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Geography of Texas

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A majestic rock formation known as El Capitan in Guadalupe Mountains National Park, Texas.

Texas is the second largest state in the United States, after Alaska. It covers about 7% of the total water and land area of the country. The state is located in the South Central United States and is part of both the U.S. South and the U.S. Southwest.

Texas has a very diverse geography. It includes parts of the Great Plains in the north and west, and the Gulf Coastal Plains along its eastern and southern edges. The state is also near the Sierra Madre Oriental mountains in Mexico.

People in Texas often divide the state into different areas such as North Texas, East Texas, Central Texas, South Texas, and West Texas. Some also talk about the Panhandle and the Upper Gulf Coast. These areas have their own special features and cultures, making Texas a big and interesting place to learn about.

Physical geography

Texas is a very big state, covering 268,581 square miles (695,622 km2). It stretches 801 miles (1,289 km) from the northwest corner to the Rio Grande river near Brownsville. The state is also 773 miles (1,244 km) wide from east to west. Some parts of Texas are closer to faraway cities than to their own state capital.

The highest point in Texas is Guadalupe Peak at 8,749 feet (2,666.7 m) above sea level. The lowest point is where Texas meets the Gulf of Mexico. Texas has many streams, rivers, and parks, with five state forests and 120 state parks covering over 605,000 acres (2,450 km2). The state also has many different climates, soil types, and plant and animal areas.

Caddo Lake

Coast and estuaries

Texas has a long coastline along the Gulf of Mexico. This coastline has many islands and special water areas where rivers meet the sea. These areas are important for nature and the economy.

Coastal Plains

Looking north at the Caprock Escarpment

The area near the Gulf of Mexico, called the Gulf Coastal Plains, has many different plants. It gets between 20 to 58 inches (510 to 1,470 mm) of rain each year. This flat land has rivers, marshes, and places like Big Thicket National Preserve and Padre Island National Seashore.

North Central Plains

Hill Country

The North Central Plains have gently rolling hills and forests. They get 35 to 50 inches (890 to 1,270 mm) of rain each year. This area includes cities like Abilene and Wichita Falls, with different types of soil.

Great Plains

El Capitan

The Great Plains include areas like the Llano Estacado and the Panhandle. This area has plains, canyons, and many small lakes, called playa lakes, especially in the southern part. It gets about 15 to 31 inches (380 to 790 mm) of rain each year.

Mountains and basins

West Texas, called the Trans-Pecos, has mountains and deserts. It gets less than 12 inches (300 mm) of rain each year. This area includes places like Big Bend National Park and is part of the Chihuahuan Desert. It has many different plants and some mountains that are over 8,000 feet tall.

Climate

Main article: Climate of Texas

Texas has three main climate types: Continental, Mountain, and Modified Marine. The Modified Marine climate, also called subtropical, covers most of the state. The amount of rain changes a lot, from about 60 inches in East Texas to only about 9 inches in El Paso. The hottest temperature ever recorded in Texas was 120 °F, and the coldest was -23 °F.

Geology

Main article: Geology of Texas

Texas is mostly made of sedimentary rocks. In East Texas, there are layers of rock formed long ago by old shorelines and the edge of the Gulf of Mexico. These rocks rest on older mountain ranges that sank down millions of years ago.

West of this area, the rocks are even older. Oil is found in many of these rock layers, especially near the Gulf coast. Some parts of central and western Texas have rocks from volcanic activity from long ago. The western high plains have a thick layer of sediment called the Ogallala formation, which helps provide water. Texas does not have active volcanoes and has very few earthquakes. The Big Bend area feels the most shaking, but it is not heavily populated, so it does not cause much damage.

Resources

Texas has many natural resources that help it grow food and make things. The state produces oil, cattle, sheep, and cotton. It also makes poultry, eggs, dairy products, and many types of fruits and vegetables.

Texas has useful minerals and rocks. It has asphalt-bearing rocks, cement, clays, bituminous coal, and lignite. The state also has fluorspar, gemstones, graphite, bat guano, gypsum, helium, iron ore, rare-earth elements, limestones, magnesium salts, manganese, mica, opal, salts, sands, silver, sulfur, and uranium. The Barnett Shale in the Fort Worth basin is an important source of natural gas.

Regions

Texas has many different landscapes and cultures. Some main regions include the High Plains, around Lubbock and Amarillo, the Metroplex around Dallas and Fort Worth, and the Gulf Coast near Houston. Other regions are the Capital area around Austin, the Alamo region around San Antonio, and West Texas including Midland and Odessa.

Texas also shares parts of larger U.S. regions like the Southwestern United States, Southern United States, and the Great Plains.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Geography of Texas, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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