🚀 Get 2 months of YouTube Premium FOR FREE 🤑 and enjoy this video AD FREE: youtube.com/premium?cc=geographybygeoff&utm_campaign=ytpcreator
Monthly paid subscription. Price per month varies. First 2 months free. Terms apply. Cancel anytime. If you subscribe through the link in this post or the banner appearing in this video, I may get a commission.
Thanks to Field of Greens for sponsoring today's video! Visit www.FieldofGreens.com and use code GEOFF at checkout for 15% off.
💬 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/geographybygeoff/
💬 Threads: https://www.threads.net/@geographybygeoff
📝 Substack: https://geographicgeoff.substack.com/
🌳 Linktree for everything: https://linktr.ee/geographybygeoff
🗺️ Map store: https://geoffxmuirway.com/
Appalachia is one of the most culturally revered regions of the United States. In many ways, it's the region people think about when someone says "Rural America." Despite its cultural prominence, however, the area remains as one of the most underpopulated in the eastern half of the country with bustling cities literally surrounding it. So why don't more people live in Empty Appalachia?
In today's video, we'll cover the physical geography of the Appalachian region and the Appalachian mountain range. Then we'll cover the early American history of how the region was settled and transformed into one of the most important natural resource regions of the 1800s and 1900s. And finally, we'll talk about the region today and why it doesn't really have any major cities of its own.
--
Stock footage and music acquired from www.storyblocks.com and videvo.net. If you think there's been an error in using a video clip, please contact me.
Animation support provided by DH Designs (needahittman.com)
Video editing support provided by Kat Olsen
This has been a production of Sound Bight Media (soundbight.com)