IAS NOVA Interactive Atlas · Geography Through Maps
USA MOUNTAIN RANGES ATLAS
Trace 63 major mountain systems of the United States across a political map with state borders. Hover over a coloured ridge—or tap it—to examine its states, highest point, geological origin and geographical importance.
Jump to a mountain range · all 63 ranges · scroll within this list
Lines show generalized mountain axes for learning, not surveyed crests, park limits or legal boundaries. Alaska and Hawaii use standard map insets and are not shown at their true proximity to the mainland. State basemap geometry is derived from U.S. Census Bureau Cartographic Boundary Files.
Major Mountain Ranges of the United States by Region
This IAS NOVA Interactive Atlas presents Geography through maps for AP Human Geography, U.S. geography and Earth-science courses, SAT general studies, UPSC, State PSC, GCSE, A-Level and other examinations worldwide. Filter the map by broad mountain system, then select any range to revise its states, orientation, highest point, formation, geographical significance and a memorable exam-ready fact. Regional colours organize a complex landscape; they are not a single geological-age classification.
Pacific Mountain System
Coast-parallel ranges, volcanic arcs and uplifted blocks shaped by the active western plate margin.
Cascade Range · Sierra Nevada · Olympic Mountains · Klamath Mountains · Oregon Coast Range · California Coast Ranges · Santa Lucia Range · Transverse Ranges · Peninsular Ranges · Blue Mountains · Wallowa Mountains
Rocky Mountain System
The central North American Cordillera, including Laramide uplifts and related ranges from Montana to New Mexico.
Rocky Mountains · Lewis Range · Bitterroot Range · Sawtooth Range · Absaroka Range · Beartooth Mountains · Bighorn Mountains · Teton Range · Wind River Range · Uinta Mountains · Wasatch Range · Front Range · Sangre de Cristo Mountains · San Juan Mountains
Interior & Southwest
Fault-block, plateau-edge, desert and interior uplifts between the Pacific systems, Rockies and Great Plains.
Ruby Mountains · Snake Range · Toiyabe Range · Spring Mountains · Panamint Range · White Mountains · Black Hills · Guadalupe Mountains · Sacramento Mountains · Davis Mountains · Wichita Mountains · Ouachita Mountains · Ozark Mountains · Chuska Mountains · Santa Catalina Mountains · Chiricahua Mountains
Appalachian & Eastern Highlands
Ancient folded, metamorphic and uplifted highlands extending from the southern Appalachians into New England.
Appalachian Mountains · Blue Ridge Mountains · Great Smoky Mountains · Unaka Mountains · Cumberland Mountains · Allegheny Mountains · Catskill Mountains · Adirondack Mountains · Green Mountains · White Mountains · Taconic Mountains · Maine Highlands / Longfellow Mountains
Alaska & Hawaii
High-latitude collision and accretion ranges in Alaska plus the hotspot-built volcanic chain of Hawaii.
Alaska Range · Brooks Range · Aleutian Range · Chugach Mountains · Wrangell Mountains · Saint Elias Mountains · Kenai Mountains · Talkeetna Mountains · Kuskokwim Mountains · Hawaiian Volcanic Chain
Complete Reference: All 63 U.S. Mountain Ranges
Open any entry for its location, states, alignment, highest point, geological formation, geographical significance and a memorable fact. “Mountain range” is used broadly for named ranges, highland systems and major uplifted plateaus commonly studied on U.S. physical maps.
Pacific Mountain System 11
Coast-parallel ranges, volcanic arcs and uplifted blocks shaped by the active western plate margin.
Cascade RangeWashington, Oregon and northern California
States: Washington · Oregon · California
Alignment: North–south volcanic arc
Highest point: Mount Rainier · 14,410 ft / 4,392 m
Formation: Subduction of the Juan de Fuca Plate beneath North America built a chain of stratovolcanoes.
Why it matters: Creates a major rain shadow and contains closely monitored volcanoes including Rainier, St. Helens and Shasta.
The Cascades are part of the Pacific Ring of Fire; many summits are isolated volcanic cones.
Sierra NevadaEastern California and a short adjoining Nevada sector
States: California · Nevada
Alignment: Northwest–southeast tilted block
Highest point: Mount Whitney · 14,505 ft / 4,421 m
Formation: A granitic batholith was uplifted and tilted westward, with a steep faulted eastern face.
Why it matters: Its snowpack and reservoirs are crucial to California water supply; glaciation carved Yosemite’s famous landforms.
Mount Whitney, the highest summit in the contiguous United States, stands near below-sea-level Death Valley.
Olympic MountainsOlympic Peninsula of northwestern Washington
States: Washington
Alignment: Compact east–west peninsula massif
Highest point: Mount Olympus · 7,980 ft / 2,432 m
Formation: Marine sediment and basalt were scraped from the subducting plate, uplifted and deeply glaciated.
Why it matters: Intercepts Pacific moisture, supporting glaciers and temperate rainforest within Olympic National Park.
The wet western slopes contrast sharply with the drier northeastern rain-shadow zone.
Klamath MountainsNorthwestern California and southwestern Oregon
States: California · Oregon
Alignment: Curving north–south composite ranges
Highest point: Mount Eddy · 9,037 ft / 2,754 m
Formation: Successive oceanic terranes were accreted to western North America and cut by granitic intrusions.
Why it matters: A botanically exceptional crossroads linking the Coast Ranges, Cascades and Sierra Nevada.
Complex geology and isolated terrain support unusually high conifer diversity.
Oregon Coast RangeWestern Oregon beside the Pacific Ocean
States: Oregon
Alignment: North–south coastal belt
Highest point: Marys Peak · 4,097 ft / 1,249 m
Formation: Uplifted marine sediments and volcanic rocks of an accreted oceanic terrane.
Why it matters: Forces heavy orographic rain and separates coastal communities from the Willamette Valley.
Dense conifer forest masks a landscape dissected by short, steep Pacific-draining rivers.
California Coast RangesCoast-parallel ranges from northern to southern California
States: California
Alignment: Northwest–southeast faulted belts
Highest point: Mount Linn · 8,098 ft / 2,468 m
Formation: Compression, uplift and strike-slip deformation along the San Andreas transform margin.
Why it matters: Frames major valleys and coastal cities, with strong effects on fog, rainfall, habitats and wildfire.
The system is divided by San Francisco Bay into northern and southern Coast Ranges.
Santa Lucia RangeCentral California immediately beside the Big Sur coast
States: California
Alignment: Northwest–southeast coastal ridge
Highest point: Junipero Serra Peak · 5,862 ft / 1,787 m
Formation: Uplifted crystalline and sedimentary rocks deformed along the active plate margin.
Why it matters: Creates the spectacular steep meeting of mountains and ocean along Big Sur.
The range rises abruptly from the Pacific, leaving little coastal plain.
Transverse RangesSouthern California from Santa Barbara toward the Mojave Desert
States: California
Alignment: Unusual west–east ranges
Highest point: San Gorgonio Mountain · 11,503 ft / 3,506 m
Formation: Crustal blocks were rotated and compressed around a bend in the San Andreas Fault.
Why it matters: Forms the northern wall of the Los Angeles Basin and a major climatic and fire-weather barrier.
Unlike most western U.S. ranges, the Transverse Ranges trend mainly east–west.
Peninsular RangesSouthern California continuing through Baja California
States: California
Alignment: Northwest–southeast peninsula spine
Highest point: San Jacinto Peak · 10,834 ft / 3,302 m
Formation: Uplifted batholithic crust fragmented by faults beside the Pacific–North American plate boundary.
Why it matters: Separates the Southern California coast from the Colorado Desert and directs local water and transport corridors.
The U.S. section includes the Santa Ana, San Jacinto and Laguna mountains.
Blue MountainsNortheastern Oregon and adjoining southeastern Washington
States: Oregon · Washington
Alignment: Northeast–southwest upland complex
Highest point: Rock Creek Butte · 9,106 ft / 2,775 m
Formation: Accreted island-arc rocks, granitic intrusions and later Columbia River basalt were uplifted and dissected.
Why it matters: Forms an ecological and transport divide between the Columbia Plateau and Snake River Plain.
The name covers several separate uplands, including the Elkhorn and Strawberry mountains.
Wallowa MountainsExtreme northeastern Oregon
States: Oregon
Alignment: Compact northeast–southwest alpine range
Highest point: Sacajawea Peak · 9,843 ft / 3,000 m
Formation: Accreted terranes and granitic intrusions were uplifted, then sharply carved by ice.
Why it matters: Contains Oregon’s most alpine scenery and the headwaters of streams flowing to the Snake River.
Deep glacial valleys and high peaks have earned the nickname “Alps of Oregon.”
Rocky Mountain System 14
The central North American Cordillera, including Laramide uplifts and related ranges from Montana to New Mexico.
Rocky MountainsFrom Montana and Idaho through Wyoming and Colorado to New Mexico
States: Montana · Idaho · Wyoming · Utah · Colorado · New Mexico
Alignment: Broad northwest–southeast continental system
Highest point: Mount Elbert · 14,440 ft / 4,401 m
Formation: Mostly uplifted during the Laramide orogeny as shallow-angle subduction transmitted compression far inland.
Why it matters: Forms the Continental Divide and the headwaters of major rivers flowing toward the Pacific, Gulf of Mexico and Arctic.
The Rockies are a system of many distinct ranges, not one continuous ridge.
Lewis RangeNorthern Montana at the Canadian border
States: Montana
Alignment: Northwest–southeast thrust belt
Highest point: Mount Cleveland · 10,466 ft / 3,190 m
Formation: The Lewis Overthrust pushed ancient rock eastward over much younger strata.
Why it matters: Forms the dramatic backbone of Glacier National Park and part of the Continental Divide.
Some exposed rocks are more than a billion years older than rocks beneath them.
Bitterroot RangeWestern Montana–Idaho border
States: Montana · Idaho
Alignment: North–south to northwest–southeast divide
Highest point: Trapper Peak · 10,157 ft / 3,096 m
Formation: Uplift and faulting exposed granitic rocks of the Idaho Batholith.
Why it matters: A rugged interstate divide separating the Bitterroot Valley from central Idaho wilderness.
The eastern front rises steeply above Montana’s Bitterroot Valley.
Sawtooth RangeCentral Idaho
States: Idaho
Alignment: North–south granitic range
Highest point: Thompson Peak · 10,751 ft / 3,277 m
Formation: Fault uplift exposed the Idaho Batholith, followed by extensive alpine glaciation.
Why it matters: Major recreation and headwater region near the source of the Salmon River.
Glaciers sharpened the skyline into the serrated profile that inspired its name.
Absaroka RangeSouthern Montana and northwestern Wyoming
States: Montana · Wyoming
Alignment: Northwest–southeast volcanic range
Highest point: Francs Peak · 13,153 ft / 4,009 m
Formation: Eocene volcanic piles and intrusions were uplifted and eroded into rugged peaks.
Why it matters: Borders Yellowstone and feeds tributaries of the Yellowstone, Bighorn and Snake systems.
Although part of the Rockies, much of the range is made of volcanic rock.
Beartooth MountainsSouth-central Montana and northwestern Wyoming
States: Montana · Wyoming
Alignment: East–west high plateau and peaks
Highest point: Granite Peak · 12,807 ft / 3,904 m
Formation: A Laramide basement uplift raised very old crystalline rocks, later shaped by glaciers.
Why it matters: Contains Montana’s highest summit and a high tundra landscape crossed by Beartooth Highway.
Precambrian rocks exposed here are among the oldest at the surface in the United States.
Bighorn MountainsNorth-central Wyoming into southern Montana
States: Wyoming · Montana
Alignment: Northwest–southeast isolated uplift
Highest point: Cloud Peak · 13,167 ft / 4,013 m
Formation: A broad Laramide arch uplifted Precambrian basement through younger sedimentary layers.
Why it matters: Divides the Bighorn and Powder River basins and stores snow for surrounding plains.
Its exposed rock sequence provides a clear cross-section through regional geologic history.
Teton RangeWestern Wyoming beside Jackson Hole
States: Wyoming
Alignment: North–south fault-block front
Highest point: Grand Teton · 13,775 ft / 4,199 m
Formation: Movement on the Teton Fault raised the range while the Jackson Hole block subsided.
Why it matters: A textbook young fault-block landscape with dramatic local relief and glacial landforms.
The range lacks broad foothills, so it rises abruptly from Jackson Hole.
Wind River RangeWest-central Wyoming
States: Wyoming
Alignment: Northwest–southeast high range
Highest point: Gannett Peak · 13,810 ft / 4,209 m
Formation: Laramide uplift raised a granitic core that alpine glaciers deeply sculpted.
Why it matters: Contains Wyoming’s highest summit, extensive glaciers and a major Continental Divide segment.
Gannett Glacier is among the largest glaciers in the U.S. Rocky Mountains.
Uinta MountainsNortheastern Utah extending into Wyoming
States: Utah · Wyoming
Alignment: East–west range
Highest point: Kings Peak · 13,528 ft / 4,123 m
Formation: Laramide compression uplifted a broad arch of resistant Precambrian sedimentary rocks.
Why it matters: Contains Utah’s highest summit and important headwaters of the Green River.
It is the highest major east–west mountain range in the contiguous United States.
Wasatch RangeNorth-central Utah beside the Great Salt Lake and Utah valleys
States: Utah
Alignment: North–south faulted front
Highest point: Mount Nebo · 11,928 ft / 3,636 m
Formation: Extension in the Basin and Range Province uplifted the Wasatch block along active faults.
Why it matters: Its snowpack supplies the Wasatch Front, where most Utah residents live.
Steep relief beside Salt Lake City makes earthquake, avalanche and debris-flow hazards especially important.
Front RangeCentral Colorado into southeastern Wyoming
States: Colorado · Wyoming
Alignment: North–south eastern Rocky Mountain front
Highest point: Grays Peak · 14,278 ft / 4,352 m
Formation: Laramide uplift raised crystalline basement along the eastern edge of the Rockies.
Why it matters: Forms the mountainous backdrop of Colorado’s largest urban corridor and a key Continental Divide section.
Pikes Peak and Longs Peak are famous landmarks, though Grays Peak is the range high point.
Sangre de Cristo MountainsSouthern Colorado into northern New Mexico
States: Colorado · New Mexico
Alignment: North–south narrow range
Highest point: Blanca Peak · 14,351 ft / 4,374 m
Formation: Laramide uplift was later sharpened by Rio Grande Rift faulting.
Why it matters: Forms a high wall east of the San Luis Valley and continues the Continental Divide region southward.
Its name means “Blood of Christ,” traditionally linked to red sunset light on the peaks.
San Juan MountainsSouthwestern Colorado
States: Colorado
Alignment: Broad volcanic mountain cluster
Highest point: Uncompahgre Peak · 14,321 ft / 4,365 m
Formation: Large Oligocene volcanic fields and caldera eruptions built on older Laramide uplifts.
Why it matters: Headwaters of the Rio Grande and Colorado tributaries; historically important for hard-rock mining.
The San Juan volcanic field preserves several immense ancient calderas.
Interior & Southwest 16
Fault-block, plateau-edge, desert and interior uplifts between the Pacific systems, Rockies and Great Plains.
Ruby MountainsNortheastern Nevada
States: Nevada
Alignment: North–south fault-block range
Highest point: Ruby Dome · 11,387 ft / 3,471 m
Formation: Basin-and-Range extension uplifted a metamorphic core complex along normal faults.
Why it matters: A high, glaciated “sky island” with unusually reliable water in arid northeastern Nevada.
Lamoille Canyon is a classic U-shaped glacial valley.
Snake RangeEastern Nevada near the Utah border
States: Nevada
Alignment: North–south fault-block range
Highest point: Wheeler Peak · 13,065 ft / 3,982 m
Formation: Crustal extension and detachment faulting exposed deeply buried rocks.
Why it matters: Contains Great Basin National Park, alpine habitats and ancient bristlecone pines.
The range rises more than 2,000 m above adjacent desert basins.
Toiyabe RangeCentral Nevada
States: Nevada
Alignment: North–south Basin-and-Range block
Highest point: Arc Dome · 11,788 ft / 3,593 m
Formation: Normal faulting stretched the crust into alternating ranges and valleys.
Why it matters: A long central Nevada watershed separating Big Smoky and Reese River valleys.
Its long crest illustrates the repeated basin-and-range pattern visible across Nevada.
Spring MountainsSouthern Nevada west of Las Vegas
States: Nevada
Alignment: Northwest–southeast fault-block range
Highest point: Charleston Peak · 11,916 ft / 3,632 m
Formation: Basin-and-Range faulting lifted thick Paleozoic carbonate rocks.
Why it matters: A cool forested sky island and critical water-recharge zone beside the Las Vegas Valley.
Strong elevation zonation places desert, pinyon-juniper, conifer forest and alpine environments close together.
Panamint RangeEastern California west of Death Valley
States: California
Alignment: North–south fault-block range
Highest point: Telescope Peak · 11,043 ft / 3,366 m
Formation: Crustal extension uplifted the Panamint block while adjacent Death Valley subsided.
Why it matters: Creates some of North America’s most extreme local relief from basin floor to summit.
Telescope Peak overlooks Badwater Basin, the lowest point in North America.
White MountainsEastern California and a small Nevada sector
States: California · Nevada
Alignment: North–south fault-block range
Highest point: White Mountain Peak · 14,252 ft / 4,344 m
Formation: Basin-and-Range faulting raised sedimentary and crystalline rocks east of Owens Valley.
Why it matters: High arid terrain preserves ancient bristlecone pines and important alpine research sites.
Some Great Basin bristlecone pines here are among the oldest known non-clonal organisms.
Black HillsWestern South Dakota and northeastern Wyoming
States: South Dakota · Wyoming
Alignment: Oval isolated dome
Highest point: Black Elk Peak · 7,244 ft / 2,208 m
Formation: Laramide uplift domed ancient crystalline rocks through younger sedimentary layers.
Why it matters: A forested island above the Great Plains with major cultural, ecological and tourism significance.
Black Elk Peak is the highest U.S. point east of the Rockies.
Guadalupe MountainsWest Texas and southeastern New Mexico
States: Texas · New Mexico
Alignment: Northwest–southeast uplifted reef escarpment
Highest point: Guadalupe Peak · 8,751 ft / 2,667 m
Formation: Fault uplift exposed a Permian fossil reef along the margin of the Delaware Basin.
Why it matters: Contains the highest point in Texas and one of the world’s clearest ancient reef records.
El Capitan is the range’s conspicuous limestone landmark above the desert.
Sacramento MountainsSouth-central New Mexico
States: New Mexico
Alignment: North–south fault-block escarpment
Highest point: Sierra Blanca Peak · 11,981 ft / 3,652 m
Formation: Rio Grande Rift and Basin-and-Range faulting uplifted an eastern block; Sierra Blanca adds volcanic rock.
Why it matters: A major forested sky island and water source above the Tularosa Basin.
The range overlooks White Sands, producing a striking mountain–dune contrast.
Davis MountainsWest Texas
States: Texas
Alignment: Compact volcanic upland
Highest point: Mount Livermore · 8,378 ft / 2,554 m
Formation: Eocene–Oligocene volcanism built lava flows, ash deposits and intrusions later eroded into ranges.
Why it matters: A cool Chihuahuan Desert sky island containing observatories and rare habitats.
McDonald Observatory benefits from the area’s high elevation, dry air and dark skies.
Wichita MountainsSouthwestern Oklahoma
States: Oklahoma
Alignment: Short northwest–southeast ancient uplifts
Highest point: Mount Pinchot · 2,476 ft / 755 m
Formation: Cambrian igneous rocks were uplifted and then deeply eroded, leaving resistant knobs.
Why it matters: An isolated rocky refuge within the southern Great Plains.
Despite modest height, the exposed granite makes the landscape appear rugged and abrupt.
Ouachita MountainsWestern Arkansas and southeastern Oklahoma
States: Arkansas · Oklahoma
Alignment: East–west folded ridges
Highest point: Mount Magazine · 2,753 ft / 839 m
Formation: Late Paleozoic collision folded and thrust deep-water sediments at the southern margin of ancestral North America.
Why it matters: A forested east–west mountain belt with novaculite, quartz and distinctive parallel ridges.
The Ouachitas are geologically related to the Appalachians but are separated at the surface by the Mississippi Embayment.
Ozark MountainsSouthern Missouri and northern Arkansas with adjoining Oklahoma and Kansas
States: Missouri · Arkansas · Oklahoma · Kansas
Alignment: Broad dissected plateau and domes
Highest point: Buffalo Lookout · about 2,561 ft / 781 m
Formation: An ancient uplifted plateau of sedimentary rock was deeply dissected by rivers.
Why it matters: Karst, springs, caves and forested plateaus define an important interior highland region.
The Ozarks are better described geologically as an uplifted, eroded plateau than a folded mountain chain.
Chuska MountainsNortheastern Arizona and northwestern New Mexico
States: Arizona · New Mexico
Alignment: Northwest–southeast plateau-edge range
Highest point: Roof Butte · 9,783 ft / 2,982 m
Formation: Uplifted sedimentary rocks capped locally by volcanic deposits form the Defiance–Chuska highland.
Why it matters: A major cultural and water-resource landscape within the Navajo Nation.
The forested crest rises distinctly above the dry Colorado Plateau.
Santa Catalina MountainsSouthern Arizona north of Tucson
States: Arizona
Alignment: Northwest–southeast metamorphic core complex
Highest point: Mount Lemmon · 9,159 ft / 2,792 m
Formation: Crustal extension exposed deep metamorphic rocks along a detachment fault.
Why it matters: A classic sky island with rapid ecological change from Sonoran Desert to conifer forest.
The drive up Mount Lemmon crosses life zones comparable to a journey from Mexico toward Canada.
Chiricahua MountainsSoutheastern Arizona
States: Arizona
Alignment: North–south volcanic sky island
Highest point: Chiricahua Peak · 9,759 ft / 2,975 m
Formation: A large volcanic eruption and later erosion created welded-tuff cliffs, pinnacles and balanced rocks.
Why it matters: Biogeographic link between temperate Rocky Mountain and subtropical Sierra Madre ecosystems.
The “Wonderland of Rocks” preserves thousands of rhyolite columns called hoodoos.
Appalachian & Eastern Highlands 12
Ancient folded, metamorphic and uplifted highlands extending from the southern Appalachians into New England.
Appalachian MountainsFrom Alabama and Georgia through the Mid-Atlantic and New England
States: Alabama · Georgia · Tennessee · North Carolina · Virginia · West Virginia · Maryland · Pennsylvania · New Jersey · New York · Connecticut · Massachusetts · Vermont · New Hampshire · Maine
Alignment: Southwest–northeast ancient fold belt
Highest point: Mount Mitchell · 6,684 ft / 2,037 m
Formation: Multiple Paleozoic continental collisions folded and metamorphosed rocks during assembly of Pangaea.
Why it matters: Shapes eastern watersheds, forests, transport corridors, coalfields and a major cultural region.
The Appalachians once connected with mountains now in Scotland, Greenland and Scandinavia.
Blue Ridge MountainsGeorgia to Pennsylvania along the eastern Appalachians
States: Georgia · North Carolina · Tennessee · Virginia · Maryland · Pennsylvania
Alignment: Southwest–northeast crystalline ridge belt
Highest point: Mount Mitchell · 6,684 ft / 2,037 m
Formation: Ancient metamorphic and igneous rocks were uplifted during Paleozoic collisions and later deeply eroded.
Why it matters: Contains the highest summits in the eastern United States and anchors the Blue Ridge Parkway.
Atmospheric scattering from forest-released hydrocarbons helps create the characteristic blue haze.
Great Smoky MountainsTennessee–North Carolina border
States: Tennessee · North Carolina
Alignment: Southwest–northeast Blue Ridge subrange
Highest point: Kuwohi · 6,643 ft / 2,025 m
Formation: Metamorphosed sedimentary rocks were folded, faulted and uplifted during Appalachian mountain building.
Why it matters: Exceptionally biodiverse, humid forested range protected by the most-visited U.S. national park.
Kuwohi was restored in 2024 as the official name of the summit long called Clingmans Dome.
Unaka MountainsNortheastern Tennessee and western North Carolina
States: Tennessee · North Carolina
Alignment: Southwest–northeast Appalachian ridges
Highest point: Roan High Knob · 6,285 ft / 1,916 m
Formation: Ancient metamorphic rocks were uplifted in Paleozoic collisions and rounded by prolonged erosion.
Why it matters: High balds, spruce–fir forests and rich biodiversity mark the central Appalachian crest.
Roan Mountain is renowned for extensive rhododendron gardens and grassy balds.
Cumberland MountainsKentucky, Virginia, Tennessee and West Virginia
States: Kentucky · Virginia · Tennessee · West Virginia
Alignment: Southwest–northeast plateau-front ridges
Highest point: High Knob · 4,223 ft / 1,287 m
Formation: Erosion dissected the western Appalachian Plateau while folding and faulting shaped its edge.
Why it matters: Coal-bearing terrain and narrow gaps strongly influenced settlement, transport and economic history.
Cumberland Gap became a famous migration route through the Appalachian barrier.
Allegheny MountainsWest Virginia, western Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania
States: West Virginia · Virginia · Maryland · Pennsylvania
Alignment: Southwest–northeast ridges and plateau front
Highest point: Spruce Knob · 4,863 ft / 1,482 m
Formation: Folded Paleozoic sedimentary rock and deep river incision formed parallel ridges and high plateaus.
Why it matters: A major eastern watershed and highland containing forests, headwaters and historic transport barriers.
Spruce Knob is the highest point in West Virginia and in the Allegheny Mountains.
Catskill MountainsSoutheastern New York west of the Hudson River
States: New York
Alignment: Dissected plateau with east-facing escarpment
Highest point: Slide Mountain · 4,180 ft / 1,274 m
Formation: Rivers deeply dissected nearly horizontal Devonian sedimentary rocks on an uplifted plateau.
Why it matters: Provides a major share of New York City’s drinking-water catchment and a celebrated recreation landscape.
Geologically the Catskills are a plateau, even though their relief and cultural identity are mountainous.
Adirondack MountainsNorthern New York
States: New York
Alignment: Circular domal uplift
Highest point: Mount Marcy · 5,344 ft / 1,629 m
Formation: Very old Grenville-age crystalline rocks are being raised in a relatively young broad dome.
Why it matters: Largest protected park in the contiguous United States and source region for several river systems.
The Adirondacks are geographically near the Appalachians but are geologically part of the Canadian Shield.
Green MountainsLength of Vermont into Massachusetts
States: Vermont · Massachusetts
Alignment: North–south metamorphic range
Highest point: Mount Mansfield · 4,393 ft / 1,339 m
Formation: Metamorphism and thrusting during the Taconic and later Appalachian orogenies built the range.
Why it matters: Forms Vermont’s backbone, main watershed and a major forest and tourism region.
Vermont’s name derives from the French verts monts—“green mountains.”
White MountainsNorthern New Hampshire and western Maine
States: New Hampshire · Maine
Alignment: Southwest–northeast granitic highlands
Highest point: Mount Washington · 6,288 ft / 1,917 m
Formation: Ancient igneous intrusions were uplifted and extensively sculpted by Pleistocene ice.
Why it matters: Contains the highest summit in the northeastern United States and severe alpine weather.
Mount Washington recorded a 231 mph wind gust in 1934, a long-standing world surface-wind record.
Taconic MountainsEastern New York, western New England
States: New York · Vermont · Massachusetts · Connecticut
Alignment: North–south narrow belt
Highest point: Mount Equinox · 3,848 ft / 1,173 m
Formation: An early Paleozoic island arc collided with North America during the Taconic orogeny.
Why it matters: A forested ridge separating the Hudson–Champlain lowland from western New England.
The Taconic orogeny was the first major mountain-building event of the Appalachians.
Maine Highlands / Longfellow MountainsCentral and northern Maine
States: Maine
Alignment: Southwest–northeast dissected uplands
Highest point: Mount Katahdin · 5,269 ft / 1,606 m
Formation: Paleozoic folding and granitic intrusion were followed by deep erosion and glaciation.
Why it matters: Contains Maine’s highest summit, major forests and headwaters; Katahdin marks the Appalachian Trail’s northern terminus.
The “Longfellow Mountains” is a traditional regional name rather than one continuous geologic range.
Alaska & Hawaii 10
High-latitude collision and accretion ranges in Alaska plus the hotspot-built volcanic chain of Hawaii.
Alaska RangeSouth-central Alaska
States: Alaska
Alignment: Curving east–west high range
Highest point: Denali · 20,310 ft / 6,190 m
Formation: Terrane accretion, compression and active subduction uplifted a granitic core along Alaska’s convergent margin.
Why it matters: Contains the highest summit in North America and extensive glaciers feeding major Alaskan rivers.
Denali has exceptional base-to-summit relief, rising more than 5 km above nearby lowlands.
Brooks RangeArctic northern Alaska
States: Alaska
Alignment: West–east Arctic fold-and-thrust belt
Highest point: Mount Isto · 8,976 ft / 2,736 m
Formation: The Brookian orogeny folded and thrust sedimentary rocks northward during Mesozoic–Cenozoic convergence.
Why it matters: Major watershed separating Alaska’s interior from the North Slope and Arctic coastal plain.
The range lies almost entirely north of the Arctic Circle and is largely treeless.
Aleutian RangeAlaska Peninsula and adjacent southwestern Alaska
States: Alaska
Alignment: Northeast–southwest volcanic arc
Highest point: Mount Redoubt · 10,197 ft / 3,108 m
Formation: The Pacific Plate subducts beneath the North American Plate along the Aleutian Trench.
Why it matters: Active volcanoes affect aviation, fisheries and communities around Cook Inlet and the Alaska Peninsula.
The range continues westward as the long island arc of the Aleutian Islands.
Chugach MountainsSouth-central Alaska beside the Gulf of Alaska
States: Alaska
Alignment: Curving coastal accretion range
Highest point: Mount Marcus Baker · 13,176 ft / 4,016 m
Formation: Oceanic sediments and crust were accreted, uplifted and intensely glaciated above a subduction margin.
Why it matters: Heavy maritime snowfall feeds vast icefields and glaciers close to Anchorage and Prince William Sound.
The range receives some of the heaviest snowfall in North America.
Wrangell MountainsEastern south-central Alaska
States: Alaska
Alignment: Northwest–southeast volcanic massif
Highest point: Mount Blackburn · 16,390 ft / 4,996 m
Formation: Large shield and stratovolcanoes grew above the subducting Pacific Plate.
Why it matters: Part of the immense Wrangell–St. Elias protected wilderness and an important glacier source.
Mount Wrangell is one of the largest active volcanoes by volume in the United States.
Saint Elias MountainsSoutheastern Alaska at the Canadian border
States: Alaska
Alignment: Northwest–southeast coastal collision range
Highest point: Mount Saint Elias · 18,008 ft / 5,489 m
Formation: Rapid convergence and terrane collision uplift crust beside the Gulf of Alaska.
Why it matters: One of Earth’s greatest coast-to-summit relief zones, with enormous icefields and tidewater glaciers.
Mount Saint Elias rises only about 16 km from tidewater, creating exceptional local relief.
Kenai MountainsKenai Peninsula south of Anchorage
States: Alaska
Alignment: Northeast–southwest coastal range
Highest point: Mount Truuli · 6,612 ft / 2,015 m
Formation: Accreted rocks were uplifted and deeply carved by glaciers along the active southern Alaska margin.
Why it matters: The Harding Icefield feeds numerous glaciers and strongly shapes the fjorded coast.
Kenai Fjords National Park preserves where ice, mountains and ocean meet.
Talkeetna MountainsSouth-central Alaska northeast of Anchorage
States: Alaska
Alignment: North–south to northeast–southwest upland
Highest point: Sovereign Mountain · 8,849 ft / 2,697 m
Formation: An accreted volcanic arc and granitic intrusions were uplifted and glaciated.
Why it matters: Separates the Susitna lowland from the Copper River basin and supplies several important watersheds.
The range exposes part of an ancient island arc added to North America.
Kuskokwim MountainsSouthwestern interior Alaska
States: Alaska
Alignment: Northeast–southwest subdued uplands
Highest point: Several summits above 5,000 ft / 1,500 m
Formation: Folded sedimentary and volcanic terranes were uplifted, eroded and partly modified by permafrost processes.
Why it matters: A remote divide between the Yukon and Kuskokwim drainage systems.
Broad rounded ridges reflect great age, erosion and cold-region weathering rather than Alpine-style relief.
Hawaiian Volcanic ChainHawaiian Islands in the central Pacific
States: Hawaii
Alignment: Northwest–southeast hotspot island chain
Highest point: Mauna Kea · 13,803 ft / 4,207 m above sea level
Formation: The Pacific Plate moves northwestward over a relatively fixed mantle hotspot, building successively older islands.
Why it matters: Creates the entire Hawaiian archipelago, active volcanic hazards and strong elevation-driven climate zones.
Measured from its submarine base, Mauna Kea is taller than Everest is above sea level.
Test Yourself
Answer all 15 questions. Each choice is checked instantly and followed by a short explanation.
Q1Which is the highest mountain in the United States?
Denali in the Alaska Range reaches 20,310 ft (6,190 m), the highest point in both the United States and North America.
Q2Which range contains the highest summit in the contiguous United States?
Mount Whitney, at 14,505 ft (4,421 m), is in California’s Sierra Nevada.
Q3Which U.S. mountain system is an ancient Paleozoic fold belt?
The Appalachians were assembled through Paleozoic continental collisions and have been deeply eroded.
Q4The Cascade volcanoes formed mainly because of:
The Juan de Fuca Plate descends beneath North America, generating magma for the Cascade volcanic arc.
Q5The dramatic eastern front of the Teton Range is chiefly associated with:
Movement on the Teton Fault raised the range while Jackson Hole subsided.
Q6Which major Rocky Mountain range trends unusually east–west?
The Uinta Mountains of Utah are the highest major east–west range in the contiguous United States.
Q7Which mountain system carries long sections of the Continental Divide?
The Rocky Mountains form the primary continental watershed through much of the western United States.
Q8The Black Hills are best described as:
The Black Hills are an oval basement uplift rising as a forested island above the Great Plains.
Q9What is the restored official name of the highest summit in the Great Smoky Mountains?
Kuwohi, long called Clingmans Dome, reaches 6,643 ft on the Tennessee–North Carolina border.
Q10Denali belongs to which range?
Denali is the culminating summit of the Alaska Range.
Q11Which range contains the highest point in Texas?
Guadalupe Peak reaches 8,751 ft (2,667 m) in the Guadalupe Mountains.
Q12Mauna Kea is part of which mountain-building setting?
The Hawaiian Islands formed as the Pacific Plate moved over a mantle hotspot.
Q13Mount Washington is the high point of which range?
Mount Washington reaches 6,288 ft in New Hampshire’s White Mountains.
Q14Which range rises directly east of the densely populated Salt Lake–Provo corridor?
The Wasatch Range fronts Utah’s principal urban corridor and supplies much of its mountain snowpack.
Q15Why are the Adirondacks geologically distinct from the Appalachians?
The Adirondacks expose Grenville-age crystalline rocks in a broad uplift related to the Canadian Shield.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many U.S. mountain ranges are included in this atlas?
The atlas maps 63 selected major systems and subranges. It emphasizes ranges most useful for physical geography, regional studies and examinations; the United States has many additional local named ranges.
What is the highest mountain in the United States?
Denali in Alaska is the highest U.S. and North American summit at 20,310 ft (6,190 m).
What is the highest mountain in the contiguous United States?
Mount Whitney in California’s Sierra Nevada is the highest point in the lower 48 states at 14,505 ft (4,421 m).
How do the Rocky Mountains differ from the Appalachian Mountains?
The Rockies are a younger, higher western system uplifted mainly during the Laramide orogeny. The Appalachians are a much older Paleozoic collision belt, rounded and lowered by long erosion.
Why are Alaska and Hawaii shown as insets?
A standard composite U.S. projection places the non-contiguous states near the lower 48 so all 50 states remain legible in one map. Their inset positions are not their true geographic proximity to the mainland.
Are the Cascade Range and the Pacific Coast Ranges the same?
No. The Cascades are chiefly a subduction-related volcanic arc inland of the coast. The Coast Ranges are faulted and uplifted belts closer to the Pacific shoreline.
Do the coloured lines show exact mountain boundaries?
No. They are generalized atlas-scale axes that help locate each system. Mountain regions are broad and commonly overlap; a line is not a surveyed crest, park boundary or legal boundary.
Which states contain major parts of the U.S. Rocky Mountains?
The principal U.S. Rocky Mountain belt crosses Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado and New Mexico, with many named subranges and adjoining uplands.
Which examinations can use this map?
It supports AP Human Geography, U.S. geography and Earth-science courses, state competitive examinations, SAT-related general studies, UPSC and State PSC world-geography revision, GCSE, A-Level and other international geography exams.
Sources and Method
The atlas combines a Census-derived state basemap with generalized educational mountain axes and concise geological synthesis. Principal references are:
- U.S. Census Bureau — Cartographic Boundary Files, for the generalized political state basemap.
- U.S. Geological Survey — Physiographic Divisions of the Conterminous U.S., for national physiographic context.
- U.S. Geological Survey — Elevations and Distances in the United States, for national and state high-point reference.
- U.S. Geological Survey — Physiographic Provinces of Alaska, for Alaska’s regional framework.
- U.S. Geological Survey — Geology of the Southern Appalachian Mountains, for Appalachian structure and history.
- U.S. Geological Survey — Geological Overview of the Teton Range, for the Teton fault-block example.
- Smithsonian Institution — Global Volcanism Program, for active volcanic-system context.
- U.S. Geological Survey — The National Map, for topographic cross-checking.
Method note: Range extents and boundaries vary among scientific and cultural sources. The map therefore uses approximate centerlines at national scale. Elevations are standard educational reference values; conversions are rounded and may vary slightly among surveys. Alaska and Hawaii are repositioned by the composite map projection.
