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Physical Geography of the U.S. & Canada Chapter 5 Section 1 - U.S. & Canada cover 7 million sq. miles - 12% of Earth Western Features • Pacific Ranges – Formed by colliding plates (Pacific & N.A.) – Sierra Nevada, Cascade Range, Alaska Range, and Coastal Mountains (in Canada) Mt. McKinley (Alaska Range) = tallest peak in N.A. at 20,320 feet Western Features • Great California Valley – alluvial valley – out produces any other region in fruit & vegetable production In Between Landforms • Dry basins and plateaus fill area between Pacific Ranges and Rockies – Why? – rain shadow effect from Pacific Ranges In Between Landforms • Great Basin Region: area of low land surrounded by mts. – Great Basin, Mojave, Sonoran, & Chihuahuan Deserts In Between Landforms – Death Valley: • hottest & lowest (282 ft. below sea level) place in N. Am. • dancing rocks phenomenon In Between Landforms • Columbia Plateau– Created by lava seeping thru cracks • Flood basalt – Eventually part of crust sank into space left by lava In Between Landforms • Colorado Plateau– Created by tectonics and erosion (Colo. River) – Grand Canyon @ southern end – Walls as steep as 6,000 ft Hoover Dam • Built on Colorado River b/w Arizona and Nevada (1931-1935) • What is purpose of building dam? – to provide irrigation, flood control, and hydroelectricpower Rocky Mountains • Formed by collision of N. A. & Pacific plates • Stretch more than 3,000 miles from New Mexico to Alaska • Some peaks are more than 14,000 ft tall • Series of ranges (cordilleras) Rockies in Alberta, Canada Continental Divide • Divide = high point or ridge that determines the direction that rivers flow – E - toward Arctic Ocean & Atlantic Ocean – W - into the Pacific Ocean Rivers • Main rivers that have headwaters in Rockies – Colorado, Columbia, Rio Grande, Mackenzie, Missouri Interior Landforms • US: between Rockies and Appalachian • Canada: between Rockies and Canadian Shield Interior Landforms • Great Plains (aka Interior/High Plains*) – Start at 6,000 ft gradually slope down about 10 ft/mile from W to E – E of Rockies: extend 300-700 miles across center of region – “Breadbasket” of the US (Wheat Belt) *depends on source* Interior Landforms • High Plains: primarily W of the 100th meridian – W of meridian= 10-20 inches of rain (semiarid); good for rangeland • Rain shadow from Rockies – E of meridian= 20+ inches of rain Interior Landforms • Eastern Interior Plains: region most positively affected by glaciers – Typically east of 100th Meridian • 20-40 inches of rain – Mostly flat w/ some rolling hills – Most fertile soil in world: Corn Belt Interior Landforms • Interior Highlands – Ozarks: Surface is limestone • Sinkholes, caves, and springs Canadian Shield • Giant core of bedrock (millions of yrs. old) – Negatively affected by Glaciation: scraped down to bare rock/thin soil • Good soil deposited in Great Plains – Only veg. is forests in south – Great for minerals (ores, gold, silver, copper, etc.) Exposed Precambrian bedrock Eastern Mountains • Appalachians: formed 300 million yrs ago – Oldest mts; eroded to 5,000-6,000 ft – Eastern NA plate collided with African plate – From Quebec to central Alabama – Valleys great for agriculture Piedmont & Lowlands • Piedmont: E of Appalachians – Plateau region that drops (Fall line) into the coastal lowlands – Many 1st cities originated here: Philadelphia, Richmond, Baltimore, D.C…. WHY? • Rapids/waterfalls = hydroelectric power and blocked from moving inland Lowlands • Atlantic PlainCarolinas, narrower as move North • Gulf Coastal Plainwest toward TX Water • US/Canada wealthy b/c of abundant water- power, transportation Water • Mississippi: 2,350 miles – Starts as stream in Minnesota – Gets to width of 1 ½ miles & empties into Gulf of MX – Affects all/part of 31 states and 2 provinces – One of world’s busiest waterways Water • St. Lawrence River: one of Can. most impt. Rivers – From Great Lakes to Atlantic, forms country border • Niagara Falls: – Tourist attraction, and major source of hydroelectric power – Form border of Ontario and NY Water • Glacial Lakes – Great Bear Lake & Great Slave Lake formed by glacial dams – Great Lakes (Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, Superior) formed by glacial gouges • St. Lawrence Seaway- series of canals & rivers • Helped build industry in NE Islands • NYC’s Manhattan Island: impt. economic center • Hawaii: volcanic island state, big tourism • Newfoundland, P.E.I., Vancouver I.: Canada’s most impt. • Greenland: world’s largest island, Denmark territory (Alaska + TX) Resources • Fuels – petroleum & nat. gas: TX and Alaska, & Alberta lead – Coal: Appalachians, Wyoming, & British Columbia • Minerals – Gold, silver, copper: Rockies – Iron & nickel: Canadian Shield Resources • Timber – Today cover <50% of Canada & 1/3 of US – Conservation of forests and animals is high priority • Fishing – Grand Banks (Can.), Atlantic, Pacific, and Gulf of MX • Cod fishing banned in Grand Banks in ’92 due to overfishing