CSUN- Geography 421
Natali Mendoza
| Honolulu Area |
Male: 50.05%
Female: 49.95% |
| Hawaii |
Male: 50.08%
Female: 49.92% |
| U.S. |
Male: 49.16%
Female: 50.84% |
| Honolulu Area | |
| Hawaii | |
| Honolulu Area | |
| Hawaii | |
| Honolulu Area | |
| Hawaii | |
|
| Honolulu Area | |
| Hawaii | |
| U.S. |
The collapse of the Northern Cod fishery marked profound
changed in the ecological, economic and socio-cultural structure of Atlantic
Canada. For many families, the Cod fishery marked also represented their
livelihood: most families were connected either directly or indirectly with the
fishery ads fishers, fish plant workers, fish sellers, fish transporters, or as
employees in related businesses. The fishery was mismanaged until it collapsed
and unfortunately till this day, it has not recovered. Hawaii has a similar
story in regards of its sugar plantations. Industrial sugar productions started
slowly in Hawaii, and by the 1840s, sugar plantations gained a foothold in
Hawaiian agriculture. The Reciprocity Treaty of 1875 allowed Hawaii to sell
sugar to the United States without paying duties or taxes, greatly increasing
plantation profits. This treaty also guaranteed that all sources including
land, water, human labor power, capital, and technology would be thrown behind
sugarcane cultivation. Additionally, by 1898 Hawaii was overthrown by the
United States. After the overthrown, Hawaiian people saw little use for working
on the plantations when they could easily subsist by farming and fishing. Sugar
plantations got dramatically impacted as the area started getting filled with
taro, banana plantations along with fish pond. However, this subsistence
farming did not last, sugar plantations were not only environmentally destructed
in the past, they unfortunately continue to be so.
Manufacturing: Historically Megalopolis was the birthplace of American
manufacturing. The colonial New England economy evolved from the fishery to
shipbuilding to water- powered textile mills. However, manufacturing is no
longer important in Megalopolis; even though it still maintain being the
financial heart of America. In contrast, manufacturing is an important part of
Hawaii’s economy. Manufacturers add value to raw products by creating
manufactured items. For example, cotton cloth becomes more valuable than a ball
of cotton through manufacturing processes. Food processing (refined sugar,
canned pineapple) is Hawaii's leading manufacturing activity. Other processed
food products are bread, candy, dairy products, juices and soft drinks. Printed
materials (mostly newspapers), refined petroleum, stone, clay, glass products
and clothing contribute in the manufacturing sector.
TRANSIT CORRIDOR: The Honolulu High Capacity Transit Corridor Project (HHCTCP) is the
official name for the plan to construct an elevated rapid transit line serving
the City and County of Honolulu on the island of Oahu. The purpose to construct mass transit lines is
to connect Honolulu’s urban center with areas that are faraway. The line will use 128 ft (39m) trains carrying
390 passengers each, similar in weight to light rail system elsewhere in the
U.S. On January 18, 2011, the FTA issued a record of decision, indicating that the HHCTCP has met the requirements of its environmental review and that the city is allowed to begin construction work on the project. A ground-breaking ceremony was held on February 22, 2011 in Kapolei, at the site of the future East Kapolei station along Kualakai Parkway.
Great Smoky
Mountains is nation’s most visited National Park and the Southeast’s only
national park. Park boundaries protect and preserve the Smokie’s scenery
ecology even though they can’t stop pollutants.
CLIMATE: The temperate
continental Appalachian climate receives third- highest precipitation, behind
the Pacific Northwest and Gulf Coast. About one quarter of total precipitation
falls in the form of snow. The Blue Ridge Mountain bordering the Piedmont
receives about 80 inches of rain annually. Hawaii’s climate is typical for
the tropics, although temperatures and humidity tend to be a bit less extreme
due to near-constant trade winds from the east.Summer highs are
usually in the upper 80s °F, (around 31 °C) during the day and mid 70s,
(around 24 °C) at night. Winter day temperatures are usually in the low to
mid 80s, (around 28 °C) and (at low elevation) seldom dipping below the
mid 60s (18 °C) at night. Snow, not usually associated with the tropics,
falls at 4,205 meters (13,796 ft) on Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa on
the Big Island in some winter months. Snow rarely falls on Haleakala. Mount Wai’ale’ale, on
Kauaʻi, has the second highest average annual rainfall on Earth, about 460
inches (11,684.0 mm). Most of Hawaii has only two seasons: the dry season
from May to October, and the wet season from October to April.It snows but
only at the very summits of the 3 tallest volcanoes (Mauna Loa, Mauna Kea and
Haleakala). The snow level almost never gets below 9000 feet in Hawaii during
the winter, but since these mountains are taller than 13,000 feet, 13,000 feet,
and 10,000 feet, respectively, they get dusted with snow a few times a year. It
rarely stays on the ground for more than a few days though.
In South
Atlantic the Percentage of black population has always been higher. The regional
black population remains more than double the national percentage. However,
according to the census, black population is the second lowest ethnicity in Hawaii
containing a 1.6 percentage.
Plantation
agriculture became a big part of South Atlantic. A major success was the tobacco
industry, which brought the Southern colonies their first economic success. Plantation
agriculture is also very important in Hawaii. there are hundreds of coffee
farms in Kona, from Holualoa to Kealakekua, that harvest the uniquely Hawaiian Kona
coffee beans, as well as boutique coffee plantations in kau, Puna and Hilo. There
are also sugarcane plantations and pineapple plantations.