Whither the 100th meridian? The once and future physical and human geography of America's arid-humid divide. Part I: the story so far

John Wesley Powell, in the nineteenth century, introduced the notion that the 100th meridian divides the North American continent into arid western regions and humid eastern regions. This concept remains firmly fixed in the national imagination. It is reexamined in terms of climate, hydrology, veget...

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Main Authors: Seager, Richard, Lis, Nathan, Feldman, Jamie, Ting, Mingfang, Williams, A. Park, Nakamura, Jennifer A., Liu, Haibo, Henderson, Naomi L.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-h5t4-zg73
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spelling ftcolumbiauniv:oai:academiccommons.columbia.edu:10.7916/d8-h5t4-zg73 2023-05-15T17:35:28+02:00 Whither the 100th meridian? The once and future physical and human geography of America's arid-humid divide. Part I: the story so far Seager, Richard Lis, Nathan Feldman, Jamie Ting, Mingfang Williams, A. Park Nakamura, Jennifer A. Liu, Haibo Henderson, Naomi L. 2018 https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-h5t4-zg73 English eng https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-h5t4-zg73 Arid regions Crops and climate Climate and civilization Hydrology Climatology Articles 2018 ftcolumbiauniv https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-h5t4-zg73 2021-07-17T22:19:53Z John Wesley Powell, in the nineteenth century, introduced the notion that the 100th meridian divides the North American continent into arid western regions and humid eastern regions. This concept remains firmly fixed in the national imagination. It is reexamined in terms of climate, hydrology, vegetation, land use, settlement, and the agricultural economy. It is shown there is a stark east–west gradient in aridity roughly at the 100th meridian that is well expressed in hydroclimate, soil moisture, and ‘‘potential vegetation.’’ The gradient arises from atmospheric circulations and moisture transports. In win- ter, the arid regions west of the 100th meridian are shielded from Pacific storm- related precipitation and are too far west to benefit from Atlantic storms. In summer, the southerly flow on the western flank of the North Atlantic sub- tropical high has a westerly component over the western plains, bringing air from the interior southwest, but it also brings air from the Gulf of Mexico over the eastern plains, generating a west–east moisture transport and pre- cipitation gradient. The aridity gradient is realized in soil moisture and a west-to-east transition from shortgrass to tallgrass prairie. The gradient is sharp in terms of greater fractional coverage of developed land east of the 100th meridian than to the west. Farms are fewer but larger west of the meridian, reflective of lower land productivity. Wheat and corn cultivation preferentially occur west and east of the 100th meridian, respectively. The 100th meridian is a very real arid–humid divide in the physical climate and landscape, and this has exerted a powerful influence on human settlement and agricultural development. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Columbia University: Academic Commons Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Columbia University: Academic Commons
op_collection_id ftcolumbiauniv
language English
topic Arid regions
Crops and climate
Climate and civilization
Hydrology
Climatology
spellingShingle Arid regions
Crops and climate
Climate and civilization
Hydrology
Climatology
Seager, Richard
Lis, Nathan
Feldman, Jamie
Ting, Mingfang
Williams, A. Park
Nakamura, Jennifer A.
Liu, Haibo
Henderson, Naomi L.
Whither the 100th meridian? The once and future physical and human geography of America's arid-humid divide. Part I: the story so far
topic_facet Arid regions
Crops and climate
Climate and civilization
Hydrology
Climatology
description John Wesley Powell, in the nineteenth century, introduced the notion that the 100th meridian divides the North American continent into arid western regions and humid eastern regions. This concept remains firmly fixed in the national imagination. It is reexamined in terms of climate, hydrology, vegetation, land use, settlement, and the agricultural economy. It is shown there is a stark east–west gradient in aridity roughly at the 100th meridian that is well expressed in hydroclimate, soil moisture, and ‘‘potential vegetation.’’ The gradient arises from atmospheric circulations and moisture transports. In win- ter, the arid regions west of the 100th meridian are shielded from Pacific storm- related precipitation and are too far west to benefit from Atlantic storms. In summer, the southerly flow on the western flank of the North Atlantic sub- tropical high has a westerly component over the western plains, bringing air from the interior southwest, but it also brings air from the Gulf of Mexico over the eastern plains, generating a west–east moisture transport and pre- cipitation gradient. The aridity gradient is realized in soil moisture and a west-to-east transition from shortgrass to tallgrass prairie. The gradient is sharp in terms of greater fractional coverage of developed land east of the 100th meridian than to the west. Farms are fewer but larger west of the meridian, reflective of lower land productivity. Wheat and corn cultivation preferentially occur west and east of the 100th meridian, respectively. The 100th meridian is a very real arid–humid divide in the physical climate and landscape, and this has exerted a powerful influence on human settlement and agricultural development.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Seager, Richard
Lis, Nathan
Feldman, Jamie
Ting, Mingfang
Williams, A. Park
Nakamura, Jennifer A.
Liu, Haibo
Henderson, Naomi L.
author_facet Seager, Richard
Lis, Nathan
Feldman, Jamie
Ting, Mingfang
Williams, A. Park
Nakamura, Jennifer A.
Liu, Haibo
Henderson, Naomi L.
author_sort Seager, Richard
title Whither the 100th meridian? The once and future physical and human geography of America's arid-humid divide. Part I: the story so far
title_short Whither the 100th meridian? The once and future physical and human geography of America's arid-humid divide. Part I: the story so far
title_full Whither the 100th meridian? The once and future physical and human geography of America's arid-humid divide. Part I: the story so far
title_fullStr Whither the 100th meridian? The once and future physical and human geography of America's arid-humid divide. Part I: the story so far
title_full_unstemmed Whither the 100th meridian? The once and future physical and human geography of America's arid-humid divide. Part I: the story so far
title_sort whither the 100th meridian? the once and future physical and human geography of america's arid-humid divide. part i: the story so far
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-h5t4-zg73
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-h5t4-zg73
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-h5t4-zg73
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