Regions of the U.S
ATLAS Regions of the U.S. Idaho Panhandle Great Plains WEST The grasslands of the Great Plains— MIDWEST parts of North Dakota, South Dakota, NORTHEAST Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Upper Peninsula Great Lakes States Me. Wash. New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming, and rior upe New York, Pennsylvania, e S Montana—are important for growing Minn. ak Mont. L Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, New England Pacific Northwest grain, raising cattle, and mining. Illinois, Wisconsin, and Vt. Maine, New Hampshire, Mich. L N.D. a Washington, Oregon, k Minnesota border the N.H. Vermont, Massachusetts, e H five Great Lakes. Idaho, and western Montana u Connecticut, and Rhode Island r ario n t Ore. o e On Mass. a k n La N.Y. Wis. g Ida. S.D. i h c i Conn. R.I. The geographic center M Mich. e Mid-Atlantic States of all 50 states is k a rie Rocky Mountain States L E Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, located near Belle Fourche, ke a L Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Wyo. South Dakota. Pa. N.J. and New York border the Atlantic Ocean, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Iowa but Pennsylvania does not. Pacific States Arizona, and New Mexico Ohio Washington, Oregon, Neb. The Mason-Dixon Line is the boundary that separates Ill. Maryland California, Alaska, and Ind. Panhandle Pennsylvania from Maryland and part of West Virginia, as well as Hawaii border the Nebraska Panhandle Del. Maryland from Delaware. Before the Civil War, it symbolized Pacific Ocean. Md. the dividing line between free (Northern) states and Nev. Utah Colo. Kan. West Virginia slave (Southern) states.
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