Geography in the Southeast
Lower Region Beaches Swamps Wetlands Great Dismal Swamp in south of Virginia and northern part of North Carolina Okefenokee Swamp in southern Georgia and Northern Florida One of the largest swamps in North America
Everglades Southern Florida Marshes and swamps
Atlantic Coastal Plain Gulf Coastal Plain Land along Atlantic Almost all a flat plain Southward from Maryland to Florida Land along the gulf of Mexico Almost all a flat plain
Appalachian Mountains West of the Piedmont Divide between the rivers that flow into the Atlantic and those that drain into the Gulf of Mexico Blue Ridge Mountains Central part of Appalachians Dense forests
Piedmont Plateau Great for farming Forests Orchards Pastures Fall Line Between highlands of the Piedmont Plateau and the lowlands of the Coastal Plain
Fertile Lowland Extends southward across Kentucky and Tennessee into Alabama Good soil for tobacco and dairy farming
Rivers Rivers cut through the Coastal Plain leading to the Atlantic Ocean or the gulf of Mexico Mississippi River Delta soil Fertile
Fertile Soil Fertile soil in large port cities of Norfolk, Virginia, and Savannah, Georgia
You teach me! You may use this information and maps to make a map of the physical features of the southeast.
What does fertile mean? On the back of your map, make an inference of what you think the definition of fertile may be. We will hear this term again throughout the unit and learn how it connects to the southeast region.