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  2. Figure 3. European influence in the Colonial United States A. European Realms in North America. Both the United States and Canada are products of European colonialism. North America was inhabited by many Native American groups before the Europeans arrived. Complex native societies, federations, and traditional local groups faced the European ...
  3. slcc.pressbooks.pub

    The population of the Mountain West is growing much faster than the United States population as a whole. For example, Nevada's population grew 32.3 percent from 2000 to 2009, which is more than three times as much as the United States as a whole (9.1 percent).
    Author:R. Adam Dastrup, Ma, GispPublished:2020
  4. North America continues to have a significant role in global trade and influence. Both Canada and the United States are members of the Group of Seven (G7), a political forum of the world's leading industrialized countries that also includes France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the European Union. The G7 was formerly known as ...
  5. louis.pressbooks.pub

    Mexico and Central America are dominated by more tropical climates and were colonized mainly by the Spanish. The United States and Canada—the second- and third-largest countries in the world in physical area, respectively—make up more than 13 percent of the world's total landmass.
  6. cod.pressbooks.pub

    Both the farming and the glacial features of the Midwest also are generally related to the flatness of many of these states. Although Florida is America's flattest state, the rest of the top ten flattest states include five Midwestern states, noted here in bold - Florida, Illinois, North Dakota, Louisiana, Minnesota, Delaware, Kansas, Texas ...
  7. The population of the Mountain West is growing much faster than the population of the United States as a whole. For example, Nevada's population grew 32.3 percent from 2000 to 2009, which is more than three times as much as the United States as a whole (9.1 percent).
  8. The United States is the world's largest economy, and both countries enjoy high standards of living as technologically developed countries. Chapter Sections. 4.1 Physical Geography of the Region; 4.2 History and Culture of the Region; 4.3 Regions of North America; 4.4 Canada; 4.5 United States of America; 4.6 Summary; 4.7 References
  9. cod.pressbooks.pub

    47 North America: Overview Physical Geography: The United States Landform Regions . There are three major alpine regions in the United States, each of them running roughly north-to-south. One consists of a pair of ranges near the Pacific Ocean. The Coast Ranges are a relatively low mountain range that run the length of the Pacific Coast.
  10. louis.pressbooks.pub

    This region, anchored by North America's largest metropolis, New York, is the economic heart of the United States and Canada and home to more than a third of each country's population. The megalopolis —the built-up area from Washington, DC, to Boston—is part of this region. The core region contains the Manufacturing/Rust Belt, which was ...
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