Mexico—Physical Geography

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
South America Physical Geography.
Advertisements

MEXICO Chapter 10-1.
Latin America Geography
The Geography of Latin America.
Latin America Physical Geography.
Unit 5: Latin America.
Mr. Burton 7.1 Notes Please grab out a blank sheet of paper and a writing utensil.
Mexico Physical Geography.
MEXICO The Land. Vocabulary BE SURE TO CIRCLE OR HIGHLIGHT THE BOLD/UNDERLINED WORDS THOUGHOUT THE PRESENTATION IN YOUR NOTES! BE SURE TO CIRCLE OR HIGHLIGHT.
Mexico’s Physical Geography
Latin American Physiographic Features. Rio Grande River Mexicans call it Rio Grande del Norte 1,885 miles long Flows through southwestern United States.
6.1 Physical Geography: Mexico
6.3 Students will identify the characteristics of climate regions in Europe and the Americas and describe major physical features, countries and cities.
Latin America’s Physical Geography
Location, Climate, & Natural Resources Unit 7 Notes.
Mexico, Venezuela, Cuba, & Brazil
Mexico’s Physical Geography
South America: Physical Geography
North American Physical Geography. Highlands, Plains and Plateaus Highlands – North American Elevation rises to the west – Appalachian Mts. and Laurentain.
From The Andes to the Amazon:
Location, Climate, & Natural Resources Unit 6 Notes.
Latin America Geography
Land & Water 10 pts 10 pts 5 pts 5 pts 15 pts 15 pts 20 pts 20 pts Climate & Vegetation 5 pts 5 pts 10 pts 10 pts 15 pts 15 pts 20 pts 20 pts 10 pts 10.
Physical Geography Mexico, Central America, Caribbean, South America
LATIN AMERICA Mexico, Central America, Caribbean, South America Chapters 10, 11, 12.
B.A.   Discussion Questions  Think, Pair, Share – spend about.
Mexico’s Land and Economy. Bridging Two Continents México forms part of a land bridge, or narrow strip of land that joins two larger landmasses. This.
Chapter 10.1 Mexico Pg. 221.
North America.
By: Mr. Maney.  Essential Questions/Main Objectives: 1) Why study Latin America? 2) What are the main geographic features of Latin America and how do.
The Geography of Latin America
There are four physical regions of Texas that you will need to know…
Location, Climate, & Natural Resources
Latin America’s Physical Geography Unit 8 Notes Name: ___________________.
L ATIN A MERICA Physical Geography. V OCABULARY Land and Water Plateau – A large raised area of mostly level land Isthmus – A strip of land with water.
Physical Geography Mexico Central America Caribbean.
Mr. Kilbourn. This is Latin America. Latin America is NOT a continent. Latin America is NOT a country. Latin America IS a cultural Region. Bahamas.
Chapter 9, Section 1 Latin America: Physical Features.
Chapter 8-1 “The Physical Geography of Mexico”. BODIES OF WATER IN MEXICO Mexico shares a long border with the United States. Part of this border is formed.
Ch. 6- Section 1- The Land Land bridge- narrow strip of land that joins two larger landmasses- connects NA and SA.
Warm-up Questions List the states that border Texas. Name two Canadian provinces. Name the mountain regions that run through the US & Canada. Name the.
Chapter 3: Geography and History Essential Questions: What are the significant physical features of North America?, How did the United States and Canada.
Overview of Latin America. Latin America is divided into three regions Mexico and central America Caribbean South America.
 Mexico is south of the United States. ◦ The Río Bravo River forms part of the border between the two countries. ◦ In the United States this river is.
C-0 H-Raise Hand A-Map M-In Seat P-Everyone. Mexico is a land of extremes, with high mountains, deep canyons in the center of the country, sweeping.
CHAPTER 10 MEXICO SECTION 1 NATURAL ENVIRONMENTS.
Mexico Capital – Mexico City 9 Million people – second largest in the world.
Chapter 6 Section 1 Mexico’s Land
Distribution of Resources Climate & Vegetation Landforms.
Latin America Physical Geography. Regions If we look at physical geography Latin America has four distinct regions: What are the four regions? A.Mexico.
Location, Climate, & Natural Resources: Where People Live & How They Trade.
Section 1: Physical Geography
Location, Climate, & Natural Resources
SSWG7b Describe the location of major physical features and their impact on Latin America.
Mexico, Venezuela, Cuba, & Brazil
Physical Features of South America
The Geography of Latin America.
Mexico Section 1 pages
Mexico, Venezuela, Cuba, & Brazil
North American Geography
Chapter 5 - Lesson 1 A Rugged Land
The Physical Geography of Latin America
Mesoamerica 11-1 Essential question: Analyze how overland trade would have been different if the Mesoamericans would have had pack animals.
Location, Climate, & Natural Resources
Mexico Section 1 Page 172.
Unit 6: Latin America.
The Geography of Latin America.
Location, Climate, & Natural Resources
Ch. 6 Sec. 2 Physical Geography of Mexico
Presentation transcript:

Mexico—Physical Geography Land, Water, Climate, Vegetation, Natural resources and Environmental concerns

Mexico’s Land Mexico is an isthmus: a narrow strip of land with water on 2 sides and joins 2 larger bodies of land

Mexico’s Land Mountains: Mountains dominate the region. Two largest ranges: Sierra Madre Occidental (west) and Sierra Madre Oriental (east) Very rugged, some are active volcanoes

Mexico’s Land Plateau: a large raised area of land Located between the mountain ranges Covers ½ of the country Most of Mexico’s population lives there

Mexico’s Land Plains: narrow coastal plains are located on each coast There is a large plains area on the Yucatan Peninsula

Baja California Baja California is a peninsula on the west side of Mexico. It separates the Gulf of California and the Pacific Ocean. The west side (Pacific) is mainly desert and the east side (Gulf) is mainly mountains.

Mexico’s Water Oceans/Seas: Pacific Ocean to the west Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Sea to the east

Mexico’s Water Rivers: Most form in the mountains and flow to the Gulf of Mexico or the Pacific Ocean Longest is the Rio Grande (Rio Bravo). It forms part of the border between the US and Mexico.

Rivers continued: Rivers serve as natural highways in areas where building roads and traveling by roads is difficult. Lakes: There are many lakes in Mexico. Water is a source of food/drink and power (electricity) for the Mexican people.

Mexico’s Climate Mexico is located in both the low and middle latitudes Climates include: Arid (desert) =hot and dry all year Semiarid- (outskirts of desert) = hot and humid all year Highlands (mountains) =cold most of the year

Climates continued: Southern Mexico- Tropical wet and dry = rainy season and dry season Tropical wet = warm and wet all year

Mexico’s Vegetation Desert scrub – low growing grasses (desert) Mixed forest (mountains) Tropical rainforests (coastal plains of south) Trees cover ¼ of Mexico Temperate grassland-long grasses (plateaus, along the coasts, and on the Yucatan Peninsula

Mexico’s Natural Resources Minerals: silver (largest producer in the world) gold copper coal iron ore lead

Natural resources continued: Petroleum is one of the most important resources in Mexico. - It is controlled by the government. Timber: Lumber and wood products are important to Mexico Agriculture: corn, cacao, coffee, sugar cane, cotton, tobacco and wheat

Natural resources continued: Livestock includes: cattle, sheep and goats Fishing industry is important esp. along the coasts

Environmental concerns Air pollution is a severe problem in Mexico. Mexico City is the worst. Its location in between the 2 mountain ranges does not allow the pollution from cars and factories to escape. The oil industry also contributes to the air pollution and water pollution. It is caused by oil rigs in the gulf/sea spilling oil and by the need to burn oil for energy.

Environmental concerns continued: Natural hazards: Volcanic eruptions and other natural hazards like hurricanes are a concern for Mexico Mexico City itself is also vulnerable to earthquakes because it was built on a dry lakebed.