Transcript Slide 1

Latitude and Longitude
 Latitude: measures
distance north and south
of Equator; lines stretch
east—west.
 Longitude: measures
distance east and west of
the Prime Meridian; lines
stretch north—south.
 The Prime Meridian
bisects which European
city?
Georgia Facts
 Western and Northern
Hemispheres
 North America (Continent)
 United States (Country)
 Southeast (Region)
 Georgia (State)
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“Empire State of the South”
 Gwinnett (County)
 Suwanee (Town)
 Address 2100 Old Peachtree
Sectionalism:
 Neighborhoods
 Physical/Cultural
 Global/Geographic
 Mason-Dixon Line
 Named after surveyors
 Deep South/Confederacy
Georgia Facts #2
 Largest state EAST of the Mississippi
River
 21st largest state U.S.
 Highest Point: Brasstown Bald
 Lowest Point: Coastline
 159 Counties
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Largest—Ware
Smallest—Clarke
Center—Twiggs
Georgia Facts #3
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North: Tennessee and North Carolina
South: Florida and St. Mary’s River
East: Atlantic Ocean, South Carolina, and Savannah River
West: Alabama, Chattahoochee River
6 Basic Regions
Also known as
“Physiographic Regions”
 Appalachian Plateau
 Ridge and Valley
 Blue Ridge
 Piedmont Region
 Upper/ Inner Coastal Plain
 Lower / Outer Coastal Plain
Coastal Plains
Fall line is northern boundary,
Atlantic Ocean is southeastern
boundary
 Largest region (60% of GA
below the Fall Line)
 Inner (Northern)
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Agricultural- clay, sand and
limestone soil
Vidalia Upland FLAT, No hills
Peanuts, peaches, pecans, cotton
 Outer (Southern)
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Coastal
Swamp/Marsh
Okefenokee Swamp
Barrier Islands:
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“Golden Isles”
Protect beaches
 Continental Shelf:
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Protects our coast from
hurricanes
Coastal Plains II
 Prehistoric ocean extended to the Fall Line
 Fossils of shark teeth, whale bones and various ocean life found in Coastal
Plains – phosphate, limestone bauxite
Coastal Plains
 75 miles from coast line inland is known as
“The Pine Barrens”
 Hardly anything except pine trees grows in this region!
Coastal Plains
 Swamps rivers,
streams, estuaries,
and islands.
 Slow, meandering,
widening rivers
 Tidal rivers along
coastline…saltwater
and freshwater share
areas during the tides
as far as 10 miles
inland.
Coastal Plains
 Coastal wetlands… Okeefenokee Swamp
 TEMPERATURE- averages 54°- 77°
Coastal Plain
Includes the Barrier
Islands
Also called
The Golden Isles
Wassaw: Considered the most pristine island in the Georgia chain.
Ossabaw: is unique in that it is two islands in one.
St. Catherines: When the Spanish came to Georgia in 1566, they selected St. Catherines as the
location for their first mission.
Blackbeard: Legend has it, Blackbeard Island was once the hide-a-way of the most infamous
and feared pirate of the 18th century.
Sapelo: is home to Hog Hammock, the last intact Geechee community on the Georgia coast.
Their roots grow deep here, all the way back to the cotton fields their ancestors worked as
slaves, 200 years ago.
Wolf, Egg, Little Egg
In 1930, Wolf Island National Wildlife Refuge was established to protect three islands, Little
St. Simons:
Little St. Simons is Georgia’s only remaining family owned island.
Sea Island: is internationally recognized for its resort hotel, The Cloister.
St. Simons is a bustling community and resort, joined to the mainland by a causeway.
Jekyll: Jekyll Island was once the playground of northern millionaires who used it as a
winter retreat.
Typical scenes at Jekyll
Island
Georgia's southern most
barrier island and home to
Cumberland's wild horses
brought by the Spanish in
the sixteenth century.
Cumberland is under the
care of the National Park
Service.
Typical scenes at Cumberland
Island
Coastal Plain
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Is south of the fall line
Flat: no more waterfalls!
Okefenokee Swamp
Salt Marshes & estuaries
Wildlife refuges
Sedimentary rock
Beaches and barrier islands
Gray’s Reef marine sanctuary
Coastal Plain
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Savannah, Valdosta and Jekyll
Providence Canyon
Altamaha River
Cypress, live oak trees
Palmetto plants
Warmer climate
Osprey and Skimmer: coastal birds
Sea turtles
Providence Canyon
 Visitors are often
amazed when they visit
“Georgia’s Little Grand
Canyon.” The massive
gullies, as deep as 150
feet, were caused by
poor farming practices
during the 1800s.
Piedmont
“Foot of the Mountains” -Over 50% of the states population,
Cherokee County/Atlanta
 Located between the Coastal Plain
and mountains of North GA
 Encompasses 30% of state’s area
 Gently sloping and rolling hills,
streams, rivers lakes
 Business and Industry region
 Cotton, soybean, wheat, beef and
dairy cattle, chicken…
 Georgia “Red Clay”, solid rockgranite, marble, mica
 Temperature: 57°-74°
Atlanta skyline…The Capitol
Fall Line
 The fall line is the change in elevation from
approximately the cities of Columbus thru
Macon to
Augusta
Many early settlers stayed in
this area because the
surrounding waterfalls
were difficult to travel over,
and they provided a power
supply.
Piedmont Region
 At foothills of
Appalachians
 Rolling hills
 Mixed forests
 Metamorphic, igneous
rock
 Chattahoochee River
 Etowah Indian Mounds
 Lake Lanier, Alltoona,
and Oconee: Water
supply & recreation!!!
Piedmont Region
 Includes Atlanta, Athens, Macon
 Rivers, lakes, waterfalls
North Georgia
 Appalachian Plateau, Ridge & Valley, Blue Ridge
 Very mountainous
 Beautiful leaf watching in the fall!
Ridge and Valley Northwest GA-between Blue
Ridge and Appalachian Plateau
 Low open valleys and narrow,
parallel ridges
”Wrinkles”
 Flat fertile farmlands
 Hardwood forest and pastures
 Corn soybeans, wheat, cotton
 Industrial: textile and carpet
The textile industry
manufacturing
 DALTON: “Carpet Capital of the
World”
 Lots of Limestone
 Temperature- 48°-72°
Ridge and Valley
 Ridges up to 1600 ft. and lowlands to 700 ft. above sea
level
 Chattahoochee Nat’l Forest
 River rafting (rivers flow downhill!)
 Dalton, GA: major city – famous for carpet
manufacturing
Blue Ridge
 Located in Northeast GA
 Highest and largest group of
mountains in Georgia , many rivers
begin here
 Landmarks:
 Tallulah Gorge
 Beginning of the Appalachian Trail
 Brasstown Bald
 Mountains act as a barrier to keep
warm, moist from the gulf causing
precipitation
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Lots of rain
sleet, snow, hail
 Short growing season- less than 1%
farmland- Apples, corn, vegetables,
and hardwood timber
 Mica, feldspar gold and marble found
here!
 Temperature- 45°-69°
Blue Ridge
 Mountains, ridges and basins
 Up to 4700 ft. mountain peaks
 Cohutta and Blue Ridge mtns
 Appalachian trail
 Mountain lakes and waterfalls
 Beautiful views
Appalachian Plateau Smallest region FAR NW Ga.
 Lookout Mt./ Sand Mt.
 Most scenic but least traveled
 Called TAG Corner
Tennessee
 Alabama
 Georgia
Gentle slopes with mountains
over valleys
Hardwood forest, pastures for
livestock, corn and soybean.
Only known source of coal in
Georgia. Iron
Temperatures 49°-71°
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Appalachian Plateau
Sedimentary Rocks
Sand Mountain
Lookout Mountain: 7 states
Cloudland Canyon
Civil war sites
Appalachian Oak forests
Hiking and rivers
Cloudland Canyon