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Physical Features of the United States and Canada Chapter 7
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Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Feb 06, 2016

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Physical Features of the United States and Canada. Chapter 7. Appalachian Mountains (Blue Ridge, Catskill, and Green Mountains. New Foundland to Alabama Highest Point —Mount Mitchell at 6,684 feet (North Carolina) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Chapter 7

Page 2: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Appalachian Mountains (Blue Ridge, Catskill, and Green Mountains

•New Foundland to Alabama•Highest Point—Mount Mitchell at 6,684 feet (North Carolina)•Formed during the collision of North America and Africa over 300+ million years ago

Page 3: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Piedmont•Plateau region stretching from New Jersey to Alabama•80,000 square miles and up to 300 miles wide•Low, rolling hills ranging from 200 to 1,000 feet high•Remnant of several ancient mountain ranges

Page 4: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Rocky Mountains•3,000 + miles long (British Colombia to New Mexico)•Highest point—Mount Elbert in Colorado at 14,440 feet high•Formed 76 million years ago by colliding plates (subduction)

Page 5: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Mount McKinley

• Alaska (Alaska Range)• Highest mountain in

the North America at 20,320 feet high

• Subduction of the Pacific plate underneath the North American plate

Page 6: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Sierra Nevada Mountains•400 miles long and 70 miles wide•Highest point: Mount Whitney at 14,505 feet (highest point in contiguous US)•Began to form about 4 millions years ago

Page 7: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Cascade Range

•British Colombia to California•Part of Pacific Ring of Fire•Highest point: Mount Rainier at 14,411 ft •Series of volcanoes

Page 8: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Death Valley•Located in the Mojave Desert•Lowest, driest, and hottest area in the United States•282 feet below sea level•Highest recorded temperature: 134° F

Page 9: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Great Plains•Sub-region of the interior plains•South-central Canada into Texas and Mexico•501,933 sq mi•Prairie, steppe, and grassland

Page 10: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Interior Plains

• Deposits from the eroding Rocky Mountains

• Many lakes formed by glaciers during the last ice age.

• Rolling hills, many river systems, and productive soils

Page 11: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Mississippi River

• Largest river system in the United States

• 2,320 miles long• Flows into Gulf of

Mexico

Page 12: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Great Lakes

• Freshwater lakes• 80,545 sq miles-surface• Created from glacial

retreat

• 21% of Earth’s surface freshwater

Page 13: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Canadian Shield

• Arc of ancient rock covered by a thin layer of soil

• Scraped by glaciers leaving a rough rocky landscape

• 8,000,000 sq km• Originally a very

mountainous area• Overtime, erosion has

caused the area to become flat.

Page 14: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Continental Divide

• Divides North America’s major river systems into those flowing eastward and those flowing westward.

Page 15: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Pacific Ring of Fire (25,000 miles)•Tectonically active region around the edges of the Pacific.•75% of the world’s volcanoes and 90% of the world’s earthquakes

Page 16: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Tectonic Plates

Page 17: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Rio Grande

• Natural boundary between Mexico and the US

• 1,896 miles long• 182,200 sq mi

watershed

Page 18: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Lake Okeechobee

•Lake Okeechobee is the largest freshwater lake in Florida•730 square miles•9 feet deep

Page 19: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Colorado River

• 1,450 miles long• Watershed is 246,000

sq mi• Flows west out of the

Rocky Mountains and empties into the Gulf of California

Page 20: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Grand Canyon

• Steep-sided canyon• Created by plate

tectonics and the Colorado River

• 277 miles long• Up to 19 miles wide• 6,000 feet deep

Page 21: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Ohio River

• Largest tributary, by volume, of the Mississippi River

• 981 miles long• 189,422 sq mi drainage

basin

Page 22: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Missouri River

• Tributary of the Mississippi River

• Longest river in North America at 2,540 miles long

• Important for trade and transportation

Page 23: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Bering Strait

• Strait—narrow, navigable channel of water that connects two larger navigable bodies of water.

• Sea strait between Russia and Alaska•53 miles wide•98—160 feet deep

Page 24: Physical Features of the United States and Canada

Hudson Bay

• Northeastern Canada• 470,000 sq mi—2nd

largest in the world.• 330 ft deep• Connected to Arctic

and Atlantic Ocean

Ice beginning to form in early November.