Physical Geography of North America Review

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Across
  1. 3. Second largest bay in the world that is so far north it often freezes in winter.
  2. 6. Most of Colorado is considered this climate, which has hot summers, cold winters, and low precipitation
  3. 11. An area that has common physical or cultureal features.Examples include The Front Range, Pacific Northwest, or “Silicon Valley”
  4. 13. A region of major tectonic activity that circles the Pacific Ocean; the Pacific mountain ranges and hawaii’s volcanoes are a part of it.
  5. 15. A form of extreme weather that affects the southeastern and Atlantic regions of the United States and Canada, mostly in the summer and fall.
  6. 16. A map that gives special information about a geographic location, such as weather, population density, roads, etc.
  7. 18. California’s agricultural industry is hugely successful, because most of the state is THIS climate, which allows for farming year-round.
  8. 19. The four major types of this are forest, desert, grassland, and tundra.
  9. 20. A climate/biome zone found in the far northern regions of Canada and Alaska, made mostly of flat treeless lands that are frozen for much of the year.
  10. 22. A map that shows landforms, elevation, and other natural features of an area.
  11. 24. Where plants and animals live, made possible by a combination of conditions in the lithosphere, hydrosphere and atmosphere in a location.
  12. 27. One of the oldest mountain ranges in the world, stretching from northern Alabama to the state of Maine in the eastern part of the United States.
  13. 29. Any water on (e.g. oceans, rivers) or over (e.g. clouds) the earth’s surface
  14. 30. A vast area of marshlands and rivers that covers most of the southern regions of Florida.
  15. 31. Solid rock part of the earth’s crust where the ocean floor and continent land masses are located.
  16. 32. The study of the distribution and interaction of Earth’s physical and human features.
  17. 34. Describing the location of a place in relation to other known places
  18. 35. Exact place on the earth, often described using latitude and longitude.
Down
  1. 1. A river that connects the Great Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean and is a major shipping route for both American and Canadian goods.
  2. 2. Much of the Southeastern United States is this climate, with plentiful rainfall, mild winters and warm summers.
  3. 4. This major river stretches from Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico, and allows for the transportation of goods each year from middle of the United States.
  4. 5. How the environment of a location affects how humans live, OR the changes humans make to a surrounding environment.
  5. 7. A vast grassland that covers the middle regions of the United States and Canada, used heavily for growing grains and raising livestock.
  6. 8. The spread of people, ideas, and good from one place to another over time, often influenced by geography
  7. 9. A map that shows man-made features of an area such as borders between countries and states as well as major cities.
  8. 10. A landform of Canada that was formed from precambrian igneous rock, has thousands of small lakes and is sparsely inhabited:
  9. 12. Much of the American Southwest is this climate, marked by hot temperatures and little to no precipitation.
  10. 14. When the Rocky Mountains create a rainshadow over parts of Colorado’s Front Range, it is creating this type of precipitation:
  11. 17. An external force that shapes the earth, when weathered material is taken away from a location by water, wind, or glacial action.
  12. 21. The layer of gases surrounding the earth.
  13. 23. An interdependent community of plants and animals.
  14. 25. A location with human and physical geographic features that make it unique from other locations.
  15. 26. Affected by wind and ocean currents, latitude, elevation, and landforms/topography
  16. 28. A mountain range nicknamed the “Continental Divide” because it affects the drainage destinations of American rivers.
  17. 33. This climate is similar to tundra and found in the highest elevations of mountain ranges such as the Rockies, Cascades, and Sierra Nevada.