List of belt regions of the United States
The belt regions of the United States are portions of the country that share certain characteristics. The "belt" terminology was first applied to growing regions for various crops, which often follow lines of latitude because those are more likely to have similar climates. The allusion was to a long clothing belt, as seen on a map.
The usage has expanded to other climatic, economic, and cultural concentrations. These regions are not formally defined; they frequently overlap and have vague borders. The terminology is also used outside the U.S. (e.g., India's Hindi Belt).
List of regions
- Banana belt, a term applied to several U.S. areas with milder climates than their surrounding regions.
- Bible Belt, any collection of states where evangelical and fundamentalist Protestantism are prevalent.
- Black Belt, a region of fertile farmlands in the southeast, now known as a region with a high ratio of African-American residents, descendants of slave laborers on the cotton plantations of the 19th century.
- Black Belt (region of Alabama), a section of Alabama (and extending into Mississippi) having a particular concentration of African-Americans.
- Borscht Belt, a region of Jewish resorts in the Catskills.
- Corn Belt, midwestern states where corn is the primary crop.
- Cotton Belt, southern states where cotton is or was a primary crop.
- Frost Belt, a region of cold weather in the northeastern and north-central United States.
- Fruit Belt, an area where fruit growing is prominent.
- Indiana Gas Belt, a region of Indiana that was the site of a natural gas boom in the late 19th century and early 20th century.
- Jell-O Belt, also known as the Mormon Corridor, western states with a large Mormon population.
- Lead Belt, a district in southeastern Missouri that has a long history of mining for lead.
- Pine Belt, a region of southern Mississippi where longleaf pine trees are abundant.
- Rice Belt, southern states where rice is a major crop.
- Rust Belt (in the past, commonly known as the Manufacturing Belt, Factory Belt, or Steel Belt), northeastern and central northern states where heavy industrialization—and some economic stagnation—is common.
- Salt Belt, a region in the Northeast and Midwest states where large quantities of salt is applied to control snow and ice on roads during the winter season.
- Snowbelt, areas in the Northeast and northern Midwest prone to lake-effect snow.
- Stroke Belt, a region in the Southeast that has an unusually high incidence of stroke and other forms of cardiovascular disease.
- Sun Belt, southern, hot-weather states stretching from coast to coast.
- Unchurched Belt, a region in the far Western United States that has low religious attendance.
- Wheat Belt, northern midwestern states where most of North America's grain and soybeans are grown (cf. Breadbasket).[1]
See also
References
- ↑ "Wheat Belt Region, North America", Encyclopaedia Brittanica, retrieved 21 July 2016
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