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      • The basic layout of Vermont in terms of its mountains and valleys was probably established by about 150 million years ago. Since then, Vermont’s geology has mostly been a story of erosion, which has been hastened in more recent times by glaciers. The Green Mountains seem eternal, but they were not the first mountain range to cover Vermont.
      mountaintimes.info/2020/07/15/geologic-events-long-ago-shaped-more-than-just-vermonts-landscape/
  1. The Green Mountains are a mountain range in the U.S. state of Vermont and are a subrange of the Appalachian Mountains. The range runs primarily south to north and extends approximately 250 miles (400 km) from the border with Massachusetts to the border with Quebec, Canada.

  2. Jun 28, 2020 · For simplicity’s sake, Vermont’s geography is usually divided into six zones: the Champlain Lowlands, a fertile zone bordering Lake Champlain; the Green Mountains, peaks made largely of...

  3. Jul 15, 2020 · The Green Mountains were reshaped about 100 million years later during the Acadian Orogeny. During that mountain-forming event, magma surged through cracks in proto-North America and created the granite peaks of northeastern Vermont and New Hampshire.

  4. Green Mountains, part of the Appalachian Mountain system, U.S., extending for 250 miles (402 km) from north to south through the centre of Vermont and having a maximum width of 36 miles (58 km). Many peaks rise above 3,000 feet (900 metres), with the loftiest being Mount Mansfield (4,393 feet.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. The central and southern Green Mountain range include the oldest rocks in Vermont, formed about one billion years ago during the first mountain building period (or orogeny). Subsequently, about 400 million years ago, the second mountain building period created Green Mountain peaks that were 15,000–20,000 feet (4,600–6,100 m) tall, three to ...

  6. An inventory of early cartography (1749-1778), from the earliest map showing English settlements in what is now southern Vermont to the first map displaying the words "State of Vermont," [7] reveals that the very first map showing "Green Mountains" dates from 1778.

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  8. The Green Mountains are flanked on the east by the Foothills or Piedmont of the Green Mountains and on the west by the Champlain Valley. In the southwestern corner of the state, a thin divide known as the Valley of Vermont separates the Taconic Mountain Range from the Green Mountains.

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