local folklore. Naming mountains helps with navigation, communication, and creating a sense of place in both natural and cultural landscapes.
Residents of the Yorkshire valleys are known as "Yorkshire Dalesmen" or "Dalesfolk".
A valley or crater ---------------------------------------------------------------------- If the mountains are close together, close enough to blend into each other, the space between them is called a saddle. ....or maybe you're looking for the word "cleavage"
Landform
synclines, anticlines, folded mountains, fault-block mountains, and plateaus
A physical map is the one that shows things like rivers, mountains and plateaus. The proper name for them however is a topographic maps.
the shara mountain
A desert can be a type of landscape, but not a landform. As a general rule, landforms are smaller than deserts, being a feature of a landscape or the land's surface. Landforms include valleys, plateaus, mountains, plains and hills, to name a few examples.
Switzerland has no deserts. The country primarily has mountains and valleys.
Mountains, plains, deserts, canyons, and plateaus are five common landforms found in the United States.
Yes, Uranus has mountains and valleys but they do not have specific names like on Earth. The surface features on Uranus are usually referred to by numbers or based on their location.
Delaware
Some landforms in this area are: waterfalls, valleys, mountains, hills, and peninsula. Also there are a few plateaus in Virginia as well.
The New York of today has many of the same landforms as it did in colonial times. These includes mountains, hills and valleys and natural harbors, to name a few of the most readily observed landforms. The geography of New York has changed since colonial days in that cities have now taken up land that was once simply forests.
One word that names a landform is "mountain." Mountains are large, elevated landforms that rise prominently above their surroundings, typically characterized by steep slopes and significant elevation changes. They can be formed through tectonic forces, volcanic activity, or erosion. Other examples of landforms include valleys, plateaus, and hills.