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St. John Uplands
Ecoregion
in
Appalachian Mountains
,
ME
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Rolling uplands and open high hills on a well-dissected landscape characterize the St. John Uplands. The eastern boundary generally occurs at the 1000-foot elevation contour, and elevations in most of the region are 1000 to 2000 feet, with some peaks reaching 2400 feet. It has higher elevations and more relief than the Aroostook Hills (82b) to the east, with more boreal and fewer temperate species. The region is more hilly, with greater relief, and some higher elevations than Ecoregion 58w to the west. Typical soils include loamy, frigid Spodosols. Surface waters are slightly to moderately buffered and drain mostly to the Saint John and Allagash rivers that flow north through the region. The Saint John River then flows east through New Brunswick to the Bay of Fundy.
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Ecoregion
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