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Unit 2, Chapter 5: Physical Geography of the United States and Canada Notes Physical characteristics of the U.S. and Canada - Canada is the world’s second largest country - U.S. is the world’s fourth largest country - U.S. and Canada share an undefended border, topographical features (like mountain ranges), similar governments, economies, and lifestyles - Abundant natural resources Fossil fuels – coal, natural gas, oil Metals – copper, zinc, gold, silver Renewable resources - forests, fishing, fresh water, fertile soil (Canada has 5% arable land, U.S. has 20% arable/farmable land - Continental divide (the Great Divide) – high ridge of the Rockies that determines the direction that rivers flow: East of the Continental Divide, waters flow into the Arctic Ocean, the Hudson Bay, the Gulf of Mexico, and the Atlantic Ocean; West of the Continental Divide waters flow into the Pacific Ocean - Rivers - Mississippi River St. Lawrence River Colorado River Columbia River Rio Grande Other Water Bodies Gulf of Mexico Great Lakes (Superior, Huron, Erie, Ontario, Michigan) Arctic Ocean Pacific Ocean Atlantic Ocean Hudson Bay - Land forms - Varied climate regions From Tundra climates in northern Alaska and Canada to Tropical Savanna in southern Florida and Tropical Rainforest in Hawaii Complete the Climate Regions Chart Aleutian Islands (Alaska) Hawaiian Archipelago Appalachian Mountains Pacific Coastal Range Basin and range Rocky Mountains Great Plains Interior lowlands Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plains Piedmont Canadian Shield Grand Canyon Niagara Falls Physical Geography of the U.S. & Canada (cont.) Topographical Features: - Mountain ranges line both the eastern and western edge o West Coast to East Coast: Pacific Range – line the Western Coast of Canada and the U.S.; includes the Alaskan range (location of Mt. McKinley, the highest peak in North America), the Coast Range, the Sierra Nevadas, and the Cascade Range Rocky Mountains – the longest mountain chain in North America; 3,000 miles long; connect Canada and the U.S. Plateaus – mountains in the west give way to plateaus; includes the Colorado Plateau and the Grand Canyon in the United States; the Nechako Plateau and the Fraser Plateau in Canada Plains – plateaus fall to plains further east and form the Great Plains which spans both the U.S. and Canada; the Great Plains slope even lower near the Mississippi River Valley to form the Central Lowlands Appalachian Mountains – span the eastern coast of the U.S. Canadian Shield – a giant core of rock centered on the Hudson Bay anchors the continent Piedmont – lowlands just to the east of the Appalachian Mountains Atlantic Coastal Plain – line the eastern seaboard - Islands are important in the region Manhattan Island – part of New York City; on the mouth of the Hudson River; a major U.S. and world economic center Hawaiian Archipelago – volcanic island chain forming the state of Hawaii in the Pacific Ocean Aleutian Islands – Alaskan island chain Vancouver Island – western Canada Newfoundland, Prince Edward Island, Cape Breton Island – eastern Canada Ellesmere Island – northern Canada