USA
TRAVEL GUIDE, “SOUTHwest”
BY CLAY
LARROY
Do
you feel like it is time for a short vacation? Once you decide to travel, how good you plan the trip
will help you feel comfortable and be comfortable at your destination. Not only
will you feel less anxiety before the trip, but you can rest assured that once
you arrive where you're going you will have a good understanding of what's
going on there. When you need to plan a vacation contact me!
Southwest, region, southwestern United
States, historically denoting several geographic areas in turn and changing
over the years as the nation expanded. After the War
of 1812, the Southwest generally meant Missouri, Arkansas,
and Louisiana; after Texas was annexed, it, too, was included. In the
wake of the war with Mexico, the Southwest embraced most, but not all, of
the territory that was acquired under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848), including land
often considered part of the “West”—i.e., New
Mexico, Arizona, and all or parts of Oklahoma, Colorado,
Utah,
and Nevada, as suited the convenience of the user of the
term.
The common denominator of the modern Southwest is
aridity. The high, dry plains of Texas extend
westward to the Pecos valley of New Mexico. Although the southern spurs of the Rocky Mountains beyond the Pecos River are cool
and are dotted with evergreens, farther west are vast highly colored sandstone
deposits. Occasional mesas or buttes rise above the peneplain through which the Colorado River has cut such spectacular gorges as
the Grand Canyon. Stretching westward from Arizona are the
true deserts with their growth of cacti and gaunt, parallel chains of mountains
almost devoid of vegetation.
Mos crops can be grown in the Southwest only with
irrigation, the water for which is taken mostly from the Colorado River and the Rio Grande. Prior to the Reclamation Act of 1902 and
the subsequent building of Theodore Roosevelt Dam (completed 1911) near Phoenix, Ariz., Hoover Dam (1936) on the Colorado
River, and the Glen Canyon Dam (1966) upriver from Hoover, the dryness of the
land enforced a pastoral economy. During the period of Spanish ascendancy in
the early 1800s, sheep ranches grew to great size. The Pueblo
Indians even began to use wool instead of native cotton in
their weaving. Although the importance of sheep ranching has declined in the
20th century, cattle raising has increased and is economically important in New
Mexico, Arizona, Oklahoma, and Texas; the latter leads all other states in the
raising of beef cattle as well as sheep. Long-staple cotton, alfalfa, citrus
fruit, grain, and sorghum are the Southwest’s main crops.
Copper mining, particularly in Arizona, where open-pit operations account for about
two-thirds of the nation’s total annual production, has been important since
the 19th century. The discovery of petroleum and natural-gas deposits in the
early 20th century in Oklahoma and Texas resulted in oases of prosperity from
local oil booms. Along the Gulf
Coast a flourishing industrial region developed around Houston
and other Gulf of Mexico ports, largely based on petrochemical industries. Also,
since World War II and particularly in Arizona and Texas, manufacturing has
become important, notably in the electrical, communications, aeronautical,
automobile-assembly, and aluminum industries. The growth of population and
industry in the region also brought water shortages and, following the building
of dams, disputes between states over the allocation of water resources, such
as the diversion of water from the Colorado River.
Although the Southwest’s dry, crisp climate and
scenic landscapes were a curse to agriculture, they have been a boon to
businesses catering to tourists and health seekers. These visitors had a lively
interest in the Indian and Spanish-American cultures, including the native
architecture, Indian dances, Spanish fiestas, and rodeos. The Southwest has
also become a popular retirement area.
REFERENCE SITES:
I'd had no particular interest
in the Southwest at all as a young girl, and I was completely surprised that
the desert stole my heart to the extent it did.
Terri Windling
Live life and travel often, the more you
travel, the more memories you create!
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