1 / 16

7-2 October 2015-6

7-2 October 2015-6. Warm-up On your map of the south: label the states Label state capitals . Section 1. Landforms and Resources. • The United States and Canada have vast lands and abundant resources . • These two countries share many of the same landforms . NEXT.

abel
Télécharger la présentation

7-2 October 2015-6

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 7-2 October 2015-6 Warm-up On your map of the south: label the states Label state capitals

  2. Section 1 Landforms and Resources • The United States and Canada have vast lands and abundant resources. • These two countries share many of the same landforms. NEXT

  3. Landforms and Resources Landscape Influenced Development Anglo America • U.S., Canada: former British Colonies most people speak English • Strong economic and political ties with one another Vast Lands • Canada 2ndlargest country in the world by area; U.S. 3rd • Together they cover one eighth of the earth’s land surface Continued . . . NEXT

  4. continuedLandscape Influenced Development Abundant Resources • Landmass and natural resources attract immigrants to both countries • U.S. and Canada have developed into global economic powers NEXT

  5. Many and Varied Landforms Major Landforms • all major landforms are found in U.S. and Canada • The two countries share mountainchains and interior plains Continued . . . NEXT

  6. Many and Varied Landforms The Eastern Lowlands • Atlantic Coastal Plain extends from Delaware down to Florida • Gulf Coastal Plain goes from Florida along Gulf of Mexico, to Texas • Piedmont—low plateau between coastal Plains Appalachian Highlands Continued . . . NEXT

  7. continuedMany and Varied Landforms The Appalachian Highlands • Appalachian Mountains run 1,600 miles from Newfoundland to _Alabama - include Green and Catskill mountains in the north - Blue Ridge and Great Smoky mountains in the south • More than 400 million years old • Erosion has created gentle slopes, peaks from 1,200–2,400 feet • The Appalachian Trail is a scenic hiking path along the chain Continued . . . NEXT

  8. continuedMany and Varied Landforms The Interior Lowlands • Glacier _leveled the land, left fertile soil • Interior Plains extend from Appalachianto Missouri River • Great Plains extend from Missouri River to Rocky Mountains • Canadian Shield vast, flat area around Hudson Bay Continued . . . NEXT

  9. continuedMany and Varied Landforms The Western Mountains, Plateaus, and Basins • Rocky Mountains run 3,000 miles from Alaska to New Mexico • Relatively young: 80 million years old • Less erosion means rugged, 12,000-foot, snow-covered peaks •Continental Divide—the line of highest points along the Rockies - separates rivers that flow Eastward from those that flow Westward Continued . . . NEXT

  10. continuedMany and Varied Landforms The Western Mountains, Plateaus, and Basins • Other Pacific mountain ranges: Sierra Nevada, Cascade • Continent’s highest peak: Mt. McKinelyin Alaska • Major Earthquake activity in Pacific ranges • Between ranges and Rockies: cliffs, canyons, basins (low desert) 1 NEXT

  11. continuedMany and Varied Landforms The Islands • Canada’s large, northern islands: Ellesmere, Victoria, Baffin • U.S.: Aleutians(Alaska), Hawiian (politically, not geographically) 1 NEXT

  12. Resources Shape Ways of Life Oceans and Waterways •U.S. and Canada are bounded by: - Atlantic, - Pacific, - Arctic oceans - Gulf of Mexico Continued . . . NEXT

  13. Resources Shape Ways of Life Oceans and Waterways •Countries have many large, inland rivers and lakes that provide: - Transportation, hydroelectric power, irrigation, fresh water, fisheries Continued . . . NEXT

  14. continuedResources Shape Ways of Life Oceans and Waterways • Great Lakes: Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, and Superior • Mississippi –Missouri -Ohio river system: continent’s longest, busiest • Mackenzie River: longest in Canada, crosses Northwest Territories Continued . . . NEXT

  15. continuedResources Shape Ways of Life Land and Forests • Fertile soil helps make North America world’s leading food exporter • Large forests yield Lumber and other products • Minerals and Fossil Fuels • • Mineral quantity and variety make rapid industrialization possible • Canadian Shield: iron ore, nickel, copper, gold, uranium • Appalachians, Great Plains: coal • Gulf of Mexico: oil, natural gas • •U.S.: biggest energy consumer; gets most of Canada’s energy exports NEXT

More Related