Unit 2, Chapter 5: Physical Geography of the United States and Canada



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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

      • 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




  • 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

Physical Geography of the U.S. & Canada (cont.)



Topographical Features:


  • Mountain ranges line both the eastern and western edge

    • 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


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