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Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... Help. Geography of the Pacific Northwest region of North America. Subcategories. This ...
This page was last edited on 11 January 2014, at 17:39 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Northwest region is an area of 30 counties defined by the Texas Comptroller for economic reporting in 2022, as mapped here. The region included 2020 population of 550,000, or 1.9 percent of Texas' population, with the Abilene MSA having 32 percent of the Northwest region's population.
Texas Midwest/West-Central Texas (includes Abilene, San Angelo, Brownwood, Texas) Texas Urban Triangle (Houston to San Antonio to Dallas-Fort Worth) West Texas. Concho Valley; Edwards Plateau; Llano Estacado (a portion of northwest Texas) Permian Basin; South Plains (includes 24 counties south of the Texas Panhandle and north of the Permian Basin)
The geography of Texas is diverse and large. Occupying about 7% of the total water and land area of the U.S., [1] it is the second largest state after Alaska, and is the southernmost part of the Great Plains, which end in the south against the folded Sierra Madre Oriental of Mexico.
USGS map colored by paleogeological areas and demarcating the sections of the U.S. physiographic regions: Laurentian Upland (area 1), Atlantic Plain (2-3), Appalachian Highlands (4-10), Interior Plains (11-13), Interior Highlands (14-15), Rocky Mountain System (16-19), Intermontane Plateaus (20-22), & Pacific Mountain System (23-25) The legend ...
Due to its transnational nature, Category:Pacific Northwest appears in Category:Regions of North America and its subcategories, Category:Regions of Canada and Category:Regions of the United States Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pacific Northwest .
The Pacific Northwest is a diverse geographic region, dominated by several mountain ranges, including the Coast Mountains, the Cascade Range, the Olympic Mountains, the Columbia Mountains, and the Rocky Mountains. The highest peak in the Pacific Northwest is Mount Rainier, in the Washington Cascades, at 14,410 feet (4,392 m).