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Pacific Slope information


The Pacific Slope is west of the continental divide (red line) in North and Central America.

The Pacific Slope describes geographic regions in North American, Central American, and South American countries that are west of the continental divide and slope down to the Pacific Ocean. In North America, the Rocky Mountains mark the eastern border of the Pacific Slope. In Central and South America, the region is much narrower, confined by the Sierra Madre Occidental in Central America,[1][2] and by the Andes in South America.[3] The phrase is still used today mostly for scientific purposes to refer to regions inhabited by specific species.[4][5]

It was and is still occasionally used to describe the region in North America during the 19th century and the expansion of the Old West. It includes the states and territories west of the continental divide that runs down the Rocky Mountains in North America. This included the territories and the states that emerged from them, including California, Oregon Territory, Washington Territory, Nevada Territory, Idaho Territory, Colorado Territory, and Utah Territory. The region is drained by the Columbia, Sacramento, San Joaquin and Colorado River systems.[6][7] In the United States, the Pacific-slope flycatcher takes its name from the region it inhabits.

In Central America, it includes the mountain and coastal regions west of the Continental Divide in Mexico and southern Guatemala, southwestern Honduras, western Nicaragua, and western/southwestern Costa Rica, and southern Panama. In Guatemala, the Pacific Slope region is a humid plain of fertile land divided into widespread plantations (fincas) that grow abundant crops including sugarcane, bananas, and rubber.[8] In Costa Rica, the Pacific Slope refers to the region west of the continental divide at Monteverde, Costa Rica.[9]

In South America, the Pacific Slope is the narrow region west of the highest points of the Andes, including western Colombia, central Ecuador, western and southwestern Peru, and eastern Chile.

  1. ^ Browne, John Ross (1869). Resources of the Pacific Slope. San Francisco: H. H. Bancroft and Company.
  2. ^ Richard, Jerome S. (February 1908). "Meteorology on the Pacific Slope". 16. Popular Astronomy: 92–98. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ Leibel, Wayne. "South America - A Continent of Extreme Contrasts". Archived from the original on 2011-07-11.
  4. ^ "The Angiosperm Phylogeny Group. An ordinal classification for the families of flowering plants". The Cutting Edge. VI (1). Missouri Botanical Garden: 531–553. January 1999.
  5. ^ Margarita Caso; Charlotte González-Abraham; Exequiel Ezcurra (May 17, 2007). "Divergent ecological effects of oceanographic anomalies on terrestrial ecosystems of the Mexican Pacific coast". Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ Rivers of the Pacific Slope (film). Coronet Instructional Films. 1947. Archived from the original on 2016-02-05.
  7. ^ Pomeroy, Earl (2003). The Pacific Slope: a History of California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Utah, and Nevada. Reno: University of Nevada Press. p. 488. ISBN 978-0-87417-518-9.
  8. ^ "Map of Pacific Slope". Archived from the original on 2012-07-16.
  9. ^ Savage, Jay Mathers. (2002). The Amphibians and Reptiles of Costa Rica : a Herpetofauna Between Two Continents, Between Two Seas. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 954. ISBN 978-0-226-73537-5.

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little to no sexual dimorphism. This species lives year-round on the Pacific slope, resident from southern Oregon south through California west of the...

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(Sonora River) is a 402-kilometer-long river of Mexico. It lies on the Pacific slope of the Mexican state of Sonora and it runs into the Gulf of California...

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Montezuma oropendola

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absent from El Salvador and southern Guatemala. It also occurs on the Pacific slope of Nicaragua and Honduras and northwestern and southwestern Costa Rica...

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a species of armored catfish native to Caribbean-slope rivers of Colombia, as well as Pacific-slope rivers of Ecuador and Panama. This species grows to...

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List of Dewey Decimal classes

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central United States 978 Western United States 979 Great Basin and Pacific Slope region of United States 980 History of South America 980 History of...

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occupies the western end of the range's Pacific slope. The Southern Pacific dry forests occupy most of the Pacific slope of the range, from Michoacan in the...

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"cardinal-grosbeaks" or New World grosbeaks. The yellow grosbeak occurs on the Pacific slope of Mexico from central Sonora to northwestern Oaxaca, and in southern...

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Alexander Hale Smith

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ordained an apostle on April 10, 1873, and "served a mission to the Pacific Slope" with David Hyrum Smith in 1875. He was ordained president of the Council...

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Enterolobium cyclocarpum

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provide creates many an oasis on the searing and sun-baked plains in its Pacific slope habitat. It is widely grown as a shade tree to shelter coffee plantations...

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Chipping sparrow

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associated with mountains and arid habitats of the western interior. A Pacific slope population constitutes subspecies S. p. stridula. Although these two...

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Sulphur Bank Mine

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Sonoran Desert

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ecoregions of the Pacific slope. The Gulf of California xeric scrub ecoregion lies south of the Sonoran desert on the Gulf of California slope of the Baja California...

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Dermophis mexicanus

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mostly on the Atlantic side, but also in some isolated parts of the Pacific slope. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical dry forests, moist...

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