© Д. С. Ведунова, 2017
© Н. А. Овсянникова, 2017
ISBN 978-5-4490-0740-7
Created with Ridero smart publishing system
The United States of America, often briefly referred to as the United States of America, the United States, or simply America, is a state in North America. The area is 9.5 million km² (4th place in the world). The population is 325 million people (2016, estimate, 3rd place in the world). The United States has a federal form of organization, administratively divided into 50 states and the federal district of Colombia; in their subordination there is also a number of island territories (Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam and others).
The capital is the city of Washington. The United States borders the north with Canada, in the south – with Mexico, also have a maritime border with Russia. They are washed by the Pacific Ocean from the west, the Atlantic Ocean – from the east and the Arctic Ocean – from the north.
The United States of America was formed in 1776 with the unification of thirteen British colonies that declared their independence. The War of Independence lasted until 1783 and ended in the victory of the colonists. In 1787, the US Constitution was adopted, and in 1791 – the Bill of Rights, which significantly limited the powers of the government towards citizens. In the 1860s, the contradictions between the slave-owning southern and industrial northern states led to the beginning of the four-year Civil War. The consequence of the victory of the northern states was the widespread prohibition of slavery, as well as the restoration of the country after the split that arose when the southern states merged into the Confederation and declared their independence.
Location:
The main US territory (called continental states) is located on the North American continent and extends from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west. In the south, the United States borders Mexico, in the north – with Canada. In addition, the US includes 2 more states. The extreme north-west of the American continent is Alaska, also bordering Canada. In the Pacific Ocean is the state of Hawaii. The border with Russia passes through the Bering Strait. The United States also owns a number of islands in the Caribbean (for example, Puerto Rico) and the Pacific (American Samoa, Midway, Guam and others).
Subordinated territories
Under a particular US administration, there are (but are not included in) a number of island territories with different status. The Constitution of the United States fully operates on the territory of the uninhabited atoll of Palmyra. The remaining territories have their own basic legislation. The largest of these territories is Puerto Rico.
Relief
In the mainland, west of the Atlantic lowlands are the Appalachian mountains, behind which are the Central Plains (200—500 m above sea level), the Great Plains (600—1500 m) plateau. Almost the whole west is occupied by the Cordillera mountain system.
Most of the territory of the United States belongs to the North American platform. In the east it is framed by the Paleozoic Appalachian folded system, in the west by the Mesozoic-Cenozoic folded Cordillera system, in the south by the young plateau on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, which passes northeast into the Atlantic flank of the same age. The foundation of the North American platform is exposed in the US territory in several small areas: Adirondack of the Canadian Shield (Middle Riphean rocks) in the states of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan (rocks: granite gneisses over 3.5 billion years old, Archaean formation of greenstone belts and granites, Lower Proterozoic shelf deposits, quartzites, overlapping rocks of the Archean, Upper Proterozoic continental red clastic sediments, basalts and gabbros), in the Eastern Scalists mountains, in the states of Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona (north – Archean education, and to the south of Wyoming – Lower Proterozoic). The rest of the area is represented by acidic ground volcanics and granites. The platform cover within the continental United States has a Paleozoic age – from the very tops of the Cambrian or more often Ordovician to the lower Permian in the Peredapalach trough. Deposits of the Lower and Middle Paleozoic are predominantly shelf carbonates with subordinate packets of quartz sandstones and black mudstones («shales»). In the Michigan (Silurian) and Willstonian (Devonian) basins there are known evaporites (salts) and in the first of them – reefogenic limestones. Depositions of the Middle-Upper Carboniferous (Pennsylvanian system of American geologists) represent a paralyzed, cyclically constructed coal-bearing formation. It forms the central part of the Peredapalachsky trough, the basins (syneclise) of Michigan and Illinois (the Inner East coal-and-coal basin), Forest City and Celain (Inner Western Coal Basin), the intermediate elevation – the anteclise of Cincinnati and Ozark, and Bend in the south – the east – are composed from the surface of the Lower Paleozoic, and the wings are Silurian and Devonian. In the deep East Texas syneclise in the southwestern corner of the platform is a complete section of Permian sediments. The rocks of the Triassic and Jurassic (coastal-marine and continental) are known only in the west of the Great Plains, as well as in the large Willston syneclise. More often there are carbonate-terrigenous deposits of chalk – in a wide band from the Canadian border to the Gulf of Mexico. The Cenozoic deposits are of low power, the continental ones are limited, closer to the Rocky Mountains, along the foot of which the deflections of the Powder River, Denver and Reton are located. The southwestern corner of the platform is separated from its main part by the complex Wichita avlacogen, which extends to the west, in the northern part of the Colorado plateau.
The Rocky Mountains are the main mountain range in the Cordillera system of North America, in the west of the USA and Canada, between 60 and 32° N. w.
Rocky Mountains stretch for 4830 kilometers from north to south from the northern point in the province of British Columbia (Canada) to the state of New Mexico in the southwest of the United States. The width of the mountains reaches 700 kilometers. The Rocky Mountains are a natural watershed between the basins of the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. In the Rocky Mountains, the rivers of Missouri, Colorado, Rio Grande, Snake, Arkansas and many others originate. Rocky Mountains were formed from 80 to 55 million years ago in the era of Laramie’s orogeny. Since then, under the influence of water and glaciers in the mountain range spectacular valleys and peaks were formed. At the end of the last ice age, people began to colonize the Rocky Mountains. After several expeditions, such as the journey of Alexander McKenzie or the expedition of Lewis and Clark, the Rockies began to settle; minerals and furs gave rise to the initial economic development of the mountains, despite the fact that the Rocky Mountains remained a sparsely populated area. Currently, most of the territory of the Rocky Mountains is protected by national parks and forest lands. Rocky Mountains – a popular place for tourists, especially for hiking, mountaineering, fishing, hunting, skiing, snowboarding and others.
The name «Rocky Mountains» was given by the Canadian pioneer of French origin Pierre Gauthier Varenne de la Verandry after he crossed the river Pierre Jaune (today it is Yellowstone – the river of yellow stone) on January 1, 1743. Alexander Mackenzie crossed the mountains in 1793 and named them «Stony Mountains». In the second half of the XIX century, the mountains were returned to the previous name.
The Northern Rocky Mountains (north of 45° N) are mainly composed of granites up to 3954 m in height (Robson Mountain); The southern Rocky Mountains, or the Rocky Mountains of the United States, consist of short ridges composed of sandstones, shales, limestones, up to 4,401 m (Albert Mountain – the highest point of the Rocky Mountains). There are extensive deposits of molybdenum, copper, gold, silver, polymetals, oil, and coal. Volcanic phenomena are observed: geysers, thermal springs, and earthquakes.
In the Rockies is a typical mountain climate. The average annual temperature in the valleys is within 6° C. In July, the warmest month, the average temperature reaches 28° C. In January, the average temperature is about -14° C, and this is the coldest month of the year. The average annual precipitation is about 360 mm.
In the Rocky Mountains in the summer it is usually warm and dry, as rain clouds from the west linger on the mountain ridge on its western side. The average temperature in summer is 15° C, and the average amount of precipitation is about 150 mm. Winters are very long and cold, with an average temperature of -2° C, and an average thickness of snow cover of 29 cm. In the spring, the average temperature is 4° C, and the precipitation is 107 mm. In autumn, the average rainfall is 66 mm and the temperature is about 7° C.
Vegetation – mainly forests, mountain-taiga in the north and pine in the south. The height of the forest boundary is from 1500 m (in the north) to 3600 m (in the south), higher – alpine meadows and eternal snow.
In the forests grow spruce, pine and fir, on the lower tiers, they mix with birches and white maple. Most of the mountains of the Arctic latitudes are covered with dwarf birches. On taiga soil not only coniferous, but also deciduous trees grow: birch, poplar and aspen.
In the valleys there are steppes and semi-deserts.
High-altitude animals here are snow goats, thick-nosed, elks and foxes. In the areas below, there is a marmot, a hare-hare, a black-tailed meadow dog and a coyote.
Most of the birds living in the Rocky Mountains are flying. In the summer months they feed the chicks here. Constantly in the mountains there live a three-toed woodpecker, a white partridge, some species of finches and owls.
In the Rockies are national parks Jasper (Canada), Banff (Canada), Yoho (Canada), Kootenay (Canada), Waterton Lakes (Canada), Glacier (USA), Yellowstone (USA), Rocky Mountain (USA).
Great Plains.
Great Plains – a piedmont plateau in the US and Canada, east of the Rocky Mountains. The height is about 700—1800 m above sea level. The length is about 3600 km, the width is from 500 to 800 km.
On the Great Plains are the territories of the Canadian provinces of Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan and the American states of New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming, Montana, North Dakota and South Dakota.
Great plains from north to south are divided into such major zones as the Missouri Plateau, the central High Plains, the Llano Estacado Plateau and Edwards. In some areas erosion of rocks is observed (these are the so-called bad lands, «badlands»). In the south they pass to the Mexican Highlands.
The climate within the plains is continental. Vegetation is mostly steppe.
On the plateau territory, wheat production is developed (the Great Plains are often called the «World Bread-Bread»), pasture cattle breeding. The US began to develop this area after the Louisiana purchase (1803). As early as 1820, researchers recognized these lands as unsuitable for life.
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