Atlantic coast: manufacturing= Great Lakes: job opportunities
Post industrialization: coast= unemployment: Rust Belt
New England: rural: limited land resources – Interior: technological developments and agricultural production
North America: whites- South: Blacks
Canada: Isolated- Populated: Mexico
Primary Producer: Canada = Secondary Producer:
Rocky Mountains: Alaska= Great Plains: Nevada
Appalachian Highlands: Interior plains = Intermontane Basins: Colorado Plateau
Humid Middle Latitudes: Sierra Nevada = Continental Climates: Great Lakes
Bilinguals: Quebec= Monolinguals: Connecticut
Artic: Alaska= Antarctic: Mexico
Atlantic Ocean: Eastern boundary – Pacific Ocean: Western boundary
In summary, the North American Realm is America’s manufacturing belt since the region is largely dominated by industrial geography (O’Neil, Carlson, Francis, and Don 5892). It is besides the economic powerhouse of America. Both the U.S. and Canada share common physical geography and development history with a British or French. The Spanish colonized Mexico whereas the British colonized other regions. In terms of physical area, Canada is the third largest country, making up 13% of the total global mass (Rowntree, Martin, Marie and William 9). Urbanization is practiced mostly in North America with al east 80% of the entire population living in the cities.
Though natives mark the region, its diverse population is made of immigrants. Economically, it is the world’s greatest economy with raw materials for final goods. Human and technological resources that result to the most advanced economies define the economic structure. The primary activity comprises of mining and agriculture, while the secondary activity comprises of manufacture of raw materials. As a result, at least 60% of the residents are the major consumers of the technological products. Though the region highly values agriculture, most of the people reside in the metropolitan region. a wide spectrum of immigrants continually define the region, these ethnic groups include the Blacks, Hispanics, Asians, Pacific Islanders, American Indians, and Eskimos.
Works Cited
O’Neil, Jonathan, Carlson, Richard W., Francis, Don & Stevenson, Ross K. “Neodymium-142
Evidence for Hadean Mafic Crust”. Science. VOl., 321, no. 5897, 2008, pp 1828–1831
Rowntree, Les, Martin Lewis, Marie Price, and William Wyckoff. “North America.” In Regional
Geography of the World: Globalization, People, and Places. New York: John Wiley. 2012. Print