"Meanwhile all the precipitation from the east could easily penetrate the country." Appalachian mountains left the chat Everyone I get it the Applacians are not as tall as the Rockies
@@gambrazzio6989he is a FACT channel and his FACTS are incorrect. His words and the graphic do not denote Metro Population. Furthermore, this is not the only incorrect FACT presented in this video.
No no it's cool, just ignore how there is an enormous and imminent population disaster looming over places like Arizona that depend on draining the Colorado River to keep the people there alive. It's only been in the public consciousness for a couple decades and been making real big headlines for the last few years. No big deal though, there's only the threat of mass starvation and the largest population movement the US has ever seen. I'm sure it has NOTHING to do with the natural amount of precipitation not being able to support the amount of people living there like the video says. Nah, you know better, right?
The biggest reason is the Orgeon Trail and Gold Rush. The people during that time believed the land was dry and even called Kansas and Oklahoma a desert because they believed there was just nothing, so they moved to California and Oregon. But when people started settling in the Great Plains they realized it's really good farmland for stuff like wheat
This is true but corporations are running almost 90% of all farm land and destroying the agriculture industry. Especially in the Midwest. It's sad. Almost all those small towns are ghost towns.
A better word to use instead of Midwest is Great Plains. Midwest is a different region more centered around most of the Great Lakes and surrounding area, while the Great Plains fall within that 9% on this map for the most part
Pretty sure Nebraska would argue against this point. In fact the reason it is so "underpopulated" is because there is so much farm land and less industrial complex that requires dense population.
Industrial complexes don’t require dense populations. Industrial complexes arise from dense populations. Youre saying it backwards. If Nebraska were densely populated then it would have industrial complexes to support the population. 🤦♂️
Yes but even then it would be low density farming since it is low precipitation. Most of Australia is like this as well, which is why our population is 90% hugging the coast.
Here's the real reason. Because America started in the East. We settled the entire East Coast bringing in people from England. People started moving west as more and more land was accumulated. The California gold rush saw MANY people migrate to try to get rich. Which is why the West Coast is so populated. The land in between was mostly settled by people who were given free land to start farming. And not everyone had luck.
Also forgot to include that while so many people were migrating west for the gold rush, some families ended up stuck, out of supplies and money, and had to make a living and ended up settling wherever they were at in-between the two coasts
Also add in the fact that building the railroads brought towns to most of the rest of the land that was empty. Towns popped up in places where they were building.
Excuse me that “dry land” that isn’t suitable for growing anything produces the majority of the worlds wheat and raises most of the beef ate in the Us.
@@wcswood that water in the ground is still water that is accessible on that side of the country. Runoff is significantly more reliable than rainfall. It’s measurable, you’ll know what it’s likely to look like several months out, and it’s not completely decimated by a dry season. On my farm, I could never trust the crops to rainfall alone. No, it’s much safer and much more reliable to irrigate using runoff from wells, rivers, etc.
We rode our cycles up through NW Nebraska, over to Wyoming, and looped around through South Dakota (Black Hills). BEAUTIFUL country, clean air, no traffic, friendly people, and a peace like I've never felt before!!!!
@@loredanadodson1602For example here's some of the percentages of land owned by the federal government: Nevada 84.94% Utah 64.9% Idaho 61.63% Alaska 61.24% Oregon 52.95% Wyoming 48.14% California 45.77% Arizona 38.61% Colorado 35.9% New Mexico 34.7%
@@kevinp1972 I think that you're making the assumption that just because the federal government owns a piece of land that they must be preserving the natural beauty. Am I experiencing there's a lot of other things that they do with land that they own, for example ask Nevada how many times they have been nuked, or here in New Mexico we not only had nuke tests but there's missle ranges, hazardous waste storage, and lots of land that they lease to ranchers. And that's just on the federal part, states own a lot of lands as well which artificially keeps the population down (recognizing of course that there's other factors). But to go back to what the clip itself is about, there's a reason why the population is spread out the way that it is, and what you'll find is that people who live in areas with very little federally owned land tend to have much higher approval ratings of the federal government owning land because of the whole not in my backyard effect. And when we have people seriously arguing that most of not all major decisions at a National level should be made by pure majority votes instead of say the Senate it sure feels like the states with very little federally and state owned land are screwing over the rest of us.
Exactly! It's 55% of people in the West. This is why I understanding basic statistics is so important for just decoding data... Data used to make regular purchases or smart voting decisions.
Coming from an NJ resident... the population of NYC isn't 25 million. It's 8 million. 25 million is the metropolitan area, which includes THE UPPER HALF OF NEW JERSEY.
NYC resident seconding this. NYC is huge and is much larger than people think (it's not just Manhattan, which a lot of people think of when thinking of NYC) but even then the population does not exceed 9M.
Yup! The 25 million is the population of the Tri-State area with all of NYC, parts of upstate New York and all of Long Island, huge parts of New Jersey, and parts of Connecticut. You could never squeeze 25 million people into New York City's borders.
Wrong! As a native NYer the 8 million you refer to are only those who are registered. In reality there's approximately 10-12 million in NY city alone. Believe me I've worked 42 years (34 in the public eye)so I've been been exposed to the actual number..
soem islands that are part of alaska are acctually on the eastern side of the world so alaska is on the majority half you can even see it on (some) maps
The corn is to destroy old engines in vehicles that don't use computers. I read it on another UA-cam comment thread, so I think it's reliable. Would you mind looking into the US ethanol conspiracy and reporting back to me? I'm much too busy and lazy.
It’s extremely dry which it’s why it snows and doesn’t rain often. And the snow melts into water which is why certain segments of the Rocky Mountains are green.
It’s apparent that most of you don’t understand infrastructures role in modern agriculture. You can grow food anywhere you can transport water to, however, that is expensive and the help of nature is always best.
Meanwhile, in the mid-west: Rain at least once in two weeks Clouds 75% of the time Lot of grass Plants can grow easily Lot of bugs 90% of plants are green Thriving trees Hail in Summer at least three times Thunder 27% of clouds Strong breezes 43% of the time
It is possible to farm in the Midwest but it’s way less fertile than the east because it’s dryer, which makes it less suitable gfor high density population
@BonJ-zl2kp The soils in the American Midwest were the most fertile in the whole country before European colonists stripped it with deliberate ecosystem collapse and unsustainable farming practices. And they were extremely fertile BECAUSE of relatively lower precipitation.
Also since I don’t think anyone mentioned this. The east side of the United States was developed first. The west side is still relatively “new” in comparison so it makes sense that we have a less dense population.
@SM-si5cm Funny way of saying by far the richest, most educated, and most successful state that literally wrote the legislation that gives you clean water, feeds half the US is alone the 5th largest economy in the world and biggest contributor to welfare to Republican states
Kansas has a pretty big farming industry and the Rocky Mountains don’t block all of the rain. The moisture comes from the pacific into Mexico and up into plains.
There seems to be alot of confusion in the comment section. About half or at the very least a sizable sliver or the eastern parts of Nebraska, Kansas, north and south Dakota Oklahoma and Texas are on the populated side of the map. Those are the last states where there is adequate water and large amounts of usable farm land yet every in the comments is acting like the video is wrong and that Those states aren't partially over or bordering the line. It's the border point not the point where it's real dry. The video is not wrong and there's a reason 80% of the population live east of that line. Also, the entire state of Iowa is on the populated side of the line, so I don't understand why people keep bringing states like Oklahoma, Iowa. Nebraska and South Dakota ans Kansas like it somehow disproves the video. It is a fact that around 80% of the population live east of that line. Including people in north Dakota, south Dakota Nebraska Kansas Oklahoma and Texas. It seems most of the people in the comment section don't know where the line actually is. Also a lot of farm land west of the line uses irrigation to grow crops. There might be a few exceptions here and there, but the vast majority of the land west of the line is drier. It's not saying literally ever square mile west of the line is desert or can't grow any crops but in general it's a much drier climate.
I have lived in Washington state my entire life. I’ve never heard this broken down in this way. This is incredible! Hard to believe but at the same time I believe it.
@@leobender2910 that still leaves 7 million people outside nyc and it’s not a big state. Wyoming is nearly double the size of New York State and has less than 500k people. NY state is far from empty
@@connormoon8363 Wyoming is one of the states of the empty interior, of course it's even emptier, why not compare it to Nevada then? New York is nowhere near being small, it stretches from the Atlantic shore to the Great Lakes and it is mostly empty with much smaller population clustered around Albany, Rochester and Buffalo which altogether amounts to about only 3 million people.
@@ThomasBrooshut the fuck up, I’ve never heard of anyone growing shit in Alabama aside from families internally, and nm hatch green chili’s are the best things ever
In terms of agriculture on the western side, more than 25 percent of the US's lettuce and leafy green supply, comes from southern Arizona, near Yuma, imperial Valley, etc.
In the state of kansas there is corn, beans, and wheat. Main reason there isnt much of a population in kansas is because its moslty crops or livestock and farmers dont want to sell their land. Those of us who live in kansas and mid western us get plenty of rain and wind during the spring and summer.
We all watched Wizard of Oz. The thought of our houses being blown up by strong winds and tornedo's is a plan not to live there. Only 20% population is saying something
There seems to be alot of confusion in the comment section. About half or at the very least a sizable sliver or the eastern parts of Nebraska, Kansas, north and south Dakota Oklahoma and Texas are on the populated side of the map. Those are the last states where there is adequate water and large amounts of usable farm land yet every in the comments is acting like the video is wrong and that Those states aren't partially over or bordering the line. It's the border point not the point where it's real dry. The video is not wrong and there's a reason 80% of the population live east of that line. I don't get why people keep bringing up Kansas and Nebraska like it some how disproves the video. It doesn't. It's a fact that about 80% of the population lives on the eastern side of the line including people in north Dakota, south Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas Oklahoma and Texas. The comment section doesn't even seem to know where the line is.
@sarthakjasra1101 farmers won't sell their land. It's peaceful yet the scenery is the same for like half the state. After abt a month or so of seeing the same thing you get quite bored on car rides. Only rime it's a change of scenery is if you don't go a certain way for awhile and choose to bc your bored and haven't taken that way for quite sometime
Cause then you'd know about tornados and how they lift houses off the ground all the time, if it can lift a house it can displace water and crops, this guy doesn't even have the real facts, but also yes that 9% area is a desert essentially.
As one of the 9 percenters, I can honestly affirm it is absolute hell and we all want to get out asap. DO yourself a favor and avoid this hell hole. You can thank me later.
I live in NV in the rain shadow of the Cascade Range. We have an average of 330 days of sun here and very little rainfall. We are in a high desert, so we do get snow. And we have greenery here, even naturally, because of the snowmelt in the nearby Lake Tahoe region. It surprising how much life can exist on so little rainfall.
@@GabrielGarcia-300 the Sierra Range is an offshoot of the Cascades. I'm in Reno as well. Actually, Sparks. If you look at the Cascade range in the video, it actually extends down through the Sierras
@@micahmiller5923 do some research on it, even a quick Google search. They are separate ranges. I've been a climber for 20 years and lived up and down the west side from Seattle to Auburn, CA, and Reno. I know my mts
A little rain fall؟؟؟ in the past few months ever since August of last year we’ve had more rain than ever. What are you talking about little rainfall 😂
As an atmospheric science major this short has literally zero actual facts in it at all. The reason why the deserts of the US exist has to do with the dry adiabatic descent which causes the air to warm and dry out. The eastern side of the Rockies is actually one of the most important regions for the creation of large weather systems. Storms do not move from the east coast into the middle of the country because general flow in the northern hemisphere is to the east not the west. Air from the gulf initially flows northward until the general flow to the east entrains it and is responsible for much of the severe weather that the plains and southern locations of the US experience. Also much of the states bordering the east of the Rockies are full of very sparsely populated agricultural land where a sizeable percentage of all crops are grown.
Well the 9% are still more than the entire population of Australia, which is an area three times larger 🤯 And most of us live along a thin strip of our east coast too.
Same! I got excited waiting for the "yup I knew it!" moment, but it never came :/ Just finished reading "The Oregon Trail by Rinker Buck. He retravelled the Oregon Trail and then wrote about it, it's an AWESOME book and something I wish schools would have children read when learning about the 1800s
And in the west, another major factor.....free land was giving to whoever want to settle to the west. Dont forget that part. And no tax for a couple of years
Early explorers called basically the western 2/3rds of the US "The Great American Desert". What's amazing is how much Americans have gone on to settle and develop it.
My pasture last summer, was over my head...because we got plenty of rain. SNOW gives many of the western states, it's irrigation water. You can KEEP your humidity on the coasts. Was brought up in high humid area. NO thanks.
As someone living in that lowest population area of the Rockies (Colorado) I have some first hand knowledge. Problems with this video: 1. This is not how the Rockies affects the weather. They don't stop clouds, and clouds do exist over 14,000 feet. They exist much higher as well as lower. I have personally watched clouds go right around peaks, engulfing them, then passing right on by. The mountains do not stop clouds. 2. This is not what rain shadow is. 3. There is no invisible line where the weather patterns change directions. 4. We do grow some things, it's just limited, where you make it seem like nothing does at all. 5. You're completely ignoring ranching and the raising of animals for the food supply. 6. You're also ignoring mining and forestry to make tech items and houses. 7. You're also ignoring the huge military presence. 8. A huge portion of the bottled water that exists comes from this area, as well as a lot of alcoholic drinks and hay and straw for animals. Super incorrect video that only happens to have good graphics with simplistic and overall inaccurate information. Thank you for making me and everyone I know feel like we don't exist at all.
I live in Southern Colorado. We have lots of farm land that grow huge fields of pinto beans, Pueblo chilies, some of the sweetest cantaloupe and different varieties of sweet corn, and all kinds of other vegetables. Also, when I lived in Kansas I remember miles and endless miles of wheat fields. They were fun to run through with my two dogs and a lamb.
@Tam_Eiki western colorado here. We have peaches, chilli's, berries, corn etc AND are the second biggest producer of wine grapes only second to Napa Valley CA! This video is so Inaccurate it's laughable
@@isaacmusicant-bijak6215 they're literally the 49th and 50th states respectively, both admitted into the union in the year 1959. So idk wtf you're talking about - a person from Alaska
@@aliciachristopher6506People still live there though... The US isn't just the Lower 48/contiguous states. Not to mention territories like Guam or Puerto Rico
@@Burbun Warmest places are also not the most populated by humans. There is also a relation with the amount of sea food. Generally cooler ocean water is more rich in food than warmer water. And people also eat a lot of sea food. So in that sense cooler climates tend to be a bit more favourable than the hot ones. In Europe this is all even stronger, because Southern Europe has dry summers due to the influence of the Africa continent While a lot of the southern US benefits from the Gulf of Mexico and therefore has a wet summer. And it goes even further than that. A lot of warm water from the Gulf of Mexico flows towards the North Atlantic Ocean, resulting in more rain in Northern Europe.
Montana: number one state for hard red winter wheat. It's what's used to bake your bead because it has the highest amount of protein. Kansas and Nebraska grow wheat and corn. To much rain is bad for those crops. Also, Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, and Montana were all upwind from the nuclear testing fallout (just a side note).
Rianne is getting a double master's degree currently. Tuition is high; sometimes shaving a vowel off a sound alike word is the only way to afford food besides ramen noodles.
@@kentvaccaro5998which is stupid as it also covers three states. You subtracting the number of people in the NY metro area from the state populations of New Jersey and Connecticut? Didn't think so.
@@domingonavarro1288 really? We have amazing plumbing. That is also quite the generalization considering about 1/4-2/5ths of the US is in the Rocky Mountain region.
I love the rocky mountain vistas, the snow caps, fresh streams that feed our Snake River in SE Idaho. I love the 4 seasons and all the dramatic changes in our scenery. Come visit, just don't decide to stay and ruin our 😊 way of life. (Where we cling to our God, our guns, our 👪 families and our religion.)...or something similar to that. 😅
A similar thing happens in Spain. Asturias has such tall mountains that all the clouds get trapped in the region, giving it a lot of rain and moisture and almost none to central Spain. This makes Asturias one of the greenest regions in Spain (literally green. There's a lot of trees, vegetation, and grass, and isn't what you would typically think of when you think of Spain).
Because the Mayflower landed on the east coast and over the next few hundred years we slowly expanded into the wildlands to the west. I learned this in elementary school in the 90s.
Comment section historian here 🤚 glad u remember 2nd grade history lesson from 1994, so why is LA the second most populated city compared to any city on the east coast other than new york, the east is more feasible for growing agriculture and transportation, (great lakes, mississippi river, atlantic ocean and gulf of Mexico, all water body’s to export and import), the rockies make travel difficult and the great plains weather sucks,
I live about an hour from the East coast and I don’t have a pool so during summer it’s not very pleasant. Temperatures here can get up to 40 degrees Celsius so imagine being more inland.
I lived in central South Australia for a while. Never wanted to live out that way again, high temp gives me headaches and living there as a kid meant I had an almost permanent one. Plus the town had a population of less than 10 and most of them were one a certain registry. Not the best place to live
There seems to be alot of confusion in the comment section. About half or at the very least a sizable sliver or the eastern parts of Nebraska, Kansas, north and south Dakota Oklahoma and Texas are on the populated side of the map. Those are the last states where there is adequate water and large amounts of usable farm land yet every in the comments is acting like the video is wrong and that Those states aren't partially over or bordering the line. It's the border point not the point where it's real dry. The video is not wrong and there's a reason 80% of the population live east of that line. Also, the entire state of Iowa is on the populated side of the line, so I don't understand why people keep bringing states like Oklahoma, Iowa. Nebraska and South Dakota ans Kansas like it somehow disproves the video. It is a fact that around 80% of the population live east of that line. Including people in north Dakota, south Dakota Nebraska Kansas Oklahoma and Texas. It seems most of the people in the comment section don't know where the line actually is. Also a lot of farm land west of the line uses irrigation and grow more drought resistant crops like wheat. There might be a few exceptions here and there but the vast majority of the Land west of the line is drier.
Also, the US Immigration took root on the east coast so naturally developed a higher population density. The California Gold Rush pulled in east coast dwellers to the west coast. It's not just geography, it's history.
Simplified but definitely oversimplified. I observe a lot of weather in my line of work and, the majority of the time, it travels from west to east or from the southwest to the northeast depending on the pressure systems.
There is nothing quite like enjoying the great outdoors of the west. I love going on road trips here. Its fascinating to see the sheer size and beauty of America 🇺🇸 🇺🇸
A huge part is there are no major waterways to transport goods. Large cities are usually built around large ports. NYC only got as big as it did because of the Erie canal getting built.
Mountains don't prevent clouds from passing, but rather that they consume them. The higher the altitude, the colder the temperature, and cold temperatures make evaporated water turn liquid again, thus causing rain and drying the air. When the wind races from the mountain top to the normal ground, it sometimes gets really hot, making the opossite effect added to the dry air.
Yep - the same phenomenon is known North of the Alps and in Germany we learnt about that in school. Air coming from the South looses its moisture in form of rain while crossing the mountain ranges (orographic lifting) and when it goes down on the North side of the Alps, it's "Foehn weather" - warm and dry, perfect for causing headaches.
This short never said that the west DOESN’T grow crops. But if you actually look into it, the crops on the eastern United States yield way more per acre than most western crops (because the east does get more precipitation). The graphic certainly isn’t 100%, but generally yes it’s true. This coming from someone from the “8% of the us” living in the west.
Washington and Idaho are both so close to the ocean that they get a lot of rain. Did you not even watch the video? Hes talking about the states just east of the rockies. Washington and Idaho are both west of the rockies or on the west side of the rockies.
@@LiamT725 I see where you’re going but Washington state is cut in half by the cascades which leads to the less rain fall on the east side of state which is why Washington state has the columbian plateau which is a desert lol. If you look at the south side of Idaho you see a very dry place and is where most potatoes in Idaho are made, in the snake river plain.
As someone who lives in western Oregon (about an hour from the coast) I can say all that rain being blocked from the mountains makes it so rainy hour culture enjoys rain instead of as far as I know the majority of modern culture disliking rain.
He did NOT say people could not grow crops he said that the majority of the area can be dry land which is reflected in the population and there’s comments trying to correct him on what crops can be grown where …. It’s sad bc it shows how badly this country’s education system is failing… all he said was the lack of agricultural development affects the population… does it not ?
The discussion is NOT about the crops themselves but how the amount of agricultural development can impact the size of a population. There’s no need to discuss what can be grown or how.
@@NickCauthon1313There seems to be alot of confusion in the comment section. About half or at the very least a sizable sliver or the eastern parts of Nebraska, Kansas, north and south Dakota Oklahoma and Texas are on the populated side of the map. Those are the last states where there is adequate water and large amounts of usable farm land yet every in the comments is acting like the video is wrong and that Those states aren't partially over or bordering the line. It's the border point not the point where it's real dry. The video is not wrong and there's a reason 80% of the population live east of that line. Also the entire state of Iowa is on the populated side of the line so I don't understand why people keep bringing states like Oklahoma, Iowa. Nebraska and South Dakota like it somehow disproves the video. It is a fact that around 80% of the population live east of that line. Including people in north Dakota, south Dakota Nebraska Kansas Oklahoma and Texas. It seems most of the people in the comment section don't know where the line actually is.
@NickCauthon1313 There seems to be alot of confusion in the comment section. About half or at the very least a sizable sliver or the eastern parts of Nebraska, Kansas, north and south Dakota Oklahoma and Texas are on the populated side of the map. Those are the last states where there is adequate water and large amounts of usable farm land yet every in the comments is acting like the video is wrong and that Those states aren't partially over or bordering the line. It's the border point not the point where it's real dry. The video is not wrong and there's a reason 80% of the population live east of that line. Also, the entire state of Iowa is on the populated side of the line, so I don't understand why people keep bringing states like Oklahoma, Iowa. Nebraska and South Dakota ans Kansas like it somehow disproves the video. It is a fact that around 80% of the population live east of that line. Including people in north Dakota, south Dakota Nebraska Kansas Oklahoma and Texas. It seems most of the people in the comment section don't know where the line actually is. Also a lot of farm land west of the line uses irrigation to grow crops. There might be a few exceptions here and there, but the vast majority of the land west of the line is drier. It's not saying literally ever square mile west of the line is desert or can't grow any crops but in general it's a much drier climate.
The way you described rain shadow is a bit misleading. The reason that the moist warm air from the west doesn't make it past the mountains is technically because the mountains are very high, but it's not because the mountains physically block the clouds. The amount of moisture an air mass can hold is relative to its temperature. As an air mass rises the decrease in pressure decreases its temperature, causing the water to condense and rain on the opposite side of the mountain.
Love the land and weather here. Unfortunately the state is high in crime, school rank among last in the nation and drugs flooding in from the southern border. Not to mention abq is full of homeless at every street corner… been a blue state for a long time
On the coast, maybe. Lol I spent my childhood in Eastern Washington, and we got TEN INCHES OF RAIN A YEAR. We grow apples, cherries, pears, strawberries... we even have wineries... because of the irrigation projects from the rivers. In Seattle and Tacoma, it's all industrial, or shipping and distribution. Thirty inches of rain a year. Olympia and the peninsula? FIFTY INCHES A YEAR. The state is a hodgepodge of weather and soil conditions... and the population density, too... west of the Cascade mountains, it's approximately 3,000 people per square mile. The east side, it's 300 people per square mile. More agriculture.
All the wheat in Kansas left the chat.
"Meanwhile all the precipitation from the east could easily penetrate the country."
Appalachian mountains left the chat
Everyone I get it the Applacians are not as tall as the Rockies
LOLz
Interesting
All the corn in South Dakota left the chat too.
Don't forget all the farms in Texas and New mexico
This is proof that just because it is a UA-cam video with good graphics does not mean that it is accurate
exactly!! So untrue
Right lol, he was trying to say North Dakota can’t grow crops, I grew up there…on a farm lmao
NYC has less than 9 Million people and his graphic says 25M 😂
Hes talking about the metro population @isomchapelle2956
@@gambrazzio6989he is a FACT channel and his FACTS are incorrect. His words and the graphic do not denote Metro Population. Furthermore, this is not the only incorrect FACT presented in this video.
Potatoes from Idaho:
Wheat from Kansas:
Tornadoes in Oklahoma:
Yep, you covered it all
Cotton from Arizona
Idiots from Missouri 💀💀💀
Tons of alfalfa in Colorado as well
something in alabama
Population of Oregon: 4.2 mil
Population of Arizona: 7.1 mil
Yeah. This video is trash
Arizona is let politicians steal their elections
You’re video is bullshit
@@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 The percentage values are still correct though, Arizona is just an outlier
No no it's cool, just ignore how there is an enormous and imminent population disaster looming over places like Arizona that depend on draining the Colorado River to keep the people there alive. It's only been in the public consciousness for a couple decades and been making real big headlines for the last few years. No big deal though, there's only the threat of mass starvation and the largest population movement the US has ever seen. I'm sure it has NOTHING to do with the natural amount of precipitation not being able to support the amount of people living there like the video says. Nah, you know better, right?
I learned a lot. Not from the short, but from the copious comments correcting the short
Same
Agreed
Haha me too 😂👍
I'm so happy to see people actively participating
😂 Copious.
Basically in a nutshell "Where the water goes we go"
Besides the fact that this video is simply wrong. The entire country is fairly evenly spread outside of the bigger cities
Not only water but a balance between the main elements (earth, water, sun, wind)
Also put in historical migration patterns that most came into the new world from the eastern coast
More like Oil haha
Some tell Africa this information. Go to where the water is
The biggest reason is the Orgeon Trail and Gold Rush. The people during that time believed the land was dry and even called Kansas and Oklahoma a desert because they believed there was just nothing, so they moved to California and Oregon. But when people started settling in the Great Plains they realized it's really good farmland for stuff like wheat
This is true but corporations are running almost 90% of all farm land and destroying the agriculture industry. Especially in the Midwest. It's sad. Almost all those small towns are ghost towns.
I guess u been eating too much sweets, it's desert*
@@hypnosiss777 lol my bad I suck at spelling thank you for pointing that out
A better word to use instead of Midwest is Great Plains. Midwest is a different region more centered around most of the Great Lakes and surrounding area, while the Great Plains fall within that 9% on this map for the most part
@@Takezhu88 yes your right I will change that
"If you've ever taken a road trip through the Pacific Northwest, you've probably seen a bumper sticker for a place called 'Gravity Falls'"
Correction: Not 11% of all those living in the west, 11% of the entire population
They’re all joke numbers. 50 million represents 11% of the US population? How much population does the presenter think we have?
@@arcade85_ us pop is 330m, 11% is 36.3m but there's also illegal immigrants etc so
@@alch8485340 million is 2024
Occupy is the correct word. Occupied and mssmrderd all of the natives
I.e. 55% of those living in the west
My phone fell behind my bed and I didnt feel like getting it so I listened to this on loop for like 20 minutes straight..
Good to know😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@mojo7493😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
how can you be so lazy bro 💀
Been there
Pretty sure Nebraska would argue against this point. In fact the reason it is so "underpopulated" is because there is so much farm land and less industrial complex that requires dense population.
No. A huge portion, 1/4 is sand. Literally. Without irrigation the parts of Nebraska that are farmed would be much less productive.
This enraged me
Industrial complexes don’t require dense populations.
Industrial complexes arise from dense populations.
Youre saying it backwards. If Nebraska were densely populated then it would have industrial complexes to support the population. 🤦♂️
Yes but even then it would be low density farming since it is low precipitation. Most of Australia is like this as well, which is why our population is 90% hugging the coast.
Ya but their soil ain’t got shxt on idaho
I traveled to all the parts he said weren't getting precipitation and I loved them! There's tons of people that live in those areas
Here's the real reason. Because America started in the East. We settled the entire East Coast bringing in people from England. People started moving west as more and more land was accumulated. The California gold rush saw MANY people migrate to try to get rich. Which is why the West Coast is so populated. The land in between was mostly settled by people who were given free land to start farming. And not everyone had luck.
include the fact that 75% of all humans live within 100 miles of a coastline, and I think you're on solid ground there.
Thank you. Makes sense!
Also forgot to include that while so many people were migrating west for the gold rush, some families ended up stuck, out of supplies and money, and had to make a living and ended up settling wherever they were at in-between the two coasts
Also add in the fact that building the railroads brought towns to most of the rest of the land that was empty. Towns popped up in places where they were building.
Italians, Irish, Germans also came from the east.
Excuse me that “dry land” that isn’t suitable for growing anything produces the majority of the worlds wheat and raises most of the beef ate in the Us.
And also the worst severe weather in the entire world.
Only by pumping all the water out of the ground.
@@wcswood that water in the ground is still water that is accessible on that side of the country. Runoff is significantly more reliable than rainfall. It’s measurable, you’ll know what it’s likely to look like several months out, and it’s not completely decimated by a dry season. On my farm, I could never trust the crops to rainfall alone. No, it’s much safer and much more reliable to irrigate using runoff from wells, rivers, etc.
@@wcswood actually eastern CO ranchers rely solely on rain to grow crops. Speak of only what you know. I grew up there.
@@stephanieburgess8217 Colorado is perhaps an exception to the rule West of the Mississipi.
We rode our cycles up through NW Nebraska, over to Wyoming, and looped around through South Dakota (Black Hills). BEAUTIFUL country, clean air, no traffic, friendly people, and a peace like I've never felt before!!!!
Did the same on my motorcycle. Epic trip. Never felt so free in my life. America the beautiful!🇺🇸
Took my mom on a trip to mt rushmore. As you get near, the hills and rock formations are honestly breathtaking
😂😂😂😂
It’s very beautiful. Please don’t move here.
And racism!!! Oh wait you are prob white so didn’t get any hate.
I can tell that you’re a great Geography teacher.
I'm pretty sure that the massive percentage of land that the government owns West of that line might have something to do with it as well.
Like what ?
@@loredanadodson1602For example here's some of the percentages of land owned by the federal government: Nevada 84.94%
Utah 64.9%
Idaho 61.63%
Alaska 61.24%
Oregon 52.95%
Wyoming 48.14%
California 45.77%
Arizona 38.61%
Colorado 35.9%
New Mexico 34.7%
Good thing, otherwise where else would the natural world exist?
They do
@@kevinp1972 I think that you're making the assumption that just because the federal government owns a piece of land that they must be preserving the natural beauty. Am I experiencing there's a lot of other things that they do with land that they own, for example ask Nevada how many times they have been nuked, or here in New Mexico we not only had nuke tests but there's missle ranges, hazardous waste storage, and lots of land that they lease to ranchers. And that's just on the federal part, states own a lot of lands as well which artificially keeps the population down (recognizing of course that there's other factors). But to go back to what the clip itself is about, there's a reason why the population is spread out the way that it is, and what you'll find is that people who live in areas with very little federally owned land tend to have much higher approval ratings of the federal government owning land because of the whole not in my backyard effect. And when we have people seriously arguing that most of not all major decisions at a National level should be made by pure majority votes instead of say the Senate it sure feels like the states with very little federally and state owned land are screwing over the rest of us.
Should have said "Accounting for 11% of Americans" not "Accounting for 11% of all those in the West"
Yeah exactly what I was thinking
Yes!
Thank you, why make a video like this if you don't understand percentages
Exactly! It's 55% of people in the West. This is why I understanding basic statistics is so important for just decoding data... Data used to make regular purchases or smart voting decisions.
Could be where immigrants are.
Coming from an NJ resident... the population of NYC isn't 25 million. It's 8 million. 25 million is the metropolitan area, which includes THE UPPER HALF OF NEW JERSEY.
NYC resident seconding this. NYC is huge and is much larger than people think (it's not just Manhattan, which a lot of people think of when thinking of NYC) but even then the population does not exceed 9M.
Yup! The 25 million is the population of the Tri-State area with all of NYC, parts of upstate New York and all of Long Island, huge parts of New Jersey, and parts of Connecticut. You could never squeeze 25 million people into New York City's borders.
NY State itself has about 11-12 million people... Might be more now with all the Illegal immigrants
Wrong! As a native NYer the 8 million you refer to are only those who are registered. In reality there's approximately 10-12 million in NY city alone. Believe me I've worked 42 years (34 in the public eye)so I've been been exposed to the actual number..
@@antoniotutt4894 So you're disregarding the point of my comment entirely to correct something generally irrelevant? Thank you, Antonio.
The abundant agriculture, snow storms, rain storms and small cities of Colorado has left the chat...
Alaska be like : you didnt have to cut me off
I live in Alaska 🥲
this comment has me cacklin at 3 am 🤣🤣
Now you're just some state that I used to know🎶😔💔
soem islands that are part of alaska are acctually on the eastern side of the world so alaska is on the majority half
you can even see it on (some) maps
Hawaii too
I agree with these folks.. driving through Iowa and Kansas i saw a lot of corn. One thing about the west is that the humidity is low in most places.
Yeah, lived in iowa all my life, pretty much all corn and the occasional town or one of the three cities
I can’t handle high humidity
So the narrator of this video can not sleep because of this.
You saw a lot of corn there
Come through Nebraska
The corn is to destroy old engines in vehicles that don't use computers. I read it on another UA-cam comment thread, so I think it's reliable.
Would you mind looking into the US ethanol conspiracy and reporting back to me? I'm much too busy and lazy.
Also one thing that was not mentioned was the amount of federal land that cannot be bought
Yeah, the globalists want to keep the assets for themselves.
I understand. I live in
NV & most of my
state, is federally
owned land/is owned
by BLM (Bureau of
Land Management).
@@lynettetaravella2578 sothe underground citys are located there ?
Everything isn't for sale. Nor should it be.
@@77Creation so true
The smart half live west of the Mississippi. The cold weather keeps out the riff-raff!
As a Coloradoan I can say I am drowning in snow from precipitation
Same.
Not related but still. Did you know that Colorado means Red in Spanish??
I can confirm.
It’s extremely dry which it’s why it snows and doesn’t rain often. And the snow melts into water which is why certain segments of the Rocky Mountains are green.
@@erikvidal9732 it doesn't. Red is rojo
It’s apparent that most of you don’t understand infrastructures role in modern agriculture. You can grow food anywhere you can transport water to, however, that is expensive and the help of nature is always best.
Alaska: Am I invisible to you?
It wasn't until I moved to Alaska that I noticed how often we aren't even there. It's fitting cause the news here barely talks about the lower 48.
Pretty much...except for your salmon and bears of all manner.
and Hawaii...
No I am jealous of you cause I am in Arizona I love it hear but need more fish.
Alaska is Russian
I live in the mountains of Idaho, and we grow a lot of things corn, potatoes, grains for feed, both summer and winter wheat, just to name a few.
Meanwhile, in the mid-west:
Rain at least once in two weeks
Clouds 75% of the time
Lot of grass
Plants can grow easily
Lot of bugs
90% of plants are green
Thriving trees
Hail in Summer at least three times
Thunder 27% of clouds
Strong breezes 43% of the time
It is possible to farm in the Midwest but it’s way less fertile than the east because it’s dryer, which makes it less suitable gfor high density population
Dry food stock ok proportion good
I mean percentage
@BonJ-zl2kp The soils in the American Midwest were the most fertile in the whole country before European colonists stripped it with deliberate ecosystem collapse and unsustainable farming practices. And they were extremely fertile BECAUSE of relatively lower precipitation.
Also since I don’t think anyone mentioned this. The east side of the United States was developed first. The west side is still relatively “new” in comparison so it makes sense that we have a less dense population.
Dude you guys live in a fucking desert, AND you’re running out of water. It has nothing to do with the fact that it’s newer.
Until all the New Yorkers moved to my wonderful state of California and screwed it up😢
@@ChiliJ-e6bCalifornia has been screwed, now you guys are moving everywhere else making it hobo heaven
Plus most of the immigrants came to the east. Of course the illegal ones typical come to the west.
@SM-si5cm Funny way of saying by far the richest, most educated,
and most successful state that literally wrote the legislation that gives you clean water, feeds half the US is alone the 5th largest economy in the world and biggest contributor to welfare to Republican states
Kansas has a pretty big farming industry and the Rocky Mountains don’t block all of the rain. The moisture comes from the pacific into Mexico and up into plains.
If anything you get more rain because of the Rockies
You get snow, which evaporates quickly. You have aquifera in the West.
There seems to be alot of confusion in the comment section. About half or at the very least a sizable sliver or the eastern parts of Nebraska, Kansas, north and south Dakota Oklahoma and Texas are on the populated side of the map.
Those are the last states where there is adequate water and large amounts of usable farm land yet every in the comments is acting like the video is wrong and that Those states aren't partially over or bordering the line. It's the border point not the point where it's real dry. The video is not wrong and there's a reason 80% of the population live east of that line. Also, the entire state of Iowa is on the populated side of the line, so I don't understand why people keep bringing states like Oklahoma, Iowa. Nebraska and South Dakota ans Kansas like it somehow disproves the video. It is a fact that around 80% of the population live east of that line. Including people in north Dakota, south Dakota Nebraska Kansas Oklahoma and Texas. It seems most of the people in the comment section don't know where the line actually is. Also a lot of farm land west of the line uses irrigation to grow crops. There might be a few exceptions here and there, but the vast majority of the land west of the line is drier. It's not saying literally ever square mile west of the line is desert or can't grow any crops but in general it's a much drier climate.
I have lived in Washington state my entire life. I’ve never heard this broken down in this way. This is incredible! Hard to believe but at the same time I believe it.
i'm from las vegas, and despite the hot weather there is just something to be said about how uninhabited the rest of the west is. It feels good to me.
What's up
A cesspool drying up in the desert.
Routine 100 degree plus weather feels good? I've been there. No thank you. It feels like Dante's Inferno.
@@user95395 how about the $350 a month electric bill, how does that make you feel.
@@rodneybryant6543 - The National Park in South East California is not called "Death Valley" for nothing! LOL
New York City does not have 25M people, as seen in the video. That is the entire state of New York. NYC has a population of around 8 million people.
Metro population is around 18 million. New York state is mostly empty
@@stanvolyou didn't want the video I guess
@@leobender2910 that still leaves 7 million people outside nyc and it’s not a big state. Wyoming is nearly double the size of New York State and has less than 500k people. NY state is far from empty
@@connormoon8363 Wyoming is one of the states of the empty interior, of course it's even emptier, why not compare it to Nevada then? New York is nowhere near being small, it stretches from the Atlantic shore to the Great Lakes and it is mostly empty with much smaller population clustered around Albany, Rochester and Buffalo which altogether amounts to about only 3 million people.
There are 7 million people in all of Tennessee
Nothing better than living in states with very few people. As a truck driver, I quickly bought land in Wyoming after I started driving.
Lowest taxes in the country too
Wyoming is nice
Do you get to spend much time there?
@@edwardhoward4708 I also own a home in Missouri so, I’m in Wyoming roughly 1/3 of the year
@@conrail666 Yeah, but very lacking in modern amenities like Uber and delivery service, or fun stuff, restaurants, if you want that.
This is the first time I’m so interested in geography
I sure am glad those 80% live over there, I love my wide open spaces, mountains and endless farmland as far as you can seeI
Does it rain??
It does sounds nice ngl
Which city?
But it should said not suitable for agriculture so it just be a desert.
I yam jealous
In New Mexico we grow the world's greatest green chile.. Pinto Beans. Squash.. Pistachios.. Corn.. We are so blessed..
sorry bud your farmland doesn't compare to alabamas
thts thanks to the fact that green chiles thrive in that climate everything else is due to modern farming techniques
Excuse me... It's HATCH green chilie... Do not ever make that mistake again. That's blasphemy
@@ThomasBrooshut the fuck up, I’ve never heard of anyone growing shit in Alabama aside from families internally, and nm hatch green chili’s are the best things ever
@@AskSpectraoh my care to provide the explanation to his blasphemous comment
In terms of agriculture on the western side, more than 25 percent of the US's lettuce and leafy green supply, comes from southern Arizona, near Yuma, imperial Valley, etc.
Not for much longer…
The water is under the land and deserts. Primary water. Artisan wells go deep. No water shortages anywhere on earth.
@@shacktime weatherWars
San Joaquin Valley use to be called the salad-bowl to the world. Pelosi and her mod-squad has basically destroyed due to 2 inch fish😮
After using most of the Colorado River for alfalfa, the rest gets used up at the border.
One thing I learned about Anno is that being close to water is the best for your nation. Because of easy trades.
In the state of kansas there is corn, beans, and wheat. Main reason there isnt much of a population in kansas is because its moslty crops or livestock and farmers dont want to sell their land. Those of us who live in kansas and mid western us get plenty of rain and wind during the spring and summer.
We all watched Wizard of Oz. The thought of our houses being blown up by strong winds and tornedo's is a plan not to live there. Only 20% population is saying something
Seems like a peaceful place to live in. Hope those money hungry corporates stay away. God bless you guys.
Kansas is obsession here? Never met 1 normal person from kansas.
There seems to be alot of confusion in the comment section. About half or at the very least a sizable sliver or the eastern parts of Nebraska, Kansas, north and south Dakota Oklahoma and Texas are on the populated side of the map. Those are the last states where there is adequate water and large amounts of usable farm land yet every in the comments is acting like the video is wrong and that Those states aren't partially over or bordering the line. It's the border point not the point where it's real dry. The video is not wrong and there's a reason 80% of the population live east of that line. I don't get why people keep bringing up Kansas and Nebraska like it some how disproves the video. It doesn't. It's a fact that about 80% of the population lives on the eastern side of the line including people in north Dakota, south Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas Oklahoma and Texas. The comment section doesn't even seem to know where the line is.
@sarthakjasra1101 farmers won't sell their land. It's peaceful yet the scenery is the same for like half the state. After abt a month or so of seeing the same thing you get quite bored on car rides. Only rime it's a change of scenery is if you don't go a certain way for awhile and choose to bc your bored and haven't taken that way for quite sometime
This was actually quite interesting and informative
Thats why Wisdom, knowledge and research is most important
Rt like the native Americans figured it out
Cause then you'd know about tornados and how they lift houses off the ground all the time, if it can lift a house it can displace water and crops, this guy doesn't even have the real facts, but also yes that 9% area is a desert essentially.
Still doesn’t know which country is which in Europe
As one of the 9 percenters, I can honestly affirm it is absolute hell and we all want to get out asap. DO yourself a favor and avoid this hell hole. You can thank me later.
I live in NV in the rain shadow of the Cascade Range. We have an average of 330 days of sun here and very little rainfall. We are in a high desert, so we do get snow. And we have greenery here, even naturally, because of the snowmelt in the nearby Lake Tahoe region. It surprising how much life can exist on so little rainfall.
This Californian loves Nevada. So much history, mountains and wide open spaces. ❤
Cascades or Sierra? I lived in Reno, definitely the Sierra range
@@GabrielGarcia-300 the Sierra Range is an offshoot of the Cascades. I'm in Reno as well. Actually, Sparks. If you look at the Cascade range in the video, it actually extends down through the Sierras
@@micahmiller5923 do some research on it, even a quick Google search. They are separate ranges. I've been a climber for 20 years and lived up and down the west side from Seattle to Auburn, CA, and Reno. I know my mts
A little rain fall؟؟؟ in the past few months ever since August of last year we’ve had more rain than ever. What are you talking about little rainfall 😂
As someone who lives in that 9%, it's hella pretty❤
Away from all politics and republicans.
Bruh no one besides weirdos actually care about politics 😂
@@theomegamuffin7346lol not true. Most people have moved to these areas because of stupid politics
@@afnanhaider7083I like how you said "away from all politics" while making it clear you're into politics
@@davezedman what studies say this?
As an atmospheric science major this short has literally zero actual facts in it at all. The reason why the deserts of the US exist has to do with the dry adiabatic descent which causes the air to warm and dry out. The eastern side of the Rockies is actually one of the most important regions for the creation of large weather systems. Storms do not move from the east coast into the middle of the country because general flow in the northern hemisphere is to the east not the west. Air from the gulf initially flows northward until the general flow to the east entrains it and is responsible for much of the severe weather that the plains and southern locations of the US experience. Also much of the states bordering the east of the Rockies are full of very sparsely populated agricultural land where a sizeable percentage of all crops are grown.
whomp whomp
Also zero actual facts. Prove it.
Thank you
This whole video is full of 💩 even called the Sierra Nevada range all of the Cascades. Just 20 miles south of Phoenix, AZ there is a lot of farming
@@samsonacc8081 No, he's right.
Plays a major role in commercial trucking
Well the 9% are still more than the entire population of Australia, which is an area three times larger 🤯
And most of us live along a thin strip of our east coast too.
Youre a kangaroo hunter
Who the hell lives in Australia😂
@@QwonDreaKangaroo and Uncle James
@@QwonDrea pretty much no-one. It’s mostly empty.
Australia would be pretty cool if it weren't for the government. And the lack of guns.
The Gold rush and Oregon Trail were a major factor so I’m surprised it wasn’t mentioned. Nice short though.
Same! I got excited waiting for the "yup I knew it!" moment, but it never came :/
Just finished reading "The Oregon Trail by Rinker Buck. He retravelled the Oregon Trail and then wrote about it, it's an AWESOME book and something I wish schools would have children read when learning about the 1800s
Short is wrong
And in the west, another major factor.....free land was giving to whoever want to settle to the west. Dont forget that part. And no tax for a couple of years
I think they were looking at it with a more geographical standpoint than with a historical standpoint.
Early explorers called basically the western 2/3rds of the US "The Great American Desert". What's amazing is how much Americans have gone on to settle and develop it.
My pasture last summer, was over my head...because we got plenty of rain. SNOW gives many of the western states, it's irrigation water. You can KEEP your humidity on the coasts. Was brought up in high humid area. NO thanks.
Early explorers?! Early colonizers and settlers you mean.
@maaziy_ghaziyIYI Explorers too.
@@maaziy_ghaziyIYIyup
@maaziy_ghaziyIYI Explorers too.
Appreciate such kind of information
As someone living in that lowest population area of the Rockies (Colorado) I have some first hand knowledge. Problems with this video: 1. This is not how the Rockies affects the weather. They don't stop clouds, and clouds do exist over 14,000 feet. They exist much higher as well as lower. I have personally watched clouds go right around peaks, engulfing them, then passing right on by. The mountains do not stop clouds. 2. This is not what rain shadow is. 3. There is no invisible line where the weather patterns change directions. 4. We do grow some things, it's just limited, where you make it seem like nothing does at all. 5. You're completely ignoring ranching and the raising of animals for the food supply. 6. You're also ignoring mining and forestry to make tech items and houses. 7. You're also ignoring the huge military presence. 8. A huge portion of the bottled water that exists comes from this area, as well as a lot of alcoholic drinks and hay and straw for animals. Super incorrect video that only happens to have good graphics with simplistic and overall inaccurate information. Thank you for making me and everyone I know feel like we don't exist at all.
Vielen Dank für diese freundliche Korrektur. Grüße aus Deutschland. 🇩🇪👍🍀
I live in Southern Colorado. We have lots of farm land that grow huge fields of pinto beans, Pueblo chilies, some of the sweetest cantaloupe and different varieties of sweet corn, and all kinds of other vegetables. Also, when I lived in Kansas I remember miles and endless miles of wheat fields. They were fun to run through with my two dogs and a lamb.
8. A huge portion of the bottled water that exists comes from this area, I have a big doubt
as a Wyoming resident, thee is something called “ground water” and “grazing land”. This guy is a joke.
@Tam_Eiki western colorado here. We have peaches, chilli's, berries, corn etc AND are the second biggest producer of wine grapes only second to Napa Valley CA!
This video is so Inaccurate it's laughable
In Nebraska we get a significant amount of tornado watches and warning every year, that's all ya need to know
And it is sooooo flat!
Yeah, there was a warning a few days ago
I say the same as a Kansan
not recently
@@jennamarie4009 Shhhhhhh! Don't jinx it.
Alaska and Hawaii:ight we're gonna head out
No there not states
You're a state@@isaacmusicant-bijak6215
Alaska is too cold and Hawaii is too far.
@@isaacmusicant-bijak6215 they're literally the 49th and 50th states respectively, both admitted into the union in the year 1959. So idk wtf you're talking about - a person from Alaska
@@aliciachristopher6506People still live there though... The US isn't just the Lower 48/contiguous states. Not to mention territories like Guam or Puerto Rico
Great videos !!! I love it
It happens to all contries, the dense population tends to appear by the warm, moist coasts
New York is certainly moist, but IDK if I'd say warm... Maybe if you only count summer.
@@Burbun Warmest places are also not the most populated by humans. There is also a relation with the amount of sea food. Generally cooler ocean water is more rich in food than warmer water. And people also eat a lot of sea food.
So in that sense cooler climates tend to be a bit more favourable than the hot ones.
In Europe this is all even stronger, because Southern Europe has dry summers due to the influence of the Africa continent
While a lot of the southern US benefits from the Gulf of Mexico and therefore has a wet summer.
And it goes even further than that. A lot of warm water from the Gulf of Mexico flows towards the North Atlantic Ocean, resulting in more rain in Northern Europe.
Montana: number one state for hard red winter wheat. It's what's used to bake your bead because it has the highest amount of protein. Kansas and Nebraska grow wheat and corn. To much rain is bad for those crops. Also, Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, and Montana were all upwind from the nuclear testing fallout (just a side note).
Too few "o"s in the word "too" is bad for clear elucidation.
Rianne is getting a double master's degree currently. Tuition is high; sometimes shaving a vowel off a sound alike word is the only way to afford food besides ramen noodles.
Yeah this video is chock full of inaccuracies. Misinformation like this short is dangerous.
Alaska : what did i do?
downwind.
New york state has five million less, you showed the state population, not the city
NYC metro is 20+ mil
@@kentvaccaro5998which is stupid as it also covers three states. You subtracting the number of people in the NY metro area from the state populations of New Jersey and Connecticut? Didn't think so.
8.5 million
@@kentvaccaro5998 8.5 million
18. Mil.
This is fascinat! Keep your work, I Love it!
I am grateful I am part of the 9% he mentioned when talking about the population of the Rocky Mountain region of the United States.
it must be great living on the farms (I always dream about that)
Real. Glad it is this way.
The plumbing sucks there.
@@domingonavarro1288 really? We have amazing plumbing. That is also quite the generalization considering about 1/4-2/5ths of the US is in the Rocky Mountain region.
I love the rocky mountain vistas, the snow caps, fresh streams that feed our Snake River in SE Idaho. I love the 4 seasons and all the dramatic changes in our scenery. Come visit, just don't decide to stay and ruin our 😊 way of life. (Where we cling to our God, our guns, our 👪 families and our religion.)...or something similar to that. 😅
Son : Dad, we are buying a new house.
Dad : Let me study the geography first.
Why would the son be telling the dad that the family is buying a new house?
@@NoHandle44 the son is young Sheldon
@@robertgough161 Then shouldn't the son be studying the geography?
@@NoHandle44 hmm maybe
@NoHandle44 sons grow up and dads can still be around and still do Dad things
A similar thing happens in Spain. Asturias has such tall mountains that all the clouds get trapped in the region, giving it a lot of rain and moisture and almost none to central Spain. This makes Asturias one of the greenest regions in Spain (literally green. There's a lot of trees, vegetation, and grass, and isn't what you would typically think of when you think of Spain).
Idaho, Kansas, and Oklahoma left the chat
On another note, this is by far the best animation to show how/why tornado alley forms tornadoes
Meanwhile Utah: LETS MAKE IT SNOW DURING SUMMER!
Utahn here. I can verify this comment. It DOES occasionally shows in the summer! 😂
Because the Mayflower landed on the east coast and over the next few hundred years we slowly expanded into the wildlands to the west. I learned this in elementary school in the 90s.
but did you learn CALI' s GDP is one of the largest in the US and it and TEXAS have over +30MIL ppl??!......lol
@@lintran3211Makes sense the land is good and it was very well marketed.
Comment section historian here 🤚 glad u remember 2nd grade history lesson from 1994, so why is LA the second most populated city compared to any city on the east coast other than new york, the east is more feasible for growing agriculture and transportation, (great lakes, mississippi river, atlantic ocean and gulf of Mexico, all water body’s to export and import), the rockies make travel difficult and the great plains weather sucks,
That's a lie. That never happened
@@pacojuanrico Dude, you can't troll over such a blatant fact.
I love this chancel so much! This videos are so educational ❤
You heard of Australia? 2% of the population lives in the MASSIVE inland, the other 98% only live very close to the coast
I live about an hour from the East coast and I don’t have a pool so during summer it’s not very pleasant. Temperatures here can get up to 40 degrees Celsius so imagine being more inland.
@@olivia-oz3qe yeah I know, I’m Australian, but I luckily have a pool
Im Australian and I have never lived more than an hour from the beach. Right now less than a kilometer. The outback is rough
I lived in central South Australia for a while. Never wanted to live out that way again, high temp gives me headaches and living there as a kid meant I had an almost permanent one. Plus the town had a population of less than 10 and most of them were one a certain registry. Not the best place to live
@@olivia-oz3qe40 Celsius goddamnn
Man, I used to live in South Dakota. That is the definition of Farmville. What is he talking about? And trust me we get plenty of rain over there.
I live in the UK but I know South Dakota is pretty flat
There seems to be alot of confusion in the comment section. About half or at the very least a sizable sliver or the eastern parts of Nebraska, Kansas, north and south Dakota Oklahoma and Texas are on the populated side of the map.
Those are the last states where there is adequate water and large amounts of usable farm land yet every in the comments is acting like the video is wrong and that Those states aren't partially over or bordering the line. It's the border point not the point where it's real dry. The video is not wrong and there's a reason 80% of the population live east of that line. Also, the entire state of Iowa is on the populated side of the line, so I don't understand why people keep bringing states like Oklahoma, Iowa. Nebraska and South Dakota ans Kansas like it somehow disproves the video. It is a fact that around 80% of the population live east of that line. Including people in north Dakota, south Dakota Nebraska Kansas Oklahoma and Texas. It seems most of the people in the comment section don't know where the line actually is. Also a lot of farm land west of the line uses irrigation and grow more drought resistant crops like wheat. There might be a few exceptions here and there but the vast majority of the Land west of the line is drier.
Utah is gorgeous! The culture is crazy, but the topography is breathtaking.
lol pretty but not exactly climate friendly! nice to visit! but you couldnt pay me enough to live there!
Please don't move to utah. We are over run by idiots out of California. Let's just repeat that utah is a dumb place to live.
Shut up..don't tell anyone!
The culture of… Utah?
@@ericktellez7632 Cults. NorCal has a similar problem.
This videos should be in school. So interesting to watch it
So that’s why Texas where I live we have dry days for so many days in a row and then all of a sudden it rains
No its because of cowboys
Yep, Texas weather is bi polar. You have hot days for weeks, then one heavy storm brings heavy rains, then about 2 days later, it's hot
T@28ebdh3udnav TALK ABOUT BI POLAR. IT IS MARCH 27TH 2024 AND I HAVE THE HEATER ON IN DALLAS TEXAS.
It is not just for agriculture, trade depends heavily on waterways or seas
I flew over the Rocky mountains over the weekend from LA. Gorgeous!
Informative!!
“The western states receive little precipitation”
Utah which receives blizzards almost every 2 winters:
I live in Kansas. Um... "not suitable for agricultural production".... not sure where you got that idea.
Corn, soybean, wheat, and more.
Also, the US Immigration took root on the east coast so naturally developed a higher population density. The California Gold Rush pulled in east coast dwellers to the west coast. It's not just geography, it's history.
By sucking the aquifers dry.
🫵😂
All these crops you mentioned can grow on nutrition, poor soil!!
High intensity crops can't grow there without artificial help!
just asking but how's life in kansas right now cause I used to live in kansas but I moved and I would like to know
Simplified but definitely oversimplified. I observe a lot of weather in my line of work and, the majority of the time, it travels from west to east or from the southwest to the northeast depending on the pressure systems.
Amazing how a simple video unites all of men together!
👇very savage way💎💎
Meanwhile Alaska: 🌨️🌨️🌨️🥶🥶🥶🥶
Siberia: 🌬️🐻❄️🌨️
What a presentation man!
There is nothing quite like enjoying the great outdoors of the west. I love going on road trips here. Its fascinating to see the sheer size and beauty of America 🇺🇸 🇺🇸
A huge part is there are no major waterways to transport goods. Large cities are usually built around large ports. NYC only got as big as it did because of the Erie canal getting built.
And I have a Farm smack dab in the middle of that😂
It’s Trump (hillbill) country 😂😂😂
You are a man of humor
Mountains don't prevent clouds from passing, but rather that they consume them.
The higher the altitude, the colder the temperature, and cold temperatures make evaporated water turn liquid again, thus causing rain and drying the air. When the wind races from the mountain top to the normal ground, it sometimes gets really hot, making the opossite effect added to the dry air.
Yep - the same phenomenon is known North of the Alps and in Germany we learnt about that in school. Air coming from the South looses its moisture in form of rain while crossing the mountain ranges (orographic lifting) and when it goes down on the North side of the Alps, it's "Foehn weather" - warm and dry, perfect for causing headaches.
This short never said that the west DOESN’T grow crops. But if you actually look into it, the crops on the eastern United States yield way more per acre than most western crops (because the east does get more precipitation). The graphic certainly isn’t 100%, but generally yes it’s true. This coming from someone from the “8% of the us” living in the west.
Patotas from idaho:
Apples and sweet cherries from Washington:
The wheat in Kansas:
The wheat from Kansas:
All left the chat
Washington and Idaho are both so close to the ocean that they get a lot of rain. Did you not even watch the video? Hes talking about the states just east of the rockies. Washington and Idaho are both west of the rockies or on the west side of the rockies.
@@LiamT725 I see where you’re going but Washington state is cut in half by the cascades which leads to the less rain fall on the east side of state which is why Washington state has the columbian plateau which is a desert lol. If you look at the south side of Idaho you see a very dry place and is where most potatoes in Idaho are made, in the snake river plain.
@@LiamT725 also if you look at the video you can see Washington state getting cut in half where the cascades are lol
@@sObad367 it’s patotas what you mean 😝
can anyone explain to me whats the correlation between wheat from kansas and this video?
Most people live in cities, and most major cities are concentrated on the East Coast, with a few on the West Coast.
Global trade in port cities grew coastal cities...it's just a fact of life. Lots of commerce going on!
In other words… A FU*KING DESERT
As someone who lives in western Oregon (about an hour from the coast) I can say all that rain being blocked from the mountains makes it so rainy hour culture enjoys rain instead of as far as I know the majority of modern culture disliking rain.
You drew North Dakota on the left side of the line, where you say it’s terrible for farming, and North Dakota is GREAT for farming!
A fellow North Dakotan!
I'd rather live up there but can't afford the move
@@joshuavanepps984 YOOOO!
@@GunGunthekingThere are dozens of us!
_"The main reason is geography."_
No way, man. What a twist!
He did NOT say people could not grow crops he said that the majority of the area can be dry land which is reflected in the population and there’s comments trying to correct him on what crops can be grown where …. It’s sad bc it shows how badly this country’s education system is failing… all he said was the lack of agricultural development affects the population… does it not ?
That's the point, how can there be a lack of agriculture when that's all there is is agriculture?
@@NickCauthon1313 still never says you can’t grow crops.
The discussion is NOT about the crops themselves but how the amount of agricultural development can impact the size of a population. There’s no need to discuss what can be grown or how.
@@NickCauthon1313There seems to be alot of confusion in the comment section. About half or at the very least a sizable sliver or the eastern parts of Nebraska, Kansas, north and south Dakota Oklahoma and Texas are on the populated side of the map.
Those are the last states where there is adequate water and large amounts of usable farm land yet every in the comments is acting like the video is wrong and that Those states aren't partially over or bordering the line. It's the border point not the point where it's real dry. The video is not wrong and there's a reason 80% of the population live east of that line. Also the entire state of Iowa is on the populated side of the line so I don't understand why people keep bringing states like Oklahoma, Iowa. Nebraska and South Dakota like it somehow disproves the video. It is a fact that around 80% of the population live east of that line. Including people in north Dakota, south Dakota Nebraska Kansas Oklahoma and Texas. It seems most of the people in the comment section don't know where the line actually is.
@NickCauthon1313 There seems to be alot of confusion in the comment section. About half or at the very least a sizable sliver or the eastern parts of Nebraska, Kansas, north and south Dakota Oklahoma and Texas are on the populated side of the map.
Those are the last states where there is adequate water and large amounts of usable farm land yet every in the comments is acting like the video is wrong and that Those states aren't partially over or bordering the line. It's the border point not the point where it's real dry. The video is not wrong and there's a reason 80% of the population live east of that line. Also, the entire state of Iowa is on the populated side of the line, so I don't understand why people keep bringing states like Oklahoma, Iowa. Nebraska and South Dakota ans Kansas like it somehow disproves the video. It is a fact that around 80% of the population live east of that line. Including people in north Dakota, south Dakota Nebraska Kansas Oklahoma and Texas. It seems most of the people in the comment section don't know where the line actually is. Also a lot of farm land west of the line uses irrigation to grow crops. There might be a few exceptions here and there, but the vast majority of the land west of the line is drier. It's not saying literally ever square mile west of the line is desert or can't grow any crops but in general it's a much drier climate.
The way you described rain shadow is a bit misleading. The reason that the moist warm air from the west doesn't make it past the mountains is technically because the mountains are very high, but it's not because the mountains physically block the clouds. The amount of moisture an air mass can hold is relative to its temperature. As an air mass rises the decrease in pressure decreases its temperature, causing the water to condense and rain on the opposite side of the mountain.
I love the mountains in New Mexico. It's gorgeous here
In deed the enchantment state NW love 😊it
Love the land and weather here. Unfortunately the state is high in crime, school rank among last in the nation and drugs flooding in from the southern border. Not to mention abq is full of homeless at every street corner… been a blue state for a long time
@@MrSturdystratusYeah.....no homeless in red Florida or red Texas.???
@@jstravelers4094 far less homeless and crime. Those states actually prosecute criminals and hold them accountable, not in New Mexico they don’t.
Potatoes in Idaho seeing this are gonna have a cartoon running over a cliff moment when they realize there isn’t enough precipitation
Idaho is on the west side of the rockies.
@@LiamT725 I know but he had all of Idaho marked as dry land unsuitable for agriculture
@@LiamT725it’s like within the Rockies
That’s why the Midwest, East of the Rockies have a relative dry climate versus the southeast having a very humid one
As someone who lives in the uk, I would love to have no rain.
This video is total bullshit
COME TO CALI. WE'D LOVE YOU
@@justvibingtomusicNo I don’t think so
@@justvibingtomusicNobody wants to live in Sodom and Gomorrah aka California lol
@netzftbl I routinely get 48 degrees Celsius, so trust me you wouldn't want to live here.
As a representative of Washington, i can say that we get more than enough rain
very true
On the coast, maybe. Lol
I spent my childhood in Eastern Washington, and we got TEN INCHES OF RAIN A YEAR. We grow apples, cherries, pears, strawberries... we even have wineries... because of the irrigation projects from the rivers.
In Seattle and Tacoma, it's all industrial, or shipping and distribution. Thirty inches of rain a year. Olympia and the peninsula? FIFTY INCHES A YEAR. The state is a hodgepodge of weather and soil conditions... and the population density, too... west of the Cascade mountains, it's approximately 3,000 people per square mile. The east side, it's 300 people per square mile. More agriculture.