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Definition of bottomland in English: bottomlandnounˈbɒtəmlandˈbɑdəmˌlænd mass nounNorth American Low-lying land, typically by a river. count noun on a fine bottomland Example sentencesExamples - In these treatments, habitats listed for this grass include marshes, bottomland forests, river banks, exposed bars and shores, and open ruderal areas.
- In addition to the hundred acres of decent bottomland, McGinty's old man also accumulated a little highland pasturage to the north of the valley, where he kept a few fat, lazy sheep.
- The second, indirect approach to assessing distribution of species was based on an ordination of quantitatively sampled bottomland stands.
- The quieter ivory-bills retreated to darkened corners of the remaining bottomland, keeping their songs to themselves.
- Few people seem to enjoy watching other people catch fish as much as this native of Panola County and its rich Sabine River bottomland.
- TNC has plans to buy and restore an additional 200,000 acres of bottomland hardwood forest there, including land that was cleared for soybeans in the '70s and '80s and will be reforested.
- My grandparents owned a small farm, whittled down over the years to about 40 acres of bottomland, in some of the most productive agricultural land in America.
- Today, however, most of the good bottomland has been subdivided, a scenario that is playing out on all sides of the Greater Yellowstone, whose human population grew at nearly twice the national rate in the 1990s.
- The general study area is located in southeastern Louisiana where the southernmost Mississippi River bottomland forests grow.
- As one local farmer puts it: ‘Much of the land is moorland and poor quality, though there's some good bottomland usually along the streams and rivers.’
- We measured the area of each spot-mapping plot that was ridge, bottomland, and midslope to determine the proportion available for each.
- About a day's walk upstream from the confluence of the Shields and Yellowstone rivers, a sandstone bluff looms above the willow bottomland.
- Even though the land is reclaimed, you will pass through many habitat types such as pastures, mixed forests, pine flatwoods, oak and hydric hammocks, scrub, and bottomland, swamp forests.
- Its second-growth oaks, hickories, and sugar maples tower over the open pastures and fields of the lower slope and bottomland.
- Floods breath life into these hidden bottomland waterways and the land around them.
- The gorge slowly widens northward to reveal river benches, flood plains, and broadening bottomland, most of which are now artificially flooded.
- Selman's cottonwood recruitment has been beset by salt cedar invasion, deer browsing, and heavy grazing by cattle on lush bottomland grasses.
- Within its boundaries, Brazos Bend has clearly defined areas of gallery forest, freshwater marsh, coastal prairie and mixed hardwood bottomland.
- You'll need land, of course, preferably rich, well-watered bottomland.
- But some say thousands and thousands of Louisiana black bear once roamed the rich forested bottomland of eastern Texas, Louisiana, and southern Mississippi.
Definition of bottomland in US English: bottomlandnounˈbɑdəmˌlændˈbädəmˌland North American Low-lying land, typically by a river and subject to overflow during floods. count noun on a fine bottomland Example sentencesExamples - About a day's walk upstream from the confluence of the Shields and Yellowstone rivers, a sandstone bluff looms above the willow bottomland.
- Selman's cottonwood recruitment has been beset by salt cedar invasion, deer browsing, and heavy grazing by cattle on lush bottomland grasses.
- We measured the area of each spot-mapping plot that was ridge, bottomland, and midslope to determine the proportion available for each.
- As one local farmer puts it: ‘Much of the land is moorland and poor quality, though there's some good bottomland usually along the streams and rivers.’
- You'll need land, of course, preferably rich, well-watered bottomland.
- Even though the land is reclaimed, you will pass through many habitat types such as pastures, mixed forests, pine flatwoods, oak and hydric hammocks, scrub, and bottomland, swamp forests.
- But some say thousands and thousands of Louisiana black bear once roamed the rich forested bottomland of eastern Texas, Louisiana, and southern Mississippi.
- Today, however, most of the good bottomland has been subdivided, a scenario that is playing out on all sides of the Greater Yellowstone, whose human population grew at nearly twice the national rate in the 1990s.
- The quieter ivory-bills retreated to darkened corners of the remaining bottomland, keeping their songs to themselves.
- In these treatments, habitats listed for this grass include marshes, bottomland forests, river banks, exposed bars and shores, and open ruderal areas.
- The gorge slowly widens northward to reveal river benches, flood plains, and broadening bottomland, most of which are now artificially flooded.
- My grandparents owned a small farm, whittled down over the years to about 40 acres of bottomland, in some of the most productive agricultural land in America.
- Few people seem to enjoy watching other people catch fish as much as this native of Panola County and its rich Sabine River bottomland.
- The general study area is located in southeastern Louisiana where the southernmost Mississippi River bottomland forests grow.
- Within its boundaries, Brazos Bend has clearly defined areas of gallery forest, freshwater marsh, coastal prairie and mixed hardwood bottomland.
- Floods breath life into these hidden bottomland waterways and the land around them.
- TNC has plans to buy and restore an additional 200,000 acres of bottomland hardwood forest there, including land that was cleared for soybeans in the '70s and '80s and will be reforested.
- Its second-growth oaks, hickories, and sugar maples tower over the open pastures and fields of the lower slope and bottomland.
- The second, indirect approach to assessing distribution of species was based on an ordination of quantitatively sampled bottomland stands.
- In addition to the hundred acres of decent bottomland, McGinty's old man also accumulated a little highland pasturage to the north of the valley, where he kept a few fat, lazy sheep.
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