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United States and Canada Climate and Resources Chapter 3 Section 2
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Climate and Vegetation Weather – the state of the atmosphere near Earth at a given time and place. Precipitation – moisture such as rain or snow. Climate – typical weather in a region over a long period of time. Vegetation – trees, shrubs, grasses, and other plants that grow Economy – way that business owners use resources to provide goods and services that people want.
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Vegetation zones Polar & Tundra Forest Rainforest Grassland Desert
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Polar and Tundra ▫Northern Canada and Alaska have cool summers and very cold winters. ▫Only above 32º F for 2 months ▫Ground is frozen most of the year ▫Precipitation ranges from 4-20 inches a year.
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Forests ▫Conifer forests (Evergreen) and broadleaf trees cover Canada, northwest, northeast, and southeast United States. ▫Precipitation ranges from 10-80 inches a year ▫Temperatures vary from mild to cold in different areas.
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Rain Forest Along the Pacific Coast precipitation can reach 167 inches a year. Rainforests with trees 300 feet tall grow here. Ground has bushes, small trees, and other plants Temperature is moderate even in the north, seldom falling below 32ºF in the winter.
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Grasslands The center of North America Prairie in the Mississippi Valley may get 30+ inches of precipitation each year. Grasses are tall and thick Further west there is less rainfall People grow grain and raise cattle in these areas.
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Desert American Southwest gets less than 10 inches of precipitation each year. Plants have to withstand harsh sun, high temperatures and little rain.
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Natural Wealth Land and Power Resources ▫Farmland of the midwestern USA and Canada have rich soil. ▫Forests in western Canada and northwestern, northeastern, and southeaster USA. ▫Oil fields in Alberta, Texas, California, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Alaska, Gulf of Mexico (BP spill) ▫Coal in Canada’s western provinces, Appalachian Mountains, Illinois, Wyoming and … INDIANA! Water Resources ▫Settlers followed and settled along the river routes. ▫Fresh water and good soil to raise crops and animals ▫Rivers still used to ship natural resources such as timber and coal (St. Lawrence River) ▫Fishing ▫Rivers give water supply, power, and recreational activities.
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Neighbors and Leaders More than 200 million people cross the US and Canada border every year. Trade exceeds $1 billion a DAY! Work together on: ▫National security ▫National defense ▫Environment ▫Air traffic ▫fishing
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President John F. Kennedy “Geography has made us neighbors, history has made us friends, economics has made us partners, and necessity has made us allies.
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