Integrated geophysical investigations of the North American Midcontinent RiftSystem have resulted in a new understanding of the structure, stratigraphy, and evolution of this 1,100-Ma aborted continental rift. Interpretation of seismic reflection, gravity and magnetic anomaly, seismic refraction, rock physical property, and geologic data has identified a great degree of structural heterogeneity of the rift system in eastern Minnesota, northwestern Wisconsin, and western Lake Superior. In the western Lake Superior region, two ridges of pre-rift basement rocks are identified by pinch out of the rift's volcanic strata and lower portion of the overlying sedimentary sequence. In addition, regional rift reverse faults terminate above these ridges. Three-dimensional gravity modeling, constrained by seismic reflection profiles, suggests that both ridges are underlain by and composed of a belt of granitic rocks within the buried Archean greenstone-granite province beneath the rift basin, suggesting a significant influence of ancestral structures throughout the evolution of the rift system. Magnetic modeling indicates that magmatism did not occur uniformly along the length of the rift. In Minnesota and Wisconsin, the great majority of the rift's volcanic rocks are normally polarized and probably younger than the recorded ca. 1,098-Ma magnetic reversal, in contrast to western Lake Superior, where the lower half of the volcanic sequence is reversely polarized and was probably erupted before ca. 1,098-Ma. Gravity modeling suggests that the mass deficiency associated with crustal thickening along the rift is probably compensated by the positive effect of dense rift intrusions in the lower crust. The volume of magma trapped in the lower crust may be similar to that erupted into the rift basin.