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Illinois HIGH and LOW

When people describe Illinois as being flat, what exactly do they mean? What is flat?Is there a way to measure flatness? In fact, there are two ways flatness can be measured.

1) It can be measured by the amount of relief, defined here as the vertical difference in elevation between the summits and the lowlands of a given region.

2) It can be measured by the average slope, which is measured with the equation (rise/run) x 100.

Because there are two ways to measure flatness, there are four possible combinations of slope and relief, as illustrated in the following example profiles:

Diagram of low relief and slope   Diagram of high relief and low slope

       Low relief and low average slope                                                             High relief and low average slope

 

Diagram of low relief and high slope   Diagram of high relief and high slope

          Low relief and high average slope                                                                   High relief and high average slope

 

The landscape of Illinois resulted from the action of glaciers, streams, rivers, and wind. Glaciers eroded the previously existing landscape, and deposited the material elsewhere. Glacial moraines account for many of the high places in Illinois but the highest point in Illinois is a bedrock exposure in an area the glaciers never reached. The low places are generally in the river and stream valleys of the state and the lowest point in the state is at the southern tip, where the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers meet. The following list of county names contains links that will give you much more information about the specific county.

Adams Alexander Bond Boone Brown Bureau
Calhoun Carroll Cass Champaign Christian Clark
Clay Clinton Coles Cook Crawford Cumberland
DeKalb Dewitt Douglas Du Page Edgar Edwards
Effingham Fayette Ford Franklin Fulton Gallatin
Greene Grundy Hamilton Hancock Hardin Henderson
Henry Iroquois Jackson Jasper Jefferson Jersey
Jo Daviess Johnson Kane Kankakee Kendall Knox
Lake La Salle Lawrence Lee Livingston Logan
Macon Macoupin Madison Marion Marshall Mason
Massac McDonough McHenry McLean Menard Mercer
Monroe Montgomery Morgan Moultrie Ogle Peoria
Perry Piatt Pike Pope Pulaski Putnam
Randolph Richland Rock Island Saline Sangamon Schuyler
Scott Shelby Stark St. Clair Stephenson Tazewell
Union Vermilion Wabash Warren Washington Wayne
White Whiteside Will Williamson Winnebago Woodford


Illinois counties ranked by area, relief, or percent slope.
Learn more about the analytical process.

 

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ILLINOIS STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
INSTITUTE OF NATURAL RESOURCE SUSTAINABILITY     |    UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN

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Updated 6/19/2007 JKH