From A+ Club Lesson Planner & Study Guide
Preparation for the state of Virginian SOL ("Standards of Learning") History test
Released tests can be found here:
Virginia Standards of Learning
Note on table formatting
- use align left for thumbs
- for text at top of cell, use
- style="vertical-align:top;"
- after row breaks on same line as \-
Geographic regions of North America[edit | edit source]
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[[File:NorthAmerica-sel-regions LCPS VA-Edu..jpg|none|thumb|Major regions of North America from the Virginia Dept. of Education SOL framework document>>
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Key
- A) Coastal Plain
- East Coast, location of the original 13 American colonies
- B) Appalachian Mountains
- border between the 13 colonies and the French-Indian lands to the west of the Appalachians
- C) Canadian Shield
- distinct climate and geographic area north of Great Lakes and New England
- D) Interior Lowlands
- fertile lowlands along the Mississippi River
- E) Great Plains
- low, flat grasslands between the Mississippi Lowlands and the Rocky Mountains
- F) Rocky Mountains
- great mountain range that served as barrier between the middle and western parts of the continent
- G) Basin and Range
- isolated region that was not directly connected by rivers to other regions and that was between the Rocky Mountains and the Coastal Ranges (mountains)
- H) Coastal Ranges
- Mountain range along the west coast that feeds water into the fertile valleys and lands along the coast
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[[File:Atlantic Coastal Plain.svg|thumb|The Atlantic coastal plain |alt=|border|none>>
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ATLANTIC COASTAL PLAIN
- lowland coast region along Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico
- the 13 American colonies were settled in the Coastal Plain from modern Georgia to Massachusetts
- note that Massachusetts is part of the Appalachian region, but it was settled along with the Coastal Plain
- the western barrier to the Coastal Plain is the eastern slope of the Appalachian Mountains
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[[File:AppalachianLocatorMap2.png|thumb|AppalachianLocatorMap2|alt=|border|none>>[[File:Appalachian region of United States.png|thumb|Appalachian region of United States|alt=|none>>
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APPALACHIAN REGION
- Appalachian Mountains =
- mountain range that extends along the western border of the Coastal Plain from Georgia to New England
- includes sub-regions
- the Piedmont, Low Plateaus and Mountains
- the Appalachian Mountains served as a barrier between
- early American colonies (to the east of the Appalachians along the Coastal Plain)
- and French and Indian lands (to the west of the Appalachians)
- all rivers from the eastern slope flow towards the Atlantic Ocean
- all rivers from the western slope flow towards the Mississippi River
- after Britain defeated France in the 1854-63 French-Indian War, the entire Appalachian region (and all lands up to the Mississippi River) became British
- however, the British King prohibited American colonists from occupying it
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INTERIOR LOWLANDS
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[[File:Satellite image illustrating the Great Plains.jpg|thumb|Satellite image illustrating the Great Plains|alt=Satellite image illustrating the Great Plains.jpg|border|none>>[[File:Map of Great Plains.svg|thumb|Great Plains region|alt=|none>>
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GREAT PLAINS REGION
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[[File:RockyMountains-Range.svg|thumb|RockyMountains-Range|alt=RockyMountains-Range.svg|border|none>>
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ROCKY MOUNTAINS REGION
- high mountain range above and to the east of the Great Basin
- the "Continental Divide" is in the Rocky Mountains, marking the point at which the land descends to the east or the west
- important rivers flow from origins in the Rocky Mountains
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[[File:Basin and Range Province Boundaries and Landmarks.svg|thumb|One of various geographical definitions of the Province|alt=|none>>[[File:GB-Definition-Map.jpg|thumb|The hydrographic Great Basin (magenta outline), distinguished from the Great Basin Desert (black), and the Basin and Range Geological Province (teal).[3]|alt=|border|none>>[[File:Great Basin map.gif|thumb|Great Basin map|alt=Great Basin map.gif|border|none>>
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BASIN AND RANGE
- the "Great Basin" = a geographic depression (low area) that was once under the sea
- no rivers or water flow out of the Great Basin
- the VA & US SOL refers to the "Great Basin" as the "Basin"
- the Range includes mountains from which water flows into the Great Basin
- the western border of the Range are the Sierra Nevada Mountains
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[[File:California Mountain Ranges.png|thumb|Northern and Southern Coast Ranges and other major mountain ranges of California|alt=|border|none>>
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PACIFIC COASTAL RANGE
- western slope of mountains that border the Great Basin and Rocky Mountains
- and that produce important rivers that flow into the Pacific Ocean
- water flow from the mountains allows for great agricultural production in the "central valley"
- = valley area between the mountains
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[[File:Map of Major Rivers in US.png|thumb|Map of Major Rivers in US|alt=|border|none>>
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BIG IDEAS
- rivers start in mountains and flow downhill
- thus they mark the major regions
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US Rivers to know:
- Hudson River
- Mississippi River
- Missouri River
- Ohio River
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[[File:US map - rivers and lakes3.jpg|thumb|US map - rivers and lakes3|alt=|border|none>>
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Virginia Rivers to know:
- James River
- Potomac River
- Roanoke River
- Virginia has approx. 49,350 miles of river
- all Virginia rivers flow towards the Atlantic
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[[File:Chesapeake bay watershed map.jpg|thumb|The Chesapeake Bay watershed|alt=A rough map of the Chesapeake Bay watershed with blue lines for rivers drawn on top.>>
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[[File:Mississippi River Watershed Map.jpg|thumb|Mississippi River Watershed Map|alt=|border|none>>[[File:Mississippi river map.png|thumb|Mississippi river map|alt=|border|none>>
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[[File:Virginia geographic map-en.svg|thumb|Virginia is shaped by the Blue Ridge Mountains, the Chesapeake Bay and its watershed, and the parallel 36°30′ north.|alt=A topographic map of Virginia, with text identifying cities and natural features.>>
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Native American regions of North America[edit | edit source]
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[[File:NativeAmericanRegions map 1.jpg|thumb|Major Regions of North America|alt=|none>>
[[File:Langs N.Amer.png|thumb|Language families of Indigenous peoples in North America: shown across present-day Canada, Greenland, the United States, and northern Mexico|alt=|none>>
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BIG IDEAS
- Native American tribes and language groups were divided into these basic geographic regions
- these maps will not be on the Virginia SOL
- however, they provide a good overview of distribution Native American ethnic, language and tribal groups
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[[File:North American cultural areas.png|Cultural areas of North America at time of European contact|alt=|border|none|thumb>>
[[File:Early indian east.jpg|thumb|Eastern tribes & general language groups, pre-colonial era|alt=Early indian east.jpg|none>>
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BIG IDEAS
- at the time of English and French colonization, Native American tribes occupied all areas of European colonization
- and were aligned by language and ethnic groups
- the English and French made treaties and/or fought with various tribes
- which re-aligned Native American tribal arrangements
- the French generally allied with Algonquin tribes and confederations
- the English generally allied with Iroquois tribes and confederations
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Colonial America & territorial expansion[edit | edit source]
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1748
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[[File:Nouvelle-France map-fr.svg|thumb|Map showing French possessions in North America just before the French-Indian War (1754)|alt=|border|none>>
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BIG IDEAS
- red = British colonies in red, including 13 American
- striped red = British territory in Canada ceded (surrendered) by France to Britain in 1713
- blue = French territory, called "New France"
- orange = Spanish territory, which includes Florida and parts of modern Southwest US (an area that belonged to Mexico after Mexican independence from Spain)
- the red (British) and blue (French) territories are separated by the Appalachian Mountains
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1775
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[[File:Map Thirteen Colonies 1775.svg|thumb|Map Thirteen Colonies 1775|alt=|none>>
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BIG IDEAS
- after the French-Indian War (1754-1763), the lands that had belonged to Franch became British
- Canada
- all lands east of the Mississippi River
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- France gave control of Louisiana to Spain
- = lands west of the Mississippi River
- English King George prohibited colonies from moving west of the Appalachian Mountains
- he reserved that land for Native Americans ("Indian Territories")
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