American Geography
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Transcript American Geography
American Geography
U.S. History II 1g, 2c, 1f, 1i
Five Themes of Geography
Location
Place
Region
Movement
Human-Environment Interaction
Location
Defined according to its position in the
earth’s surface
“Where is it?”
Examples for Ashburn, VA:
West of Fairfax – relative
39.0438° N, 77.4874° W - coordinates
Place
Locations having distinctive features
that give them meaning and character
that differ from other locations over
time
What is it like?
Region
A unit on the earth’s surface that has
unifying characteristics
“How are places similar or different?”
Movement
The way people, products, and
information move from one place to
another
“How do people, goods, and ideas
move from one location to another?”
Human-Environment Interaction
The relationship between people and
their environment
“How do people relate to the physical
world? How did the environment over
time change the people and their
history?”
DILI USII.1b:
Five Themes of Geography
U.S. Regions, States, and Cities
Preview Video
Region: Northeast
States
Maine
Vermont
New Hampshire
Connecticut
Massachusetts
Rhode Island
New Jersey
Pennsylvania
Geography of the Northeast
Cities of the Northeast:
New York City
New York City
By 1850 is was the most populated American city
Most immigrants arrived at Ellis Island
Cities of the Northeast:
Boston
Boston
Where many Irish and
Italian immigrants
settled
Major textile industry
center in the early 1900s
Cities of the Northeast:
Philadelphia
Philadelphia
Where the Declaration of Independence was written
Major railroad hub during the late 1800s and early 1900s
Cities of the Northeast:
Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh
Steel manufacturing center
Region: Southeast
States
South Carolina
Maryland
Georgia
Delaware
West Virginia Florida
Alabama
Virginia
Mississippi
Kentucky
Louisiana
Tennessee
North Carolina Arkansas
Geography of the Southeast
Cities of the Southeast:
Washington, D.C.
Washington, D.C.
Capital of the United
States
Cities of the Southeast:
New Orleans
New Orleans
Major port city and
gateway to the
Mississippi River
The majority of the city
is below sea level
Cities of the Southeast:
Atlanta
Atlanta
Destroyed by General
Sherman during the Civil
War
Site of sit-ins during the
Civil Rights Movement
Site of the 1996
Olympics
Region: Midwest
States
Ohio
Indiana
Illinois
Michigan
Wisconsin
Minnesota
Iowa
Missouri
Kansas
Nebraska
South Dakota
North Dakota
Geography of the Midwest
Cities of the Midwest:
Detroit
Detroit
Center of the
automobile
industry
Cities of the Midwest:
St. Louis
St. Louis
Lewis and Clark began their journey west from this
city
Hosted 1904 Worlds’ Fair
Cities of the Midwest:
Chicago
Chicago
Center of the meatpacking industry
1/3 of the city was destroyed by a fire in 1871
Hotspot for gangsters in 20th century (Al Capone)
Region: Western (Rocky Mountain)
States
Colorado
Utah
Wyoming
Nevada
Montana
Idaho
Geography of the Rocky Mountain
Region
Cities of the Rocky Mountain Region:
Denver
Denver
Founded during the Gold Rush
Originally an American Indian encampment
Cities of the Rocky Mountain Region:
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake City
Founded as a Mormon settlement in 1847
Located on the Great Salt Lake
Region: Southwest
States
Texas
Oklahoma
New Mexico
Arizona
Geography of the Southwest
Geography
Desert landscape
Land is irrigated to
allow for the growing
of crops
Cities of the Southwest:
Santa Fe
Santa Fe
Santa Fe Trail headed west from Independence, MO
in 1850s
Capital of New Mexico
Cities of the Southwest:
San Antonio
San Antonio
Texans here staged a revolt
against Mexican rule, but were
slaughtered by Mexican
General Santa Anna at the
Alamo. With the battle cry,
“Remember the Alamo!”,
Texans eventually captured
the Mexican dictator and
Texas became an independent
republic.
Region: Pacific
States
Washington
Oregon
California
Geography of the Pacific
Cities of the Pacific:
Los Angeles
Los Angeles
Originally a Spanish settlement
Center of culture, science, technology, and higher
education
Cities of the Pacific:
San Francisco
San Francisco
Founded by the Spanish
1848 Gold Rush propelled the city into rapid growth
Destroyed by an earthquake in 1906 but quickly rebuilt
Cities of the Pacific:
Seattle
Seattle
Major trading post in the late 1800s-early 1900s
Gateway to Alaska during the Klondike Gold Rush of the
1890s
Region: Noncontiguous
States
Alaska
Hawaii
Geography of Alaska
Capital is accessible only
by air or boat
Contains mountains,
glaciers, an Arctic climate
Large petroleum industry
locate here
Alaska History
Bought for $7 Million dollars from Russia,
referred to as“Seward’s Folly”
Didn’t become a state until 1959
Noncontiguous Cities: Juneau
Juneau
Capital of Alaska
Began as an Inuit settlement
Once was a mining town
Alaskan Pipeline runs near the city
Geography of Hawaii
Hawaii is the only state:
Completely in the
tropics
Completely surrounded
by water
That continues to grow
That is an archipelago
Noncontiguous Cities: Honolulu
Honolulu
Capital and largest city in Hawaii
Formerly the location of the Hawaiian monarchy
Major tourist location
American Road Trip Partners &
Puzzle Practice
DILI 2c: Regions, States, and Cities
Review (if time)
Interactive State Placement Activity:
http://tinyurl.com/3wuxb
States and Capitals – Song (Animaniacs)