Ozarks (Rural)
Karst country: caves, springs, and sinkholes shape rural land
Karst geology affects drainage, sinkhole risk, and groundwater, which matters for anyone buying rural land or relying on a private well in this county.
Under rural Maries County land, water may be taking a route nobody can see. That is the plain lesson of Ozark karst: soluble rock, small openings, caves, springs, sinkholes, and groundwater all work together. The Salem Plateau groundwater reference fits here because wells and surface drainage are tied closely in this kind of country. A sinkhole is not just a strange dip in the field. It can change where runoff goes, where a building site makes sense, and how carefully a private well should be protected. For a buyer, the useful question is not whether the land looks dry on one visit. It is how water moves through the place over time. Start with the DNR karst and sinkhole guidance, then look at the actual ground with that map in your head.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Maries County. See every local note for the county on its page.