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Published byLoreen Muriel Hopkins Modified over 9 years ago
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Regions of the United States
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Northeast
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The Northeast Few natural resources Some coal in Pennsylvania Waterways (rivers, shoreline, Great Lakes, etc.) Allowed for trade, fishing, industry Factories were built along rivers waterfalls to take advantage of hydroelectric power Megalopolis (Greek “very large city”) The area from Boston to Washington, DC Over 40 million people Many descended from Immigrants
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South
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The South Climate/Vegetation Mostly Humid subtropical Warm and wet Less rainfall toward the West Warm and semiarid in western Texas and Oklahoma Mixed forests Mangroves are tropical trees in swampy areas along the coast Bayous in Louisiana Everglades in Florida Economy Agriculture Industry Textile mills built along the fall line Oil industry began in east Texas in 1901 NASA developed in 1960s in Florida, Alabama and Texas
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The South Population Population growth Sunbelt region grew faster than any other US region in the 19070s Diverse Population African America (over 50% live in the South) Hispanic Mexico (across the Rio Grande from Texas) Cuba (Florida is only 90 miles from Cuba) White/European Louisiana-French/Cajun West Texas-German
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Midwest
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The Midwest Agricultural Economy (The Nation’s Breadbasket) Large flat area with fertile soil Warmer and wetter areas (Illinois, Iowa, Indiana) Grow corn and soybeans and raise hogs Drier Great Plains States grow grains Wheat and sunflowers Cooler areas with poorer soil in the north (Wisconsin) Grow hay and raise dairy cattle
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The Midwest Transportation and Industry Waterways allow growth of heavy industry Great Lakes Detroit-automobiles Mississippi River Over 400 million tons of freight each year Railroad allow transportation of products Chicago-grain is processed and livestock slaughtered
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West
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The West Natural Resources/Economy Minerals such as gold, silver, oil, etc. Gold Rush—mid-1800s Oil discovered in Alaska in 1960s Pipelines carry oil from remote areas to port cities Forests—provide nearly 50% of the nation’s lumber Fish—billions of tons caught in waters off of Alaska, Hawaii, other Pacific coastal areas
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The West Alaska Largest state but least populated Few roads Juneau can be reached only by plane or boat Anchorage only has 2 roads into the city Hawaii 8 main islands More than 2,000 miles away from mainland US Annexed by the US in 1898 Became 50 th state in 1959 Jet travel makes it a popular tourist destination Satellites and Internet allow easier communications
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