Upper Peninsula lies North of the Lower Peninsula.
In Michigan, moose live in the Upper Peninsula. The Upper Peninsula is the area of Michigan north of the Straits of Mackinac.
The Upper Peninsula of Michigan lies north of the Lower Peninsula. The two peninsulas are separated by the Straits of Mackinac, with the Upper Peninsula bordered by Lake Superior to the north and Lake Michigan to the south. Thus, the Upper Peninsula is the northernmost part of the state.
Michigan's Upper Peninsula is typically abbreviated as U.P.
Michigan. The entire state of Michigan is a peninsula, upper and lower.
It's Michigan
They are Lower Michigan and Upper Michigan. Upper Michigan is also known as the Upper Peninsula.
When Michigan became a state on January 26, 1837, the Upper Peninsula was included as part of its territory. The Upper Peninsula was formally attached to Michigan following a boundary dispute with Ohio, which was resolved in favor of Michigan. This included the land north of the Straits of Mackinac, effectively making the entire state, including the Upper Peninsula, part of Michigan at its statehood.
The Upper Peninsula of Michigan borders the state of Wisconsin.
The Upper Peninsula is part of the state of Michigan. It is bordered by Wisconsin and connected to the rest of Michigan by the Mackinaw Bridge.
Michigan consists mainly of two geographic peninsulas, called the Lower Peninsula and the Upper Peninsula. Michigan residents often refer to the Upper Peninsula by the abbreviation "U.P.", pronounced "yew-pee".
The upper peninsula of Michican is shares its western border with the state of Wisconsin and is bordered on the north by Lake Superior, the south by Lake Michigan and the east by Lake Huron. The upper peninsula also is in close proximity to the Canadian province of Ontario. The upper peninsula is connected to the lower peninsula of Michigan by I-95. Originally the upper peninsula of Michigan was part of the Wisconsin territory, but became part of Michigan following the Toledo war.