Copper, natural gasses and some more
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the southwestern magor regions
Location affects natural resources because not all things grow everywhere, and not all regions of the world produce the same things.
Minerals such as gold, copper, and zinc
Wetlands (which filter out chemicals), redwood forests, and fish.
Wetlands (which filter out chemicals), redwood forests, and fish.
Mountains and basins regions typically have natural resources such as minerals (copper, silver, zinc), oil and gas deposits, water resources (rivers, lakes), and timber. These regions may also have geological formations suitable for recreation and tourism activities.
How do the Natural Resources in a region affect which products people make?
Subarctic regions typically have natural resources such as timber, minerals (including gold, copper, and zinc), oil, natural gas, and fish. These resources play a crucial role in the local economies of subarctic regions and are often important for industries such as forestry, mining, and fishing. However, their extraction can also pose challenges due to the harsh climate and environmental concerns.
It is difficult to determine a single region that has the most natural resources as it varies depending on the specific type of resource. However, regions known for their abundant natural resources include North America (oil, coal, natural gas), South America (minerals, forests, water resources), and Africa (diamonds, gold, oil).
All regions are interpendent because there is not one state that has all the Natural Resources or manufactured resources that they need. Therefore each region works together to supply that region with what they need and all regions work together to supply the entire U.S. needs.