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Chapter 7 Living in the United States and Canada
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Page 1: Chapter 7 Living in the United States and Canada.

Chapter 7

Living in the United States and Canada

Page 2: Chapter 7 Living in the United States and Canada.

7:1 Objectives

• 1. Explain the effects of physical geography on the region’s agriculture.

• 2. Identify the kinds of transportation and communications systems in the region.

• 3. Describe how the economies of the United States and Canada are dependent on each other and interdependent with those in other parts of the world.

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Terms to Know

• free market economy• post-industrial• commodity• retooling

• pipeline• monopoly• trade deficit• tariff• trade surplus

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Building Geography Literacy

• Advertising is one of the major service industries in the U.S.

• In 1997, U.S. companies spent more than $187 billion to advertise their products or services.

• About one-quarter of this amount is spent on television commercials.

• The next biggest markets for advertisements are local newspapers and direct mail.

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I. Economic Activities

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A. Agricultural

• Farming in the region is primarily commercial and large-scale.

• One billion acres in the U.S. and 167 million acres in Canada are used for agriculture.

• Only a small percentage of Americans and Canadians work as farmers, because of the high cost of farming, the hard work involved, and unpredictable consumer demand.

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B. Key Agricultural Products

• The major U.S. and Canadian crops are wheat and corn.

• U.S. and Canadian ranches and dairies are among the world’s leading producers of beef, milk, and eggs.

• Both countries also grow a variety of fruits and vegetables and produce chickens and pigs.

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C. Breaking Geographic Boundaries

• Geographic factors in the region once limited agricultural work,

• But technology and modern transportation have largely overcome these limits.

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Discussion Question

• How does the region’s physical geography relate to its agricultural production?

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II. Manufacturing and Service Industries

• About 20% of Americans and Canadians work in manufacturing industries, which have been transformed by advanced technologies such as robotics and computerized automation.

• A. Post-Industrial Economies• About 75% of Americans and Canadians work in

service industries such as government, health care, and education.

• High tech and biotechnology industries also employ many people in both countries.

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• B. Re-tooling the Rust Belt

• As the U.S. economy shifted from manufacturing to services, older industrial areas in the Great Lakes and Northeast were left with abandoned factories and steel mills.

• The rusting plants and parts gave these areas the derogatory nickname “the Rust Belt.”

• Today communities are converting old factories to new uses.

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Discussion Question

• What are some possible uses for an old factory?

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III. Transportation and Communication

• A. The Automobile

• Extensive automobile use in Canada and the United States has required investment in the building and maintenance of millions of miles of highways, road, and bridges.

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• B. Other Means of Transportation

• Most Americans and Canadians travel long distances by airplane.

• Railroads carry relatively few passengers but carry about 35% of the region’s freight.

• Another 35% is carried by waterways and on large trucks.

• Pipelines carry the region’s gas and oil.

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Alaskan Pipeline

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• C. Communications

• Canada’s broadcasting and telephone systems are operated by the government.

• Those in the U.S. are privately owned and operated.

• Cell phones, faxes, electronic communications are common.

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Discussion Question

• What do you think is the best way for the U.S. to protect its citizens from terrorist attacks at home and abroad?

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Chapter 7:2 Objectives

• 1. Explain how the U.S. and Canada are learning to manage their natural resources responsibly.

• 2. Identify causes and effects of pollution in the region, and discuss how it can be prevented.

• 3. Discuss the environmental challenges faced by the U.S. and Canada in the 2000s, both as individual countries and as a region.

Page 25: Chapter 7 Living in the United States and Canada.

Terms to Know

• clear cutting• acid rain• smog

• groundwater• eutrophication

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Building Geography Literacy

• In 1995 Americans generated more than 208 million tons of garbage.

• Only 27% of the total was recycled or composted.

• Over 32 million tons of paper and paperboard were recycled that year.

• Other recycled waste included metals, grass clippings, Christmas trees, plastics, and glass.

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I. Human Impact

• Canada and the U.S. are rich in natural resources, but the growth of industry has seriously damaged portions of the environment.

• Efforts are being made throughout the region to repair the damage, but much work needs to be done.

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Discussion Question

• What can ordinary people do to help the environment?

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II. Pollution

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• D. Back from the Brink

• Water in the Great Lakes region became so polluted that the Cuyahoga River in Ohio actually caught fire several times in the 1970s.

• Cleanup efforts are returning the lakes and rivers to their natural state.

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Discussion Question

• Automobiles are a major source of pollution, yet most people in this region continue to prefer automobile transportation over mass transit.

• Why might they do so, and how would you meet this challenge?

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III. Challenge for the Future

• WARNING – PROPAGANDA!!!!!!

• Global warming poses major challenges to North America and the rest of the planet.

• The U.S. and Canada will have to monitor and respond appropriately to changes in temperature and other effects of global warming.

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• The melting of polar ice is accelerating.• Areas of the permafrost in the tundra are

thawing.• Flooding of rivers and rising oceans

threaten coastal areas with rising ocean waters and more frequent floods.

• Warmer, higher seas alter climate patterns, causing weather events such as El Niño.

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Discussion Question

• How does global warming affect the area where you live?

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End of Slide Show