The largest mountain range in the United States that runs right through western Montana.
Rocky Mountains
The climate zone that Florida and Cuba are in.
The Tropics
Materials found in nature that humans use to make things.
Natural Resources
The two explorers of land west of the Mississippi River.
Lewis and Clark
The time of tension between the U.S. and Soviet Union after World War 2.
The Cold War
Glaciers
The cold, dry, flat regions in Canada where not much can grow.
Tundra
The first permanent settlement in the 13 colonies.
Jamestown
People who move from one country to another.
Immigrants
The French-speaking and French-cultured area of Canada.
Quebec
The line alone the Rocky Mountains that separates the flow of rivers east and west.
Flat, rolling grasslands found in places like eastern Montana.
Prairies
The document that established our independence from Great Britain. (Bonus 100 if you tell me who wrote it)
Declaration of Independence
People who wanted to end slavery.
Abolitionists
The type of government that controls all the land, factories, and other property in a country.
Communist
A river that flows into another river.
Arctic condition where the land is permanently frozen solid.
Permafrost
The document that established or government.
The Constitution
The rebuilding of the United States after the Civil War.
Reconstruction
The movement in the United States to end segregation and win rights for African Americans.
The Civil Rights Movement
The five lakes of the northeast U.S. (Bonus 100 for each lake you can name)
The Great Lakes
The climate on a dry, sheltered side of a mountain range.
Rain Shadow
A refusal to buy things.
Boycott
The change in society from using hand-made items to machine-made items.
The Industrial Revolution
The type of country with two official languages instead of one.
Bilingual