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Many carbon dioxide (COâ) emissionâreduction strategies currently under consideration rely on terrestrial carbon (C) sequestration to offset substantial proportions of COâ emissions. We estimated C sequestration rates and potential land areas for a diverse array of landâcover changes in the Upper Midwest of the US, a âbest caseâ region for this study because of its relatively modest COâ emissions and the large areas of cropland potentially available for conversion. We then developed scenarios that apply some of the most widespread mitigation strategies to the region: the first, which aimed to offset 29% of regional COâ emissions, required the unrealistic loss of twoâthirds of working cropland; the second, which estimated the emission offset attainable by conversion of 10% of harvested croplands (5.8% of the US total), resulted in