The United States is a land of great beauty and natural wealth. Its many famous and
interesting sights include the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor, quaint
cable cars on hilly San Francisco streets, and areas of rich farmland in the
fertile Midwest.
Giant cactuses in Arizona are symbols of the wide open spaces" of the
Southwest. A warm, dry climate has made the Southwest one of the nation’s
fastest-growing areas.
A snow-covered village nestles among low hills in Vermont. Such tiny, picturesque settlements
are common in much of the far Northeastern part of the United States.
A Southern mansion in Alabama dates from 1853. Originally a private home, it is now a
government owned museum and a reminder of the architecture of the pre-Civil
War South.
The Rocky Mountain States Region includes the scenic Yellowstone National Park, located chiefly in
Wyoming.
Most Hispanic Americans are of Mexican descent The Mexican Americans are celebrating Cinco
de Mayo (May 51), a Mexican national holiday.
Asians are a major
immigrant group in the United States. The street shown above is in a Korean
neighbourhood in Flushing, New York.
Urban and rural life in the United States contrast sharply. Motor vehicles move slowly
along a street lined by big buildings in central San Antonio.
At a county fair, farm people show their sheep in a livestock
competition.
Sprawling suburbs surround many American cities. Rows of comfortable houses line the
streets of most of them. Highways connect the suburbs with their central cities,
where large numbers of suburban dwellers work.
Central cities of most U.S. urban areas have neighbourhoods where most people belong
to the same racial or ethnic group. In New York City's Harlem area, most people
are blacks. A Chicago neighbourhood, has many Spanish-speaking people and some
signs in Spanish.
The educational system of the United States includes many learning opportunities outside
formal classrooms. An adult education class, offers woodworking lessons. At a
museum, people study exhibits dealing with space travel.
Religion plays an important role in the lives of millions of Americans. The
country's churches provide people with moral guidance and places for worship.
Many churches also serve as centres for social gatherings, such as a church
picnic.
Recreational activities provide the people of the United States with leisure time
enjoyment. Fans thrill to the excitement of the duel between a pitcher and
batter in a baseball game. A large group of runners compete—and get exercise—in
a marathon race.
Modern painting and sculpture have produced both abstract and realistic styles, Jackson Pollock
gained fame for such paintings as Number 13, 1949, shown above. These
paintings consist of rhythmic patterns dribbled onto the painting surface.
George Segal placed plaster figures among actual objects, as in The Butcher
Shop, shown on the right.
Architecture in the United States developed the skyscraper as one of the most
characteristic types of modern building. The Sears Tower, dominates the Chicago
skyline. Frank Lloyd Wright ranks as America's most important architect.
Wright's Falling water house shows his ability to blend a structure with its
natural setting.
Popular music has taken many forms in the United States. Jazz relies on spontaneous
playing. Trumpeter Louis Armstrong was the first great jazz soloist. Country
music, began as the folk music of Southern whites but soon gained
widespread acceptance. Singer Elvis Presley, above, helped make rock music
the leading type of popular music in the mid- and late 1900’s.
Films have become one of the most popular and
influential art forms in the United States since the early 1900's. The animated
films of Walt Disney, such as Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs have
charmed cinema audiences throughout the world. Steven Spielberg became a
leading director with the success of E.T., and other science fiction and
adventure films.
Dancing in the United States often explores American subjects. The famous dancer
and dance composer Martha Graham created Appalachian Spring, shown
above, a ballet that celebrates the courage and dignity of American pioneers
during the early 1800’s.
Theatre has produced many masterpieces of serious drama and musical comedy.
Arthur Miller's drama Death of a Salesman, shown on the left, deals with
a salesman whose search for success brings him only disappointment and failure.
Frank Loesser wrote the music and words for Guys and Dolls, shown on the
right, a musical about colourful characters who live in New York City.
Rolling hills dotted with farm buildings stretch across the Appalachian Highlands,
which extend from Maine to Alabama. The scene shown above is in West Virginia.
A swamp that
includes bald cypress trees lies in Florida's Everglades National Park in the
southernmost part of the Coastal Lowlands. The Coastal Lowlands extend from
New England to Texas.
The geographic centre of the United States has moved westward as the country has added new
territory. Since 1959, when Alaska and Hawaii were added, it has been in South
Dakota.
Fields of wheat grow near a rural Montana community on the Interior Plains. The
plains, America's vast heartland, stretch from the Appalachian Highlands to the
Rocky Mountains.
Rugged hills border a valley in northwestern Arkansas, which is part of the
Ozark-Ouachita Highlands. This region also includes parts of Missouri and
Oklahoma.
The Pacific Coast forms the western border of the Pacific Ranges and Lowlands region,
which extends from Canada to Mexico. Rugged rock formations line parts of the
coast, including the California area.
Waimea Canyon, Hawaii, was formed by water from Mount Waialeale. The mountain, the
wettest place in the U.S., receives about 1,170 centimetres of precipitation a
year.
Death Valley, California, the country's driest place, receives less than 5 centimetres
of precipitation yearly. It recorded the highest U.S. temperature ever, 57” C.
Prospect Creek, Alaska, recorded the lowest U.S. temperature ever, —62” C. The nearby town of Barrow has the country's
lowest average annual temperature, — 13”C
America's economy produces a
greater value of agri-1 cultural, manufactured, and mined products than any
other country. A huge ware-11 house
stores grain before it is shipped to distant markets. Barges, railway carriages, trucks, and other
transportation facilities are used to transport products.
Forests are one
of the many natural resources that contribute to the U.S. economy. Logs from
forests are used for timber and in making other valuable products.
The gross
domestic product (GDP) is the total value of goods
and services produced within a country in a year. The CDP measures a nation's
economic performance and can also be used to compare the economic output and
growth of countries. The U.S. GDP was 5,678,000,000,000 U.S. dollars in 1991.
Services =74%, Industry = 24%, Agriculture = 2%
The construction industry provides jobs for many Americans. Workers help put up a high-rise
building in the centre of a city.
Service industries are those economic activities that provide services, rather than
goods. Data processing is one of many such industries. Others include
government services and the operation of hotels and restaurants.
Manufacturing is one of the most important economic activities in the United States.
The steps in the manufacture of an aeroplane include building a full-sized model, above.
Agriculture includes the raising of both crops and livestock. A mechanized system for
fattening cattle for market is o example of the efficient methods used by
American farmers.
Mining provides vital raw materials for American industry. For example, a
strip mine, yields coal. Coal, in turn, is used to fuel electric power plants
and to make steel for many manufactured products.
A network of roads crisscrosses the United States. Roads form a key part of the nation's
excellent transportation system. The construction and repair of roads provides
jobs for people throughout the country.
There are many major ports in the United States. Houston, Texas, is one of the nation's busiest.
United States of America is the third largest country in the world in population and
the fourth largest in area. China and India are the only countries with more
people. Only Russia, Canada, and China have larger areas. The United States
covers the entire midsection of North America, stretching from the Atlantic
Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west. It also includes Alaska, in
the northwest corner of North America; and Hawaii, far out in the Pacific. The
United States is often called the U.S., U.S.A., or America.
The land of the United States is as varied
as it is vast.
It ranges from the warm beaches of Florida
and Hawaii to the frozen northlands of Alaska, and from the level Midwestern
prairies to the snow-capped Rocky Mountains. This huge and beautiful country
is rich in natural resources. It has great stretches of some of the most fertile
soil on earth, a plentiful water supply and excellent water routes, and large
stretches of forests. There are also huge deposits of valuable minerals which
lie underneath the ground.
Economically, the United States is one of
the world's most highly developed and productive nations. No other country
equals the United States in the production of
goods and services. Its people enjoy one
of the world's highest standards of living. .
Until the 1500's, what is now the United
States is largely a wilderness. Small groups of Indians lived scattered over
the land between the Atlantic and Pacific. Eskimos inhabited what is now
Alaska, and Polynesians lived in Hawaii. People in Europe saw in this vast
"new i world" a chance to build new and better lives. Small groups of
Spaniards settled in what is now the Southeastern and Western United States in
the 1500's. People from England and some other European countries began
settling along and near the East Coast during the 1600rs. In 1776,
colonists in the East established an independent nation based on freedom and
economic opportunity. Through the years, large numbers of people from Europe
continued to settle in the United States. In addition, people from almost every
other part of the world settled in the country. Except for black Africans
brought in as slaves, these immigrants came seeking the rights and the
opportunities that had become part of the American way of life. As a result of
this immigration, the United States today has one of the world's most varied
populations. It has been called "a nation of immigrants.'
The vast space and resources of the land,
the ideals of and economic opportunity, and hard work by the people
all helped build the United States into the economic giant it is today. The
Americans—as the people are commonly called—also made major contribution- in
such fields as technology, science, and medicine. Americans developed the mass
production system of manufacturing, the electric light bulb, the telephone, and
polio vaccine. They also created the skyscraper and such new art forms as jazz
and musical comedy.
At times, the U.S. economy has run into
difficulty.
Even so, it remains one of the most
productive systems ever developed. In some cases, groups of Americans have
suffered socially and economically from discrimination. But the country's laws
have helped many people overcome discrimination and achieve better lives.
This article discusses the nation's
regions, people, way of life, land, climate, and economy. For government and
history information, see United States, Government of the, and United States, History of the.
Political divisions. The United States consists of 50 states and the District of Columbia.
The District of Columbia is a piece of land set aside by the federal government
for the nation's capital, Washington, D.C. For a list of the states, see the
table in this article titled Facts in brief about the states.
In area, population, and economic output,
some of the states are comparable to many nations. The United States has a
federal system of government, which gives the states many powers that national
governments have in most other countries. For example, the states have broad
control over public education and the establishment of civil and criminal
laws.
Regions. The states of the United States, excluding Alaska and Hawaii, are often
divided into seven major regions. Each region is made up of states that have
similarities in geography, climate, economy, traditions, and history. The
regions are: (1) New England, (2) the Middle Atlantic States, (3) the Southern
States, (4) the Midwestern States, (5) the Rocky Mountain States, (6) the
South-western States, and (7) the Pacific Coast States. For a list of the sates
in each region, see the table titled Regions of the United States in
this article. The map that accompanies the table shows the location of each of
these regions.
New England is a small region in the northeast corner country that is known for
picturesque rural vilnumerous fishing harbours, and colourful autumn srenery.
New England was the nation's first
industrial centre, and manufacturing is still its leading source of income.
Industrial cities dot southern New England.
Much of the region's land is too hilly or
rocky to grow crops. But New England produces large amounts of dairy and
poultry products and is famous for its maple syrup. Many tourists visit the
region to see its many historic sites—especially those from colonial times—and
to enjoy its natural beauty.
Many New Englanders, especially in the
rural north, are descendants of English Puritans who settled the region during
the 1600's. The more densely populated southern section of the New England
Region has people who come from many different backgrounds, including blacks,
Irish, Italians, and French Canadians. The southern section includes Boston,
New England's largest city by far.
The Middle Atlantic States Region stretches inland from the Atlantic Ocean southwest of New England.
Deepwater harbours help make the region a major centre of international trade.
The busiest harbour is at New York City, the largest city in the United States.
Factories in and near such Middle Atlantic cities—in order of size—as New York
City, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Buffalo, and Newark produce a wide variety of
goods. Coal mining and related industries are important economic activities
in the western part of the Middle Atlantic States Region. Farms dot hillsides
and fertile plains in various parts of the region. Forested mountains, sandy
seashores, scenic lakes and rivers, historic sites, and big- city attractions
draw many visitors to the region.
The Middle Atlantic States Region ranks as
the nation's most densely populated area. Its urban population includes people
of varied European backgrounds, and large groups of people of black African,
Latin-American, and Asian ancestry. Many of the region's rural dwellers are of
British descent.
The Southern States Region is an area of rolling hills, mountains, and plains bordered by broad
beaches along the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico. Until the mid-1900's,
the region's economy was based heavily on agriculture. Such warm-weather crops
as sugar cane, tobacco, and—especially—cotton contributed greatly to the
economy. Agriculture has retained importance in the South. But an industrial
boom that began in the mid- 1900fs has greatly increased manufacturing and has
improved the balance of the region's economy. Tourists flock to coastal
resorts in the South—especially in winter, when temperatures are usually
relatively mild. Baltimore is the largest city of the Southern States Region, Jacksonville,
Memphis, Washington, D.C., Nashville,
New Orleans, and Charlotte rank next in size.
Washing- ? ton, D.C., is not part of a state, but it is in the Southern States
Region.
Large numbers of Southerners are descended
from early English, Irish, and Scottish immigrants. From the 1600‘s to the
1800's, many black Africans were brought to the region to work on plantations
as slaves. Today, blacks form a large minority group in the Southern States
Region. Many Southerners have a strong sense of regional loyalty and take
pride in the South's history and traditions.
The Midwestern States Region is a vast area of generally flat land that covers much of the centre
of the United States. The Midwest is famous for its large stretches of fertile
soil. Farms in the region produce enormous quantities of maize, wheat, and
other crops; and also dairy products and livestock. In addition, the Midwest
has a number of large industrial cities. The cities include, in order of size,
Chicago, Detroit, Indianapolis, Columbus, and Milwaukee.
The Mississippi River system, the Great
Lakes, and many railways give the region an excellent transportation network.
Lakes and rivers—some set among rolling hills and rugged bluffs—provide
numerous recreation areas there.
The Midwestern States Region has a varied
population. Its rural areas include large groups of descendants i of settlers
from Germany, Great Britain, Norway, Sweden, and eastern and southern Europe.
The region's city ‘ population includes many descendants of people who came
from northern, southern, and eastern Europe.
Blacks make up a large minority group in
the big cities of the Midwest.
The Rocky Mountain States Region lies west of the Midwest. It is named after the rugged, majestic Rocky
Mountains, which cut through it. In addition to the mountains, the region has
areas of deserts, plains, and Although much of it is a thinly populated
wilderness. some of its cities and towns are among the nation’s fastest-growing
areas. Denver ranks as the region's largest city by far.
Rich deposits of gold, silver, and other
metals first attracted settlers to the region. Mining remains an important economic
activity, but manufacturing is now the chief source of income. Cattle and other
livestock graze on dry, grassy ranges, and farmers grow a variety of pops in
the Rocky Mountain States Region. Many tourists visit the region to enjoy its
scenic beauty and numerous ski resorts.
The population of the Rocky Mountain
States Region includes people of European descent, as well as blacks, Mexican
Americans, and American Indians. Mormons, whose ancestors founded a religious community
in Utah in the 1800's, form an important cultural group in the region.
The Southwestern States Region spreads out over a vast area that is sometimes called the "wide
open spaces." There, cattle graze on huge ranches, and vast fields of
cotton and other crops soak up rays of blazing sunshine. However, petroleum has
brought the region most of its wealth. The region has large deposits of petroleum
and natural gas, as well as various other minerals. In the 1900's, refineries
and petrochemical factories led the way to industrialization in the Southwest
The industrialization has helped bring about much urban growth in the
Southwestern States Region. The region includes many of the nation's
fastest-growing cities. Its largest cities are, in order of size, Houston, Dallas,
Phoenix, San Antonio, El Paso, and Austin. The region also has many retirement
communities. Tourist attractions in the Southwest include huge, unspoiled areas
of incredible natural beauty, such as the Grand Canyon and the Painted Desert.
Many cultures come together in the
Southwest. The population includes people of various European backgrounds, and
black, Mexican-American, and American Indian minority groups.
The Pacific Coast States Region, which borders the Pacific Ocean, is known for.its dense forests, rugged
mountains, and dramatic ocean shore. The scenic beauty and relatively mild
climate of the region encourage an outdoor life style enjoyed by both
residents and tourists.
Fertile valleys in the Pacific Coast
States Region produce a large part of the nation's fruits, nuts, vegetables,
and wine grapes. The region also has abundant timber, minerals, and fish. Much
manufacturing takes place in its large cities, which include—in order of
size—Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose, San Francisco, and Seattle.
The discovery of gold and the opening of
the Oregon Territory in the mid-1800's brought a stream of settlers to the
Pacific Coast. New residents have continued to pour in ever since. Today, the
population includes people of European ancestry, and black and Mexican-
American minority groups. The Pacific Coast States Region also has more people
of Asian ancestry than any other part of the United States, and a large number
of American Indians.
Outlying areas. The United States has possession of various island territories in the
Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean. Some of them, such as Guam and the Virgin
Islands, have a large degree of self-government. Puerto Rico, one of the areas,
is a commonwealth associated with the United States that has been given wide
powers of self-rule by the U.S. Congress. American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico,
and the Virgin Islands each send to Congress a representative who votes only in
committees.
See the table titled Main outlying
areas of the United States in this article.
Population. The U.S.
Census Bureau reported that in 990 the country had a population of 249,632,692.
Whites make up about 80 per cent of the
country's population. Blacks form the largest minority group. They account for
about 12 percent of the population. About 3 per cent of the population is of
Asian descent. American Indians make up almost 1 per cent of the population.
Other groups combine to make up the remaining 4 per cent
The population of the United States
includes many Hispanic people, such as people of Mexican, Puerto Rican, or
Cuban descent. Hispanics consist mainly of whites, but they also include some
blacks and American Indians. Hispanics make up 8 per cent of the U.S. population.
About 51.5 per cent of the people in the
United States are females. The United States has one of the highest life
expectancies of any country—74.9 years old. Since 1945, the part of the U.S.
population that is over 65 years old has increased from 8 per cent to 12 per
cent. Improvements in medical care have been the main reason for the increase.
The over-65 population of the United States will continue to grow at a rapid
rate as advances in medicine continue and as the large numbers of people born
during the "baby boom" grow older. The baby
boom was a period of high birth rate that
occurred in the United States from 1946 to 1964.
Approximately 94 per cent of the total
population was born in the United States. The largest foreign-born groups are,
in order of size, Mexicans, Germans, Canadians, Italians, British, and Cubans.
The United States has an overall average population density of about 27 people per square kilometre. But the
density varies widely from place to place. See the map in this section of the
article, which illustrates the density throughout the country.
Ancestry. The United States has one of the world's most varied populations in
terms of ancestry. The population includes descendants of people from almost
every part of the world.
The first people to live in what is now
the United States were Indians, Eskimos, and Hawaiians. The Indians and
Eskimos are descended from peoples who migrated to North America from Asia
thousands of years ago. The ancestors of the Hawaiians were Polynesians who
sailed to what is now Hawaii from other Pacific islands about 2,000 years ago.
Most white Americans trace their ancestry
to Europe. Some Spaniards settled in what is now the United States during the
1500's. European settlement increased sharply during the 1600's. At first, most
of the settlers came from England. But America soon attracted many emigrants
from other nations of northern and western Europe including France, Germany,
Ireland, the Netherlands, and Scotland; and the Scandinavian lands of Denmark,
Norway, and Sweden. Until the late 1800's, northern and western Europe
provided most of the emigrants. Then, large waves of people began arriving
from southern and eastern European nations, including Austria-Hungary,
Greece, Italy, Poland, and Russia.
Most Hispanic Americans are people who
immigrated—or whose ancestors immigrated—to the United States from Latin
America. A small percentage of them trace their ancestry directly back to
Spain. Some have mainly Spanish ancestry. Others have mixed Spanish and
Latin-American Indian or black ancestry.
Most black Americans are descendants of
Africans who were brought to the United States as slaves during the 1600's,
1700's, and 1800's and forced to work on plantations. See Slavery (Slavery in
the United States).
Since the 1800's, the United States has
attracted immigrants from Asia. Most Asian Americans trace their ancestry to
China, India, Indochina, Japan, Korea, or the Philippines. For more details on
the flow of people into the United States through the years, see Immigration.
The United States has often been called a melting
pot. This term refers to the idea that the country is a place where people
from many lands have come together and formed a unified culture. Americans have
many things in common. For example, the vast majority of them speak English, and
people throughout the country dress similarly and eat many of the same kinds
of foods. Public education, mass communication, and other influences have
helped shape a common identity. But in other ways, U.S. society is an example
of cultural pluralism.
That is, large numbers of its people have
retained features of the cultures of their ancestors. Many Americans take
special pride in their origins. They preserve traditions—and in some cases the
languages—of their ancestors. In many cities, people of different national or
ethnic origins live in separate
neighbourhoods, and shops and restaurants reflect their cultural heritages.
Ethnic festivals, parades, and other events emphasize the nation's cultural
pluralism.
Language. The United States has never had an official language, but English has
always been the chief language spoken in the country. Emigrants from the
British Isles—who included the nation's founders—spoke English. Many emigrants
from other lands who spoke little or no English also came to the United States.
They learned at least enough English to be able to communicate with other
Americans. Their children learned English in school. The immigrants' children
generally spoke both English and their ethnic language, and the immigrants'
grandchildren often spoke only English.
Today, Spanish is the second most common
language in the United States. The region that is now the Southwestern United
States was colonized by Spain in the 1500's. As a result, many people from that
region speak Spanish. Since the 1950's, many Spanish-speaking people have
immigrated to the United States from Mexico, Cuba, and other places. Many of
these people learned to speak English. But others speak only Spanish. This is
especially true in Spanish-speaking neighbourhoods that developed in cities.
Some people feel that special efforts should be made to provide education and
other services in Spanish for Americans who speak only Spanish.
Many people believe every American should
know English. They point out that it is difficult to get a job outside
Spanish-speaking neighbourhoods without a knowledge of the English language.
They also argue that a language shared by everyone is an important unifying
force for a country. In the 1980's, several states passed laws declaring English
to be their only official language. These laws provide that the state
government must offer its services in English, and need not do so in any other
language. But in some places, public documents and signs in public places are
written in both English and Spanish.
For census purposes, the United States is
divided into urban areas and rural areas. An urban area, as
defined by the U.S. Census Bureau, is a community with 2,500 or more people. A
rural area is a community with fewer than 2,500 people. In 1790, the year of
the first census, about 95 per cent of the nation's people lived in rural
areas, and only about 5 per cent were urban dwellers. Through the years, these
percentages changed steadily and dramatically. Today, about 74 per cent of all
the people live in urban areas. Only about 26 per cent live in rural areas.
Several factors contributed to the
dramatic population shift from the countryside to urban areas. Through the
years, Americans greatly improved agricultural methods and equipment. From the
1800's onward, farm work has become more and more efficient, farm production
has soared, and fewer and fewer people have been needed to work on the nation's
farms. At the same time, an industrial boom has created large numbers of new
jobs in the nation's urban areas. As a result of these economic changes, a
steady flow of people from rural to urban areas has taken place. Also, large
numbers of immigrants—many of whom had been fanners in their homelands—found
jobs in cities and settled there when they reached the United States. In
addition, the variety of job choices and recreational, educational, and
cultural opportunities in cities attracted many rural people, especially the
young. Large numbers of rural people left home to seek employment and excitement
in cities.
Urban life. Urban areas, which range from giant cities surrounded by suburbs
to small towns, dot the U.S. landscape. Although the urban areas cover about 2
per
cent of the land, they are the home of
about three- quarters of the people. New York City, with about 7 1/2 million
people, is the largest U.S. city by far. Los Angeles has about 3 1/2 million
people. Chicago has a population of about 2 3/4 million. Five other U.S.
cities—Houston, Philadelphia, San Diego, Detroit, and Dallas—each have; more
than 1 million people.
Networks of suburbs surround many U.S.
cities. The central cities and their suburbs form units called metropolitan
areas. There are 268 metropolitan areas in the United States. The three largest
are, in order of size, the New York-Newark, Los Angeles-Long Beach, and Chicago
areas. The New York-Newark metropolitan area has about 17 million people, the
Los Angeles-Long Beach area has more than 8 3/4 million people, and the Chicago
area has about 7 1/2 million people.
For many years, most of the country's
urban population lived in the central cities. During the mid-1900's, suburban
population soared while central city growth slowed or decreased. In 1980, more
Americans lived in suburbs than in central cities.
The Northeast and Midwest have long had
most of the nation's largest urban areas. But during the 1900's, other parts of
the country have experienced dramatic urban growth. Since the early 1900's,
many California urban communities—especially Los Angeles—have grown
tremendously. Since the mid-1900's, the populations of many more urban areas
in the West, and in the South and Southwest, have soared. Such metropolitan
areas as Atlanta, Dallas, Denver, Houston, and Phoenix grew rapidly. Large
numbers of people were attracted to the West, South, and Southwest by jobs
created by new industries. Also, many of the fastest-growing communities have
warm, sunny climates, which helped at- many of the newcomers. Parts of the
South, Southwest, and West are sometimes called the Sun Belt because they
have such climates.
Urban economies provide jobs for a great variety of workers, including office
and factory workers, bankers, doctors, fire fighters, medical personnel, police
officers, teachers, trash collectors, and construction and transportation
workers. Urban life also has many other positive features. Because of their
large populations, urban areas generally offer a wide variety of specialized
services and shops. Urban dwellers can take advantage of an assortment of
restaurants, recreation facilities, and places of entertainment. Because of
such facilities as art galleries, museums, libraries, theatres, and concert
halls, many cities are important cultural centres. These and other features
make urban areas exciting and interesting places to live for many people.
The people of most U.S. urban areas
represent a variety of ethnic backgrounds. Most cities include neighbourhoods
in which almost all the people belong to the same ethnic or nationality group.
The people of large urban areas are also divided economically. Urban society
includes extremely wealthy and extremely poor people, and a huge middle class.
The wealthy live in luxurious flats or condominiums (apartment
buildings), or in large, comfortable single-family houses. Middle-class housing
also includes flats, condominiums, and single family houses. In general, the
housing of the middle class is comfortable, though not as luxurious as that of
the wealthy. In contrast, large numbers of urban poor people live in
substandard housing. They rent crowded, small flats or run-down single-family
houses.
In addition to substandard housing, urban
areas have a number of other negative features. Such features include high
crime rates, racial and ethnic friction, noisy surroundings, pollution, and traffic
jams. See City (City problems).
Rural life. More than 98 per cent of all the land of the United States is classified
as rural. But much of the rural land is uninhabited or only lightly inhabited.
About a fourth of all Americans live in areas that are classified as rural.
Farms provide the economic basis of the
nation's rural areas. But only about 5 per cent of the country's rural people
work on farms. Many other rural people own or work in businesses related to
agriculture, such as grain and feed stores and warehouses. Mining and related
activities and light industries also employ many rural people. Still other
rural Americans work as teachers, police officers, salesclerks, or in other
occupations. Many farmers hold other jobs for part of the year to add to their
incomes.
American farmers of today lead vastly
different lives from those of their grandparents. Machines have eliminated
much backbreaking farm work. Farmers use machines to help them plough, plant
seeds, harvest crops, and deliver their products to market. Many farms have
conveyor systems so that the farmer no longer has to shovel feed to farm
animals. Milking machines make morning and evening chores easier. In the home,
farm families may have all the comforts and conveniences of people who live in
cities. During the 1900's, the car, telephone, radio, and television have
brought American farm families into close contact with the rest of the world.
The steady decline in the percentage of
the country's rural population has slowed since 1970. Although many people
continued to move away from rural areas, others chose to move into rural towns
and farm communities. Many of the newcomers wanted to escape the overcrowding,
pollution, crime, and other problems that are part of life in urban areas and
to take advantage of benefits of country living. Rural areas have lower crime
rates and less pollution than urban areas. They are also far less noisy and
crowded.
Because of their small populations, rural
communities collect less tax revenues than urban communities do, and they
generally cannot provide the variety of services that urban areas can. For
example, rural communities have cultural and recreational facilities that are
more limited than those available in urban areas. For many rural Americans,
social life centres around family gatherings, church and school activities,
special interest clubs, and such events as state and county fairs.
Rural areas generally have less
diversified economies than urban areas. Because there are fewer and a smaller variety
of jobs to choose from, rural communities may experience more widespread
economic hardships than urban communities. A single economic downturn—a drop in
farm prices, for example, or the closing of a mine—can cause economic hardship
for an entire rural area.
The nation's rural areas, like its urban
areas, have wealthy, middle class, and poor people. For the most part, however,
the gaps between economic classes are not as large in rural areas as in urban
areas. Most rural Americans live in single-family houses. The majority of
the houses are comfortable and in good
condition. But some people, including many who live in parts of Appalachia—in
the eastern United States—and other pockets of rural poverty, have run-down
houses and enjoy few luxuries.
See Ranching.
Education has been an important factor in the economic development of the United
States and in the achievement of a high standard of living for most Americans.
It has also contributed to the enjoyment of life for many people.
Americans are among the best-educated people in the world. Schools, libraries,
museums, and other educational institutions in the country provide learning
opportunities for people of all ages.
Schools. During the early history of the United States, most schools were
privately owned. Church groups owned and operated many of them. In the early
1800's, the idea of free state schools began to gain widespread support in the
country. State and local governments took the responsibility for establishing
state school systems. By 1918, every state had laws requiring children to
attend school until they reached a certain age or completed a certain year.
Today, about 80 per cent of the nation's primary and secondary schools, and
about 45 per cent of its institutions of higher learning, are state schools.
The rest are private schools run by religious organizations or private groups.
The United States has about 74,000 primary
schools, about 25,000 secondary schools, and about 6,800 combined primary and
secondary schools. In addition, there are approximately 3,300 colleges and
universities.
Many American children begin their
schooling before enrolling in primary school. About 30 per cent of all the
children aged 3 and 4 attend nursery schools, and about 95 per cent of all
5-year-olds attend kindergarten. More than 99 per cent of all U.S. children
complete primary school, and about 75 per cent of them graduate from secondary
school. Approximately 65 per cent of the secondary school graduates go on to
colleges or universities. About 20 per cent of the country's people complete at
least four years of higher education.
Adult education is an important part of
the school system in the United States. Millions of adults take courses at
universities, colleges, vocational schools, recreation centres, or other
institutions. Many adults continue their schooling to improve their job skills
or to get training for a new job. Others attend classes simply to develop new
hobbies or to find out more about topics that interest them. A growing number
of part-time and full-time college and university students are men and women
who have held jobs or raised families and are returning to higher education to
get a degree.
State schools in the United States are
supported mainly by taxation. Private schools get their operating funds chiefly
from tuition fees and contributions from private citizens. The nation's
schools, like its private businesses, have always had to deal with financial
problems. Rapidly rising material and salary costs have increased the
financial problems of the schools. Some state and private schools have cut back
on programmes and reduced their faculties to try to keep expenses in line with
revenues. Colleges and universities have sharply increased their tuition and
other fee charges.
Schools in the United States face a number
of other problems. Many schools, particularly in large cities, have run-down
buildings, inadequate supplies, and overcrowded conditions. A far higher
percentage of young people in these areas fail to complete secondary school
than in other areas. Some people claim that schools in their areas fail to
provide students with the basic skills necessary to obtain and hold jobs.
Schools with large numbers of students from foreign countries face the problem
of educating some children who cannot speak English. Demands for bilingual
education increased in the 1970's, especially in school districts with large
numbers of Spanish-speaking students. Bilingual education involves instruction
in both English and the native language of the students. Also in the 1970's, a
decline in the nation's birth rate caused a reduction in the number of
children of school age. Some schools closed or reduced their staffs because of
the declining enrolment. As a result of these reductions, many teachers lost
their jobs.
Libraries provide the American people with access to books, periodicals,
pamphlets, and other printed matter. In addition, many libraries offer
audio-visual materials, research services, lectures, and educational exhibits.
There are about 8,800 public libraries in
the United States. They range from one-room libraries in small towns to huge
city libraries and their branches. There are about 5,000 university and college
libraries in the United States, as well as thousands of libraries in primary
schools and secondary schools.
The nation's library system also includes
large numbers of private research libraries and special libraries with
collections limited to certain fields of knowledge.
In addition, many government agencies and
businesses operate their own libraries. Three of the government's many
libraries are considered national libraries because of their large and varied
collections and because of the many services they provide. They are the Library
of Congress, the National Agricultural Library of the Department of
Agriculture, and the National Library of Medicine of the Department of Health
and Human Services. These three libraries are all situated in or near Washington,
D.C.
Museums. There are about 6,100 museums in the United States. They include
museums of art, history, natural history, and science. In addition, a number
of historic houses and villages are classed as museums. The collections of
many of the nation's museums are devoted to a single topic of interest, such
as the history of baseball or railways. Some museums have huge collections of
items from many parts of the world. Others feature exhibits of local interest.
In addition to exhibits, many U.S. museums offer classes, lectures, films,
field trips, and other educational services. The most famous museums in the
United States include the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, the
Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, and the Smithsonian Institution in
Washington, D.C
Religion. About 60 per cent of all the American people are members of an
organized religious group. Among them, about 52 per cent are Protestants, 37
per cent Roman Catholics, 4 per cent Jews, 3 per cent Mormons, and 3 per cent
are members of Eastern Orthodox Churches. Relatively small numbers of Americans
belong to other faiths, such as Islam and Buddhism. Roman Catholics make up
the largest single religious denomination in the United States. About 53
million Americans are Roman Catholics. The country's largest Protestant groups
are, in order of size, Baptists, Methodists, Lutherans, Pentecostals, and
Presbyterians.
Religion has played an important role in
the history of the United States. Many people came to the American Colonies to
escape religious persecution in other lands. The early colonists included
Puritans in New England, Roman Catholics in Maryland, and Quakers in Pennsylvania.
The early Americans made religious freedom one of the country's basic laws. The
First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which was adopted in
1791, guarantees every American freedom of religion. It also provides that no
religious group be given official recognition as a state church. These
provisions were intended to prevent persecution of religious minorities and
the favouring of one church over another. The country's religious freedom was
one of the reasons immigrants continued to flock to the United States through
the years.
Although all religious groups in the
United States enjoy freedom, Christian traditions have had a stronger influence
on American life than those of any other faith. For example, most offices,
factories, and other places of employment are closed on Sunday, the Sabbath of
most Christians. The influence of Christianity results from the fact that a
majority of the people are Christians.
Throughout the country's history, religion
has influenced everyday life in a number of ways. For example, in colonial
America many religious rules were enforced by local governments. Some of the
laws that prohibited activities on Sunday still exist.
Today, religion has relatively less
influence in the everyday lives of most Americans. But churches and other
religious organizations continue to play important roles in American life.
Their chief functions are to provide moral guidance and places for worship.
However, religious groups also operate many primary and secondary schools,
colleges, universities, hospitals, and nursing homes. They provide aid for
refugees, the poor, the elderly, orphans, and other persons in need. Social
gatherings are held at many churches. Some religious groups take active roles
in discussing such issues as birth control and rights for minorities and women.
Recreation. Most Americans have a great deal of leisure time, and they spend it in
a variety of ways. They pursue hobbies; take part in sports activities; attend
sporting and cultural events; watch movies and television; listen to records,
tapes, and radios; and read books and magazines. They enjoy trips to museums,
beaches, parks, playgrounds, and zoos. They go away for weekends and holidays,
eat at restaurants, go on picnics, and entertain friends at home. These and
other activities contribute to the richness and diversity of American life.
Sports rank as a leading American pastime.
Millions of Americans enjoy watching such sports events as motor car races,
horse races, and baseball, basketball, and American football games—either in
person or on television. Many Americans, especially children and other young
people, play baseball, basketball, American football, and soccer. People of
most ages participate in such sports as bicycle riding, boating, bowling,
fishing, golf, hiking, hunting, running, skiing, softball, swimming. and
tennis.
Films, plays, concerts, operas, and dance
performances attract large audiences in the United States. Americans find
entertainment at home, as well. About 98 per cent of all American homes have a
television set. On average, a set is in use in each home for about six hours a
day.
Hobbies occupy much of the leisure time of
many Americans. Large numbers of people enjoy raising flower or vegetable
gardens or indoor plants. Other popular hobbies include stamp collecting, coin
collecting, and photography. Since the mid-1900's, interest in such crafts
hobbies as needlepoint, quilting, weaving, pottery making, and woodworking has
increased sharply.
Most Americans spend part of their leisure
time travelling. Many take annual holidays, as well as occasional one-day
excursions or weekend trips. Some people have holiday homes near lakes or seashores,
in the mountains, or in other recreation areas. Others own motor homes or
caravans, which provide comfortable living and sleeping quarters during trips.
Some people enjoy camping in tents. Others prefer to stay in hotels or motels
while on trips.
Food. Americans eat a wide variety of foods. A typical dinner consists of meat
and potatoes, plus a lettuce salad or a vegetable, and sometimes rolls or
bread. Favourite dinner meats include beef steaks, ground beef dishes,
chicken, ham, and turkey. Fish, shellfish, and such dishes as pizza and
spaghetti also serve as main courses.
For lunch, many Americans eat a hamburger
or a hot dog, or a sandwich made with meat or sliced sausage, cheese, peanut
butter, chicken salad, or tuna salad.
Some Americans enjoy a hearty breakfast of
eggs or pancakes served with bacon or sausage. Others prefer a light breakfast
of toast or a pastry, or cereal with milk and fruit. Orange juice accompanies
many breakfasts.
Cake, biscuits, pie, and ice cream are
eaten as desserts and snacks. Other snack foods include chocolate and sweets,
crisps made from potatoes or maize, and fruits such as bananas, apples,
oranges, and grapes.
Beverages are drunk with meals and also at
other times for refreshment. Consumption of soft drinks, especially cola,
exceeds that of any other beverage. Americans also drink much coffee, milk,
and beer, and smaller amounts of fruit juices, tea, and wine.
Americans eat out often. Fast-food
restaurants have wide popularity. They offer a limited variety of foods, all of
which are served within a few minutes. Common fast- food items include
hamburgers and other sandwiches, fried chicken, and chips. Many Americans also
enjoy the cooking of other countries. Chinese, French, Italian, and Mexican
restaurants have long been popular. In recent years, Americans have begun to
enjoy the cuisines of India, japan, the Middle East, and many other areas.
Some regions of the United States—for
example, Hawaii and Louisiana—have distinctive food specialities.
European colonists arrived in America
during the early 1600's, bringing European art traditions with them. But within
a few years, colonists were building houses that probably rank as the first
major American works of art. During the 1700's, American craftworkers began to
produce outstanding examples of furniture, sculpture, and silverwork. By the
mid-1700's, colonial painters were creating excellent portraits.
The first important American literature
appeared in the early 1800's with the works of such authors as Washington
Irving and James Fenimore Cooper. During the late 1800's, American architects
began designing skyscrapers that revolutionized urban architecture throughout
the world. Two uniquely American art forms, jazz and musical comedy, developed
during the late 1800's and early 1900's. In the early 1900's, the United States
gained international leadership in the new art forms of films and modern
dancing.
Today, American architects, authors,
composers, painters, and sculptors have achieved worldwide recognition and
influence. Many of them have shown a keen interest in developing new styles,
new ways of expressing themselves, and even new forms of art.
The United States has an area of 9,372,571
square kilometres. The country, excluding Alaska and Hawaii, can be divided
into seven major land regions. The regions are: (1) the Appalachian Highlands;
(2) the Coastal Lowlands; (3) the Interior Plains; (4) the Ozark-Ouachita Highlands;
(5) the Rocky Mountains; (61 the Western Plateaus, Basins, and Ranges; and (7)
the Pacific Ranges and Lowlands. For a discussion of the land regions of
Alaska and the islands of Hawaii, see the articles on those states.
The Appalachian Highlands extend from the northern tip of Maine southwestward to Alabama. This
rugged region has many mountain ranges.
The White Mountains and the Green
Mountains of northern New England are old mountains, worn down but craggy in
some places. Southern New England consists mostly of hilly land. New England's
chief river is the Connecticut. The Adirondack Upland of northern New York
includes mountains and many beautiful lakes.
From central New York southward, the
Appalachian Highlands has three main subdivisions. They are, from east to west:
the Blue Ridge Mountains Area, the Ridge and Valley Region, and the Appalachian
Plateau.
The Blue Ridge Mountains Area consists of
some of the oldest mountains in the country. The Blue Ridge Mountains
themselves are a narrow chain that stretches from southeastern Pennsylvania to
northeastern Georgia. The Great Smoky Mountains of Tennessee and North
Carolina are also part of this area. The Hudson Highlands of New York and New
jersey form a northern extension of the area. Several mighty rivers, including
the Delaware, Hudson, Potomac, and Susquehanna, cut through the mountains to
form water gaps. These water
gaps provide low, level land suitable for
the construction of major roads and railways.
The Ridge and Valley Region consists of
the Great Valley in the east and a series of alternating ridges and valleys in
the west. The rolling Great Valley is actually a series of valleys,
including the Cumberland, Lebanon, and Lehigh valleys in Pennsylvania; the
Shenandoah Valley in Virginia; the Valley of East Tennessee; the Rome Valley
in Georgia; and the Great Valley of Alabama. The region has some forests, but
other wooded areas have been cleared to take advantage of fertile soil and relatively
level land for farming. About 50 dams on the Tennessee River and its branches
in the southern Great Valley provide flood control and hydroelectric power.
The Appalachian Plateau extends from New
York to Alabama. Glaciers covered the northern plateau during the Ice Age and
carved out natural features, including the Finger Lakes in New York. Deep,
narrow river valleys cut through the plateau in some areas, creating steep,
rugged terrain. Deposits of coal, iron ore, oil, and other minerals lie beneath
the surface, and many people in the region work in mining. Parts of the region
have good farmland. But thin, rocky soil covers much of the plateau, and the
steep hillsides are badly eroded.
The Coastal Lowlands extend from southeastern Maine, across the eastern and southern United
States, to eastern Texas. Forests of hickory, oak, pine, and other trees are
common throughout the lowlands. The region has three subdivisions: (1) the
Piedmont, (2) the Atlantic Coastal Plain, and (3) the Gulf Coastal Plain.
The Piedmont is a slightly elevated rofling plain that separates the Blue Ridge
Mountains from the Atlantic Coastal Plain. It stretches from southern New York
to Alabama. The eastern boundary of the Piedmont is called the Fall Line.
Rivers that reach the Fall Line tumble down from the Piedmont to the lower
coastal plains in a series of falls and rapids. In the early days of settlement
of the eastern United States, boats travelling inland on coastal rivers stopped
at the Fall Line and unloaded their cargoes. The rapids prevented the boats
from travelling farther. They also provided water power for early industries.
As a result, many cities grew up along the Fall Line. Tobacco is a leading
agricultural product of the Piedmont, and the region also has many orchards
and dairy farms.
The Atlantic Coastal Plain extends eastward from the Piedmont to the Atlantic Ocean. It ranges
from a narrow strip of land in New England to a broad belt that covers much of
North and South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. In colonial times, the broad
southern part of the plain encouraged the development of huge plantations for
growing cotton. Cotton is still grown there. Other farm products include
vegetables, citrus fruits, peanuts, and tobacco. In New England, where the
plain narrows to a width of about 15 kilometres in some places, crop farming
has always been less important. Many New Englanders turned to manufacturing, fishing,
or shipping instead of farming.
Numerous rivers cross the plain and flow
into the Atlantic Ocean. They include the Delaware, Hudson, lames, Potomac,
Roanoke, Savannah, and Susquehanna. Bays cut deeply into the plain in some
areas, creating excellent natural harbours. They include Cape Cod Bay, Boston
Bay, Chesapeake Bay, Delaware Bay, and Long Island Sound.
Many resort areas flourish around the
beautiful sandy beaches and offshore islands that line much of the Atlantic
shore from New England to Florida. In some inland regions, swamps form large
wilderness areas, where trees and grasses rise up from shallow waters and
tangled vines and roots form masses of vegetation.
The Gulf Coastal Plain borders the Gulf of Mexico from Florida to southern Texas. Numerous
rivers—including the Alabama, Mississippi, Rio Grande, and Trinity—cross the
plain and flow into the Gulf. The Mississippi, which originates in the
Interior Plains to the north, is the most important of these rivers. Barges carrying
cargoes from many parts of the country travel along the river. Soil deposited
along the banks of the Mississippi and other rivers in the Gulf Coastal Plain creates
fertile farmland. The plain also has belts of hilly forests and grazing land,
and large deposits of petroleum and natural gas lie beneath it and in the
offshore Gulf waters. The Gulf Coastal Plain has many sandy beaches, swamps,
bays, and offshore islands.
The Interior Plains occupy a huge expanse of land that stretches from the Appalachian
Highlands in the east to the Rocky Mountains in the west Glaciers covered much
of the region during the Ice Age. They stripped the topsoil from parts of
Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin and carved out thousands of lakes. Today,
much of this area is heavily forested. Farther south—in parts of Illinois,
Indiana, Iowa, and Ohio—the glaciers flattened the land and deposited rich soil
ideal for growing crops. The plains slope gradually upward from east to west
and get progressively drier.
The western part of the region, called the
Great Plains, has vast grasslands where livestock graze. It also has large
areas of fertile soil that yield maize, wheat, and other crops. Few trees grow
on the Great Plains. Some rugged hills, including the Black Hills of South
Dakota and Wyoming, rise up out of the plains.
Deposits of iron ore and coal provide raw
materials for many manufacturing industries in the eastern part of the Interior
Plains. Important deposits of petroleum and metal ores lie in the western part
Glaciers carved out the five Great Lakes
in the Interior Plains. The lakes—Erie, Huron, Michigan, Ontario, and
Superior—are the largest group of freshwater lakes in the world. The lakes
provide a vital transportation route for shipping the agricultural and
industrial products of the Interior Plains. The Mississippi River is the
region's other great waterway. The Mississippi and its many branches, including
the Missouri and Ohio rivers, form
a river system that reaches into all parts
of the Interior Plains.
The Ozark-Ouachita Highlands rise up between the Interior Plains and Coastal Lowlands. The highlands
form a scenic landscape in southern Missouri, northwest Arkansas, and eastern
Oklahoma. The region is named for the Ozark Plateau and the Ouachita Mountains.
Rivers and streams have cut deep gorges through the rugged highland terrain.
The highlands include forested hills, artificial lakes, and many underground
caves and gushing springs. Much of the region has poor soil for farming but
fertile land lies along the river valleys. Deposits of coal, iron ore, and
other minerals are valuable natural resources of the highlands.
The Rocky Mountains form the largest mountain system in North America. They extend from
northern Alaska, through Canada and the western United States to northern New
Mexico. Many peaks of the Rockies are more than 4,250 metres high. The Continental
Divide, or Great Divide, passes through the mountains. It is an
imaginary line that separates streams that flow into the Pacific Ocean from
those that flow into the Atlantic. Many important rivers, including the
Colorado, Missouri, and Rio Grande, begin in the Rockies.
Forests cover the lower mountain slopes.
The timber line marks the elevation above which trees cannot grow.
Grasses, mosses, and lichens grow above the line. Bighorn sheep, elk, deer,
bears, mountain lions, and other animals live in the mountains. Lakes and
streams add to the region's spectacular beauty.
Timber production and mining are important
industries in the Rockies. The mountains are a storehouse of such metals as
copper, gold, lead, silver, and zinc. The region also has large deposits of oil
and natural gas.
Mountain meadows provide grazing land for
beef and dairy cattle, and valleys are used for growing crops.
For many years, the Rockies formed a major
barrier to transportation across the United States. In the 1860's, the nation's
first transcontinental rail line was built, passing through the Rocky Mountain
region at the Wyoming Basin. Today, other railways and major roads cut through
tunnels and passes in the mountains, and aeroplanes fly over the mountains.
The Western Plateaus, Basins, and Ranges lie west of the Rocky Mountains. This region extends from Washington
south to the Mexican border. It is the driest part of the United States. Parts of
it are wastelands with little plant life. But the region has some forested mountains,
and some fertile areas where rivers provide irrigation water necessary for
growing crops. In other areas, livestock graze on huge stretches of dry land.
The Columbia Plateau occupies the
northernmost part of the region. It has fertile volcanic soil, formed by lava
that flowed out of giant cracks in the earth thousands of years ago. The
Colorado Plateau lies in the southern part of the region. It has some of the
nation's most unusual landforms, including natural bridges and arches of solid
rock and huge, flat-topped rock formations. The plateau's spectacular river
gorges, including the Grand Canyon, rank among the world's great natural
wonders.
The Basin and Range part of the region is
a vast area of mountains and desert lowlands between the Columbia and Colorado
plateaus. It includes Death Valley in California. Part of Death Valley lies 86
metres below sea level and is the lowest place in the United States. The Great Basin
is an area within the larger Basin and Range area. Great Salt Lake is the
largest of many shallow, salty lakes in the Great Basin. Bathers cannot sink in
Great Salt
Lake because the high salt content
provides great buoyancy, enabling swimmers to float with ease. Near the lake
is the Great Salt Lake Desert, which includes a large, hard, flat bed of salt.
The Pacific Ranges and Lowlands stretch across western Washington and Oregon and most of California. The
region's eastern boundary is formed by the Cascade Mountains in the north and
by the Sierra Nevada in the south. Volcanic activity formed the Cascades. Two
of the Cascades—Lassen Peak in California and Mount Saint Helens in
Washington—are active volcanoes. Some of the range's highest peaks have glaciers
and permanent snowfields. Evergreen forests cover the lower slopes and provide
the raw materials for timber and paper products industries. The Sierra Nevada
are granite mountains, dotted with lakes and waterfalls.
Broad, fertile valleys lie west of the
Cascade and Sierra Nevada mountains. They include the Puget Sound Lowland of
Washington, the Willamette Valley of Oregon, and the Central Valley of
California. Valley farms produce large amounts of fruits and vegetables.
West of the valleys, the Coast Ranges line
the Pacific shore. In many places, they rise up abruptly from the ocean,
creating craggy walls of rock. In other areas, the mountains lie behind sandy
coastal plains. Deep bays that jut into the coast include Puget Sound, Columbia
River Bay, San Francisco Bay, and San Diego Bay.
The San Andreas Fault runs through the
Coast Ranges in California. It is a break in the earth where movements of the
earth's crust cause occasional earthquakes. Giant redwood trees grow on the
mountains in northern California. Set among the Coast Ranges are a number of
rich agricultural valleys that produce much of the nation's lettuce, dried
fruit, and wine grapes.
The climate of the United States varies
greatly from place to place. Average annual temperatures range from 13° C in
Barrow, Alaska, to 25.7'’ C in Death Valley, California. The highest
temperature ever recorded in the country was 57” C. It was registered at Death
Valley on July 10,1913. The lowest recorded temperature was —62° C It was
registered at Prospect Creek, near Barrow, Alaska, on |an. 23,1971.
Precipitation (rain, snow, hail, and other forms of moisture) ranges from a yearly
average of less than 5 centimetres at Death Valley to about 1,170 centimetres
at Mount Waialeale in Hawaii. In general, however, most parts of the United
States have seasonal changes in temperature and moderate precipitation.
The Midwest, the Middle Atlantic States,
and New England experience warm summers and cold, snowy winters. In the South,
summers are long and hot, and winters are mild. Along the Pacific Coast, and in
some other areas near large bodies of water, the climate is relatively mild
all year round.
Mountains also affect the climate. In the
West, for example, the mountainous areas are cooler and wetter than the neighbouring
plains and plateaus. Parts of the West and Southwest of the United States have
a desert climate.
The moderate climate in much of the United
States has encouraged widespread population settlement. It has also helped make
possible the production of a great variety of agricultural goods. See North
America (Climate).
The United States ranks first in the world
in the total value of its economic production. The nation's gross national
product (GNPI— the value of all the goods and services produced by a
country in a year—amounted to about 5 trillion U.S. dollars in 1988. This total
was more than twice the GNP of Japan, which ranked second.
The United States economy is based largely
on a free enterprise system. In such a system, individuals and companies
are free to make their own economic decisions. Individuals and companies own
the raw materials, equipment, factories, and other items necessary for production,
and they decide how best to use them in order to earn a profit.
Even though the U.S. economy is based on
free enterprise, the government has placed regulations on economic practices
through the years. It has passed antitrust laws, which are designed to keep
one company or a few firms from controlling entire industries. Such control,
called a monopoly, does away with competition and enables controlling companies
to charge high prices and reduce the quality of goods. Government regulations
have protected consumers from unsafe merchandise and protected workers from
unsafe working conditions and unreasonably low wages. The government has also
enacted regulations designed to reduce environmental pollution. Some people
argue that the government interferes in the economy too much. Others say it
should do more. In spite of involvement by the government, the United States
still has one of the least regulated economies in the world. See Capitalism; Monopoly
and competition.
In spite of its overall strength, the
United States economy has faced problems from time to time. The problems
include recessions (mild business slumps), depressions (severe
business slumps), and inflation (rising prices). See Depression; Great
Depression; Recession; Inflation.
Natural resources. A variety of natural resources provide the raw materials that support
the economy of the United States. In addition to a moderate climate, the most
valuable resources are minerals, soils, water, forests, and fish.
Minerals. The United States has large deposits of coal, iron ore, natural gas,
and petroleum, which are vital to the country's industrial strength. Its many
other important minerals include copper, gold, lead, phosphates, potash,
silver, sulphur, and zinc. To meet its needs, however, the United States must
import additional amounts of iron ore, petroleum, and other minerials.
Soils. The United States has vast expanses of fertile soil that is well-suited
to growing crops. The most fertile soils include the dark soils of the Interior
Plains and the alluvial (water-deposited) soils along the lower Mississippi
River Valley and other smaller river valleys. Rich, wind-blown soil called loess
covers parts of eastern Washington and the southern Interior Plains.
Water. Lakes, rivers, and underground deposits supply water for households,
farms, and industries in the United States. The nation uses about 1,500 billion
litres of water daily. Households use
only about 10 per cent of this total. The vast majority of the rest is used to
operate manufacturing industries and steam power plants, and to irrigate farms.
Forests cover nearly a third of the United States, and they yield many valuable
products. About 40 per cent of the nation's timber comes from the trees of
forests in the Pacific Northwest. Forests in the South supply timber, wood
pulp—which is used to make paper—and nearly all the turpentine, pitch, rosin,
and wood tar produced in the United States. The Appalachian Mountains and
parts of the Great Lakes area have fine hardwood forests. Hickory, maple, oak,
and other hardwood trees cut from these forests provide quality woods for the
manufacture of furniture.
Fish. Americans who fish for a living catch about 5.6 million metric tons of
sea products annually. The greatest quantities are taken from the Gulf of
Mexico, where important catches include menhaden, oysters, and shrimp. The
Pacific Ocean supplies Alaska pollock, cod, crabs, herring, salmon, tuna, and
other fish. The Atlantic yields cod, flounder, herring, menhaden, and other
fish; and such shellfish as clams, lobsters, oysters, and scallops.
Service industries account for 74 per cent of the U.S. gross domestic product and employ 76
per cent of the country's workers. This industry group includes a wide variety
of businesses that provide services rather than producing goods.
Community, social, and personal services are rated first among U.S. service industries in terms of the gross
domestic product. This industry includes such establishments as doctors'
offices and private hospitals, hotels, law firms, computer programming and data
processing companies, restaurants, repair shops, private research laboratories,
and engineering companies.
Finance, insurance, and land and property
services are rated second among U.S. service
industries. Banks finance much of the economic activity in the United
States by lending money to both
individuals and businesses. American banks lend billions of dollars annually.
Most of the loans to individuals are for the purchase of houses, cars, or other
major items. Loans to businesses provide an important source of money for capital
expansion— the construction of new factories and the purchase of new
equipment. As a business expands, it hires more workers. These workers, in
turn, produce more goods and services. In this way, the nation's level of
employment and its economic output both increase.
Other important types of financial
institutions include commodity and security exchanges. Commodities are basic
goods, such as grains and precious metals. Securities are certificates of
investment, such as stocks and bonds. The prices of commodities and securities
are determined by the buying and selling that takes place at exchanges. The
New York Stock Exchange is the nation's largest security exchange. The Chicago
Board of Trade is the world's largest commodity exchange.
The United States has the world's largest
private insurance industry. The country has about 2,000 life and health
insurance companies and about 3,500 property and liability companies. Land and
property services are important to the economy of the United States because of
the large sums of money involved in the buying and selling of property.
Wholesale and retail trade play major roles in the American economy. Wholesale trade, which
includes foreign trade, takes place when a buyer purchases goods directly from
a producer. The goods may then be sold to other businesses for resale to
consumers. Retail trade involves selling products to the final consumer.
Grocery shops, department stores, and car dealerships are examples of retail
trade establishments.
Foreign trade provides markets for surplus
agricultural goods and many raw materials and manufactured goods produced in
the United States. The nation imports goods that it lacks entirely or that
producers do not supply in sufficient quantities. It also imports goods
produced by foreign companies that compete with U.S. firms. During much of.the
country's history, the value of U.S. exports has exceeded, or been about the
same as, the value of its imports. But since the mid-1960s, the value of
imports has usually been much higher than the value of exports.
Important U.S. exports include (II
machinery and transportation equipment, such as aircraft, computers electric
power equipment, industrial machinery, and motor vehicles and parts; (2)
manufactured articles, especially scientific measuring equipment; (3) chemical
elements and compounds, including plastic materials; (4) basic manufactures, such as metals and
paper; and (5) agricultural products, especially maize and wheat.
The leading U.S. imports are (1) machinery
and transport equipment, such as cars and parts, engines, office machines, and
telecommunications equipment; (2) manufactured articles, such as clothing,
shoes, and toys; (3| mineral fuels and lubricants, especially petroleum; (4)
basic manufactures, such as iron, steel, and other metals, and paper and
newsprint; and (5) chemical products, such as chemical compounds and medicines.
Canada and Japan are the country's chief
trading partners. Other major U.S. trading partners include Germany, Mexico,
South Korea, Taiwan, and the United Kingdom.
Government services play a major role in the economy. Federal, state, and local
governments employ 17 per cent of U.S. workers. Many government employees are
directly involved in making public policies. Others- including police officers,
postal workers, teachers, and refuse collectors—provide public services.
Federal, state, and local governments buy
a fifth of all the goods and services produced in the nation. These purchases
range from paper clips to office buildings.
The federal government is the nation's
largest single buyer of goods and services. Its agencies, including the
military, buy billions of dollars worth of equipment from private companies. In
addition, federal grants finance much of the nation's research activity. State
governments spend most of their income on education, health care and
hospitals, highways, and social security benefits. Local governments spend
over a third of their income on education, and less for police and fire protection,
hospitals, streets, sanitation and sewerage, and parks.
In addition to its roles as an employer
and purchaser of goods and services, government influences the economy by
providing income to certain groups of people. For example, the federal
government makes social security payments to retired and disabled people.
Federal, state, and local governments provide assistance to the needy. Such
government programmes are the only source of income for some Americans.
Transportation, communication, and
utilities are also important to the economy.
Utility companies provide electricity, gas, telephone, and water services. More
information on transportation and communication appears later in this
section.
Manufacturing accounts for 18 per cent of the gross domestic product and employs 16
per cent of the workers. The value of American manufactured goods is greater
than that of any other country. Factories in the United States turn out a
tremendous variety of producer goods, such as sheet metal and printing
presses; and
consumer goods, such as cars, clothing, and TV sets. The leading categories of U.S.
products are, in order of value, chemicals, transportation equipment, food products,
nonelectrical machinery, electrical machinery and equipment, printed materials,
scientific and medical instruments, fabricated metal products, paper products,
rubber and plastic products, and primary metals.
The Midwest and Northeast have long been
major U.S. centres of manufacturing. Since the mid-1900's, the country's
fastest-growing manufacturing areas have been on the West Coast, in the
Southwest, and in the South. Today, California is first among the states in the
value of its manufactured goods, followed by Texas, Ohio, Michigan, New York,
Illinois, and Pennsylvania. Manufacturers in California produce aircraft,
aerospace equipment, computers and electronic components, food products, and
many other goods.
Midwestern factories turn out much of the
nation's iron and steel, cars, and other heavy industrial products. The
Northeast has many clothing factories, food processors, printing plants, and
manufacturers of electronic equipment. Petroleum refineries and petro chemical
industries account for much of the manufacturing activity in Texas and other
states bordering the Gulf of Mexico. Atlanta, Dallas-Fort Worth, Seattle, and
Wichita are important centres for the manufacture of aircraft and related
equipment
Through the years, Americans have
developed manufacturing processes that have greatly increased productivity.
During the early 1900's, U.S. car firms introduced the moving assembly line and
identical interchangeable parts for cars. This led to mass production, in which
large numbers of goods could be produced in less time and at a lower cost than
ever before. Beginning in the mid-1900's, U.S. industries turned increasingly to
automation—the use of machines that operate with little human help.
American inventors and engineers developed computers to bring automation to an
even higher level. Today, computers operate machines, handle accounting, and
perform many other important functions in industries. See Manufacturing.
Construction accounts for 4 per cent of the U.S. gross domestic product and provides
jobs for 4 per cent of the work force. This industry employs such workers as
architects, engineers, contractors, bricklayers, carpenters, electricians,
plumbers, roofers, ironworkers, and plasterers.
Agriculture accounts for 2 per cent of the U.S. gross domestic product and employs 3
per cent of the nation's workers. Yet, the United States is a world leader in
agriculture production. The country's farms turn out as much food as the
nation needs, with enough left over to export food to other countries. About a
third of the world's food exports come from U.S. farms.
Beef cattle is the most valuable product
of American farms. Millions of beef cattle are reared on huge ranches in the
western United States. The South and Midwest also produce large numbers of beef
cattle. Other leading farm products, in order of value, include milk, maize,
soybeans, chickens and eggs, pigs, wheat, and cotton. United States farms also
produce large amounts of hay, tobacco, turkeys, oranges, potatoes, tomatoes,
apples, peanuts, and sorghum.
Farmers throughout the country rear dairy
cattle for milk and other products. Much of the dairy production is
concentrated in a belt that extends from Minnesota to
New York. Midwestern states account for
much of the nation's maize, soybeans, and pig production. The nation's chief
wheat-growing region stretches across the Great Plains. Most of the chickens
are reared in the South. California and states in the South and Southwest
produce almost all the country's cotton. Farmers in various areas also
produce poultry, eggs, fruit, vegetables, nuts, and many other crops.
The United States has played a major role
in the modernization of agriculture. During the 1800's, American inventors
developed the first successful harvesting machine and steel plough. United
States scientists have contributed to the development of improved plant varieties
and livestock breeds, as well as agricultural chemicals for fertilizer and
pest control.
The use of modern farm machinery and
agricultural methods has helped make U.S. farms to be among the most efficient
in the world. But it has also contributed to rapidly rising production costs.
Many farmers who have been unable to meet these rising costs have been forced
to leave farming and sell their land. Since 1925, the number of farms in the
United States has decreased from about 6,500,000 to about 2,100,000. At the
same time, average farm size increased from about 58 hectares to about 189
hectares. Some of the largest farms in the United States are owned by
corporations. But more than 95 per cent of all the farms are owned by individuals
or by corporations or partnerships made up of members of farm families. See
Agriculture.
Mining. The United States is among the leading countries in the value of its
mineral production. Mining accounts for 2 per cent of the gross domestic
product and employs 1 per cent of the workers.
The chief mineral products of the United
States are, in order of value, petroleum, natural gas, and coal. The United
States is third, after Russia and Saudi Arabia, in the production of petroleum.
It is second to Russia in natural gas production. The United States is second-
largest producer of coal—after China. Most coal deposits lie in the Interior
Plains and the Appalachian Highlands. Major deposits of petroleum and natural
gas occur in Alaska, California, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas. Other
important minerals include clays, copper, gold, granite, iron ore, limestone,
phosphate rock, salt, sand and gravel, sodium carbonate, sulphur, and trap
(a fine-grained rock).
Although mining accounts for a small share
of the total economic output in the United States, it has been a key to the
growth of other parts of the economy. Coal and iron ore, for example, are
needed to make steel. Steel, in turn, is used to make cars, buildings, bridges,
and many other goods. Coal is also a fuel for electric power plants. Refineries
turn petroleum into petrol; fuel oil for heating and industrial power; and
petrochemicals used in the manufacture of plastics, paint, drugs, fertilizers,
and synthetic fabrics. Limestone, granite, and trap are crushed for use in
construction materials. Sand and gravel are also used in construction. Sulphur
and phosphates are used to make fertilizer. See Mining.
Energy sources. The farms, factories, households, and motor vehicles of the United
States consume vast amounts of energy annually. Various sources are used to
generate the energy. Petroleum provides about 40 per cent. It is the source of
most of the energy used to power motor vehicles, and it heats millions of
houses and factories. Natural gas generates about 25 per cent of the energy
used. Many industries use gas for heat and power and millions of households
burn it for heat, cooking, and drying laundry. Coal is the source of about 25
per cent of all the energy. Its major uses are in the production of
electricity and steel. The electricity lights buildings and powers factory and
farm machinery. Hydroelectric and nuclear power plants each generate about 5
per cent of America's energy.
Since the mid-1900s, the cost of
energy—especially the petroleum portion—has risen dramatically. The rising
cost became a major contributor to inflation in the United States and other
countries. For more details, see Energy supply.
Transportation. A sprawling transportation
network spreads out over the United States. Motor vehicles drive on about
6,200,000 kilometres of streets, roads, and highways in the country. The United
States has an average of about 75 cars for every 100 people. Americans use
cars for most of their personal travel. Trucks carry nearly 25 per cent of the
freight in the United States.
The United States has about 240,000
kilometres of railway lines. Railways are the leading freight carriers in the
United States, handling more than 35 per cent of the freight. But they account
for less than 1 per cent of all passenger traffic. See Railway.
Airlines handle about 18 per cent of all
U.S. passenger traffic, but less than one-half of 1 per cent of the freight
traffic. Chicago-O'Hare International Airport is the world's busiest airport.
See Airport Aviation.
About 15 per cent of the freight traffic
in the United States travels on waterways. The Mississippi River system
handles more than half of this freight. Ships and barges travelling on the
Mississippi and its branches, including the Arkansas, Missouri, and Ohio
rivers, can reach deep into the country's interior. The Great Lakes form the
nation's other major inland waterway. The St. Lawrence Seaway links the lakes
with the Atlantic Ocean.
There are many major ports in the United
States. New Orleans ranks as the busiest port in the nation, followed by the
ports of New York City and Houston.
The nation has a vast network of pipelines
that carries crude oil, petroleum products, and natural gas. Pipelines account
for nearly 25 per cent of the total freight handled in the United States.
Communication. Private corporations operate the publishing and broadcasting industries
in the United States. The First Amendment of the Constitution guarantees
freedom of the press and speech. These guarantees allow newspapers and
broadcasters to operate without government censorship. Laws prohibit the
publishing or broadcasting of libellous, obscene, and treasonous materials.
But, for the most part, the government interferes little in the operation of
the communication industry.
The free exchange of ideas and information
is a vital part of the democratic heritage of the United States.
Publishers in the United States issue
about 1,600 daily newspapers, which have a total circulation of more than 60
million copies. The nation also has about 7,000 weekly and semiweekly
newspapers. The newspapers provide information on local, national, and
international events.
In the United States, most newspapers
chiefly serve a local region. However, The Wall Street journal, USA Today,
The New York Times, and The Christian Science Monitor circulate
throughout most of the country. The Wall Street Journal, which
specializes in business news, has the largest circulation among U.S.
newspapers.
There are more than 11,300 radio stations,
about 1,500, television stations, and about 8,500 cable TV systems in the
United States. Radio and TV provide entertainment, news, and public interest
programmes. In the United States, both national networks and local stations produce
and broadcast programmes. Almost every household has at least one TV set and
one or more radios, and more than half of the households subscribe to cable TV.
Outline
The nation
Political divisions
Regions
C Outlying areas
People
Population
Ancestry C Language
Way of life
Urban life
Rural life
Religion
Education
Recreation
Food
Arts
Land
The Appalachian Highlands
The Coastal Lowlands
The Interior Plains
The Ozark-Ouachita Highlands
The Rocky Mountains
The Western Plateaus, Basins, and Ranges
The Pacific Ranges and Lowlands
Climate
Economy
Natural resources
Service industries
Manufacturing
Construction
Agriculture
Mining
Energy sources
Transportation
Communication
Questions
How does the United States rank among the
countries of the world in population and area?
Why is the country called a melting pot.
What are the country's main land regions?
How does mineral production contribute to
other parts of the American economy?
What are some of the U.S.'s leading farm
products?
What are some of the reasons why the
United States changed from a rural nation to an urban nation?
Where is the lowest land in the United
States?
What are some problems that are faced by
schools in the United States?
What are the major religions in the United
States?
What are some positive and negative
features of U.S. urban life and rural life?
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