Prairie County topographic map
Interactive map
Click on the map to display elevation.
About this map
Name: Prairie County topographic map, elevation, terrain.
Location: Prairie County, Arkansas, United States (34.47974 -91.80369 35.09189 -91.34401)
Average elevation: 63 m
Minimum elevation: 43 m
Maximum elevation: 108 m
Other topographic maps
Click on a map to view its topography, its elevation and its terrain.
Bentonville
United States > Arkansas > Benton County
Bentonville lies in the humid subtropical climate zone (Köppen Cfa) with influence from the humid continental climate type. Bentonville experiences all four seasons and does receive cold air masses from the north, however some of the Arctic masses are blocked by the higher elevations of the Ozarks. July is…
Average elevation: 387 m
Fort Smith
United States > Arkansas > Sebastian County
The United States acquired the territory and large areas west of the Mississippi River from France in the Louisiana Purchase (1803). Soon after, the government sent the Pike Expedition (1806) to explore the areas along the Arkansas River. The US founded Fort Smith in 1817 as a military post. It was named after…
Average elevation: 140 m
Eureka Springs
United States > Arkansas > Carroll County
It is a tourist destination for its unique character as a Victorian resort, which first attracted visitors to use its then believed healing springs. The city has steep winding streets filled with Victorian-style cottages and manors. The historic commercial downtown of the city has an extensive streetscape of…
Average elevation: 411 m
Marshall
United States > Arkansas > Searcy County
For bicycling, the Ozark Grinder Trail is a nearby gravel grinder bicycle trail covering approximately 200 miles and 13,000 feet of elevation in north central Arkansas Ozarks. The annual Arkansaw High Country Race transits through Marshall each June. This event is an approximately 1,034-mile self-supported…
Average elevation: 331 m
Cross County
Roughly the western third of the county is within the Western Lowlands Pleistocene Valley Train subregion of the Delta. This region is characterized as flat windblown deposits of silty, sandy soils, and loess with a high groundwater table. Post oak and loblolly pine are native in the higher elevations, with…
Average elevation: 73 m
Dover
United States > Arkansas > Pope County
The mild hills historically supported oak-hickory forest or oak-hickory-pine forest. Elevation changes and soil types make the Arkansas Valley Hills largely unsuitable for row agriculture. Instead, forest has been cleared for pastureland, poultry farming or ranching. Logging remains an important land use where…
Average elevation: 164 m
Magnolia
United States > Arkansas > Columbia County
Magnolia is located in southwest Arkansas, north of the center of Columbia County. The average altitude is 336 ft (102 m) above sea level according to NOAA. The surrounding region is a mix of dense forest, farm prairies, and low rolling hills.
Average elevation: 91 m
Hickory Ridge
United States > Arkansas > Cross County
Hickory Ridge is within the Mississippi embayment of the Mississippi Alluvial Plain, a flat fertile floodplain of the Mississippi River. In Arkansas, an economic and cultural region roughly following this geography is known as the Arkansas Delta (or "the Delta"). Roughly the western third of Cross County is…
Average elevation: 70 m
Horseshoe Lake
United States > Arkansas > Crittenden County
The elevation of Horseshoe Lake is 203 feet (62 m) above sea level.
Average elevation: 62 m
Pine Bluff
United States > Arkansas > Jefferson County
The city is situated in the Southeast section of the Arkansas Delta and straddles the Arkansas Timberlands region to its west. Its topography is flat with wide expanses of farmland, similar to other places in the Delta Lowlands. Pine Bluff has numerous creeks, streams, and bayous, including Bayou Bartholomew,…
Average elevation: 69 m
Washington County
The economy of Washington County was based on apples in the late 19th century. A mixture of wet weather, altitude, and loamy soils provided a good environment for apple orchards. First planted in areas around Lincoln, Evansville, and Cane Hill in the 1830s, apple orchards began all across the county. The…
Average elevation: 424 m