An example is the reigon directly north of the city, between the Great Miami and Stillwater rivers. Using a topographic map from around 1903 (before the start of suburbanization) as a basis one can do some topographical analyses.

1. Midwestern Plains: the stereotypical midwest landscape, a mix of farms and woolots.
2. Flat to Rolling Country: still charactersitic of the plains, but more rolling, not as flat
3. Hills & Valleys/Creek Valley: valleys along watercourses, steeper slopes.
4. Bluffs & Steep Slopes: well defined valley walls with steep slopes and ravines.
5. Flats & Bottoms: nearly dead-level land along the rivers.
6. Bench: Flat land just above the river bottoms, seperated from them by a low bluff or hill
7. River Oxbows/Changing River Course: The Great Miami apparently meandered in its bottoms, changing course from time to time, leaving oxbows. This process has stopped due to flood control.
8. The Ridge: A somewhat unique feature, perhaps a glacial remnant, a higher piece of land with steep slopes on either side.

One can see how the fairly flat landscape of the midwestern plains breaks into tongues of more rolling yet still mostly level terrain, but then drops to the river and creek valleys via hills and steeper slopes, and how extensive the flatlands are along rivers.
Laying the rectantular coordinate survey system over the landscape yields the "Midwestern Grid"....







Taking two diagrammatic cross sections one can see, in the first, how the land steps down to the Great Miami. The low bluff that seperates the bench from the bottom lands is evident inside the city of Dayton, too, in South Park (at the Emerson School), St Annes Hill (Dutoit Street and Steamboat House hills) and Front Street (the hill on 2nd as it passes between the buildings). In West Dayton its visible as the rise just the the east of Paul Lawrence Dunbar Street.

And how, when one is in the bottomlands near the Great Miami @ Dixie, one does not get a sense of being in a valley due to the indistinct bluffs and valley walls.
So perhaps a more subtle and varied landscape than one would expect.
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