Some geomorphologists held to a geological basis for physiography and emphasized a concept of physiographic regions while a conflicting trend among geographers was to equate physiography with " pure morphology, " separated from its geological heritage.
42.
However, a map in Fenneman s " Physiography of Western United States " ( 1931 ) shows a long Jefferson Range to include what is now called the Tobacco Roots plus the Gravelly Range.
43.
The variegated and rapidly changing physiography of glacial moraines and lowlands has also allowed temperate flora, such as oaks, to grow within a few hundred meters of northern flora, such as bog cotton and cloudberries.
44.
Fenneman expanded and presented his system more fully in two books, " Physiography of western United States " ( 1931 ), and " Physiography of eastern United States " ( 1938 ).
45.
Fenneman expanded and presented his system more fully in two books, " Physiography of western United States " ( 1931 ), and " Physiography of eastern United States " ( 1938 ).
46.
The physiography of Sylhet consists mainly of hill soils, encompassing a few large depressions known locally as " beels " which can be mainly classified as oxbow lakes, caused by tectonic subsidence primarily during the earthquake of 1762.
47.
The land is generally alluvial flat and swamplands which has an elevation of less than 10 meters above sea level, while going south, south easterly, the physiography abruptly rises to moderately rugged hills with a peak of.
48.
A fairly narrow strip dividing the Eastern and Western Cross Timbers, the Grand Prairie differs in physiography, topography, and land use from both of these, as it is much more nearly level and better suited to agriculture.
49.
The building's 18 science demonstration rooms and laboratories accommodated physiology, physiography, chemistry, botany, and physics, and in the basement, the building was designed with shops for woodworking, machining, and domestic science.
50.
Physical geography is used loosely as a synonym, but the term is more properly applied to the borderland between geography and physiography; dealing, as it does, largely with the human element as influenced by its physiographic surroundings ".