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Chapter 3 Mapping Texas Regions (pages 44-66)

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Title: Chapter 3 Mapping Texas Regions (pages 44-66)


1
Chapter 3Mapping Texas Regions(pages 44-66)
  • Essential Question
  • How were the regions of Texas identified?

2
Objectives
  • Compare places in Texas in terms of their
    physical characteristics.
  • Compare regions of Texas in terms of their
    physical characteristics.
  • Identify the location of each natural subregion
    of Texas..
  • Compare the regions and subregions of Texas.
  • Analyze geographic distributions and patterns in
    Texas.
  • Compare places/regions in Texas in terms of their
    physical and human characteristics.
  • Explain ways in which geographic factors have
    affected the political, economic, and social
    development of Texas.

3
What States Are Adjacent to Texas?
4
(No Transcript)
5
Two Kinds of Geography
  • Geography land and people
  • Things that relate to the land (climate,
    vegetation, rivers, lakes, plains, etc)
  • Physical Geography
  • Things that people do (how people earn a living,
    customs, settlements, political systems, etc)
  • Human Geography

6
Vocabulary
  • Plains a wide area of flat or gently rolling
    land
  • Physical Geography physical features of the
    earths surface
  • Human Geography features of the earth that are
    created or changed by humans
  • Settlement a place where people live

7
Weather and Climate
  • Weathercondition at a certain time/place
  • Climateexpected weather conditions
  • Texas has a huge range of climates across the
    state
  • How does weather affect human geography?
  • See map on page 47

8
Landform Regions
  • Landforms can include mountains, valleys, rivers,
    seacoasts, lakes, plateaus, and plains
  • Read about The Enchanted Rock
  • (p. 49)
  • Most of Texas is made up of Plains
  • (pages 48-49)
  • 2 plains regions of Texas also extend into other
    states
  • Gulf Coastal Plain
  • Great Plains

The Enchanted Rock

9
Texas Rivers
  • Important to Texas
  • Much of Texas border made up of 3 rivers
  • Rio Grande between Texas Mexico
  • Begins in Colorado, flows 1900 miles into NM,
    enters Texas near El Paso
  • 2 dams built Amistad Dam and Falcon Dam
  • Water from reservoirs created with dams irrigates
    crops
  • Sabine River between Louisiana Texas
  • Shorter than Rio Grande
  • Toledo Bend Reservoir created
  • Water is used for industry and agriculture
  • Red River between Texas and Oklahoma
  • Begins in eastern NM and flows to Arkansas
  • Flows to Gulf of Mexico after flood control
    system put into place

10
Texas Rivers, cont
  • Other important rivers
  • Canadian River
  • In Panhandle of Texas
  • Begins in NM and crosses Texas to Oklahoma joins
    Arkansas River
  • Only major Texas River that does not flow into
    Gulf of Mexico
  • Pecos River
  • Tributary of Rio Grande
  • Starts in NM and flows south to Texas
  • Provides irrigation for farms in NM and Pecos, TX
  • Others (all flow into Gulf of Mexico)
  • Neches, Trinity, San Jacinto, Brazos, Colorado,
    Guadalupe, San Antonio, Neuces
  • Many important Texas cities are located along
    these rivers

11
Map of Texas Rivers
12
Texas Rivers and Cities
13
Rio Grande River
The Red River
The Sabine River
14
Regions of Texas
  • Regions are determined by physical geography
    (landforms)
  • Very diverse
  • Texas has 4 large natural regions
  • Coastal Plains
  • North Central Plains
  • Great Plains
  • Mountains and Basins

15
Vocabulary
  • Subregion a smaller division of a geographic
    region
  • Escarpment a cliff or abrupt break in the
    lands surface
  • Growing Season average of days crops grow
    based on weather
  • Steppe a vast, treeless plain
  • Aquifer underground layer of porous rock,
    gravel, or sand that contains waterwater can
    reach surface of land through springs or wells
  • (see page 540This Land of Oursinfo about the
    Ogallala Aquifer)

16
Regions and Subregions of Texas
17
Balcones Escarpment
The Balcones Fault Zone extends from Dallas to
the north and Del Rio to the southwest. The West
Austin Hill Country is part of a larger
geographical area called the Edwards Plateau.
18
Caprock Escarpment
19
Where are the Balcones and Caprock Escarpments?
20
The Edwards Aquifer
21
Coastal Plains Region
  • About 1/3 of Texas
  • Extends east south from Balcones Escarpment to
    Gulf of Mexico
  • Most of Texas largest cities here
  • Subregions
  • Piney Woods
  • area of pine forests
  • Extends from Texas-Louisiana border west for
    about 125 miles
  • Extends from Oklahoma state line south to where
    coastal prairies beginabout 25 miles from coast
  • Rainiest part of Texas
  • Elevation 100-400 feet above sea level
  • Caddo Lake is in Piney Woods
  • Only natural lake in Texas
  • Giant cypress trees, floating lotus, and lots of
    fish

22
Coastal Plains Region, cont
  • Subregions, cont
  • Post Oak Belt
  • West of Piney Woods
  • Long, narrow zone
  • Has oak, hickory, and other hardwood trees (not
    pine)
  • Elevation 250-500 feet above sea level
  • Blackland Prairie
  • Long, narrow area15-70 miles wide, 300 miles
    wide
  • Runs from Balcones Escarpment near OK border
    through San Antonio to Texas/Mexico border
  • Elevation 400-800 feet above sea level
  • Soil not good for growing treesmost vegetation
    is prairie grass with a few hardwood trees

23
Coastal Plains Region, cont
  • Gulf Coastal Plain
  • Forms a large arc that follows the coast of Gulf
    of Mexico from Sabine River to Kingsville
  • Goes inland about 30-60 miles
  • Elevation below 100 feet, humid climate
  • South Texas Plain
  • Runs from about San Antonio south to Rio Grande
  • 270 miles long 250 miles wide
  • Elevation sea level to 1000 feet above sea
    level
  • Climate warm year round

24
Coastal Plains Cities and Ways of Making a Living
  • Cities
  • Brownsville, Harlingen, Corpus Christi, San
    Antonio, Houston, Beaumont, Waco, Austin, Tyler,
    Texarkana, Dallas, Galveston
  • Ways of Making a Living
  • Agriculture, tourism, timber industry, oil/gas,
    shipping, commercial fishing, manufacturing, food
    and food products

25
North Central Plains Region
  • Begins at Balcones Escarpment and goes west to
    Caprock Escarpment
  • Area of rolling plains covered by small oak
    trees, mesquite trees, brush, and scattered grass
  • Subregions
  • Grand Prairie
  • Long narrow belt extends from Red River south to
    Temple and Killeen
  • Elevation 800-1700 feet above sea level
  • Vegetation tall grasses and a few hardwood
    trees by streams

26
North Central Plains Region, cont
  • Subregions, cont
  • Cross Timbers
  • Area surrounds Grand Prairie
  • Eastern Cross Timbers and Western Cross Timbers
  • Good area for growing treespost oak, hickory,
    pecan, elm
  • Elevation 900-1500 feet
  • Rolling Plains
  • Largest subregion of North Central Plains
  • Begins west of the Cross Timbers and ends at
    Caprock Escarpment
  • Elevation 900 feet in east 2000 feet in west
  • Region is a steppe (vast, treeless plain)
  • Vegetation short grasses, brushy plants, some
    mesquite trees
  • Mostly used as grazing lands for large ranches

27
North Central Plains Cities and Ways of Making a
Living
  • Cities
  • Ft. Worth, Abilene, Wichita Falls, San Angelo,
    Arlington
  • Ways of Making a Living
  • Agriculture, Oil/Gas, Tourism

28
Great Plains Region
  • Made up of 3 subregions
  • 2 are large plateaus (High Plains and Edwards
    Plateaus)
  • 1 is different than any other part of Texas
    (Llano Basin)
  • Subregions
  • Llano Basin
  • Almost in center of Texas
  • Egg-shaped area south of North Central Plains
    west of Balcones Escarpment
  • Made up of granite (very hard rock formed when
    molten rock cools slowly under earths surface)
  • Pink granite from Llano Basin was used to build
    Texas Capitol Building
  • Elevation 1000-1800 feet above sea level
  • Vegetation mesquite, live oak post oak trees,
    short grasses. Pecan and oak trees grow along
    streams

29
Great Plains Region, cont
  • Subregions, cont
  • Edwards Plateau
  • Southern part of Great Plains region
  • North and west of Balcones Escarpment
  • Elevation 1000-3000 feet above sea level
  • Mostly made of limestonesome limestone has
    dissolved and formed caves and underwater streams
  • Has Edwards Aquifer which supplies water for San
    Antonio and other towns
  • See Texas Tidbits on page 56

30
Great Plains Region, cont
  • Subregions, cont
  • High Plains
  • Extends west from rolling plains to Pecos River
    in NM
  • Also known as Llano Estacado
  • One of flattest places on earth
  • Very dry climate
  • Elevation 3000-4000 feet above sea level
  • Vegetation short grasses, like a steppe
  • Major farming area in Texas

31
Great Plains Region Cities and Ways of Making a
Living
  • Cities
  • Midland, Odessa, Lubbock, Amarillo
  • Ways of Making a Living
  • Agriculture, Oil/Gas

32
Mountains and Basins Region
  • No subregions
  • Made up of tall mountains separated by basins or
    closed valleys
  • Vegetation in Mountains forests of oak, pinon,
    and ponderosa pine trees
  • Vegetation in Basins (desert like area) cactus,
    shrubs, short grasses
  • Very little rain
  • Elevation variedfrom 2500-8700 feet above sea
    level
  • Guadalupe Peak highest point in Texas

33
Guadalupe Peak
34
Mountains and Basins Cities and Ways of Making a
Living
  • Cities
  • El Paso
  • Ways of Making a Living
  • Manufacturing, Oil/Gas, Agriculture

35
Where People Live in Texas
  • Most Texans live in cities or urban areas
  • Largest cities in TexasHouston and Dallas
  • Most of largest cities are east of Balcones
    Escarpment
  • Separates Central and East Texas from West Texas
  • Out of 27 major cities in Texas, only 7 of them
    are west of Balcones Escarpment

36
Vocabulary
  • Metropolitan Area a city and all the areas
    around it that depend on the central city
  • Suburb smaller community just outside a city
  • Industry making or preparing products to sell
  • Per Capita Income average amount of money a
    person makes a year in a certain area
  • Heritage beliefs and customs that people get
    from their ancestors

37
Why Cities Grow
  • People go where there are jobs
  • Houston oil industry, space program
  • Dallas financial, telecommunications,
    electronics, fashion, DFW airport,
  • Ft. Worth cattle town, airplane/helicopter
    production
  • San Antonio military base, tourism
    Alamo/River Walk
  • Austin state capital, UT (largest state
    university), computers (Dell)

38
Why Havent Other Areas Grown?
  • Attracted less industryexcept for Oil
  • West Texas further away from major
    citieshigher transportation, shipping, labor,
    and living costs
  • Dry climate
  • Not much farming (not as much water)
  • Land mostly used for ranching
  • Workers dont make as much money

39
Farming in Texas
  • Agriculturestill major industry in Texas
  • Texas has 2nd largest farm income in US (CA has
    more)
  • Approximately 225,000 farms
  • Rice (Houston), Citrus fruit and sorghum (Rio
    Grande Valley),
  • Texas produces more cotton than any other state
  • High Plains largest cotton growing area in US

40
Rich and Poor in Texas
  • Per Capita Income
  • Highest incomes in Texas? Big Cities
  • Oil industry helps Texas per capita income
  • Lowest incomes in Texas? Along Rio Grande River,
    inner cities

41
Diverse Names of Texas Cities and Towns
  • Names can reflect states heritage
  • Spanish or Mexican influence
  • Names of Settlers
  • Native Americans
  • Heroes of Texas Revolutions
  • Politicians
  • Immigrants and immigrant groups of people

42
Picture Sources
  • blog.travelpod.com
  • care2.com
  • innerenergies.org
  • thefullwiki.org
  • outdoors.webshots.com
  • tpwd.state.tx.us
  • city-data.com
  • texasescapes.com
  • blog.oregonlive.com
  • resortbay.com
  • pubs.usgs.gov
  • esi.utexas.edu
  • http//www.beg.utexas.edu/UTopia/contentpg_images/
    central/central_7708.jpg
  • http//www.freeworldmaps.net/united-states/texas/m
    ap.html
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caprock_Escarpment
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