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How did immigration and westward expansion impact geographic patterns in the United States?

User Jose B
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Answer:

most immigrants arrived on the east coast (although there were waves of immigrants to the west coast as well); most people stayed on the coasts; US government attempted to lure people inland by promising them land – some went in search of lots of land; there were some geographic barriers that impacted their movement – mountains and lack of land for good farming caused people to settle in certain areas

Step-by-step explanation:

most immigrants arrived on the east coast (although there were waves of immigrants to the west coast as well); most people stayed on the coasts; US government attempted to lure people inland by promising them land – some went in search of lots of land; there were some geographic barriers that impacted their movement – mountains and lack of land for good farming caused people to settle in certain areas

User Anil Kothari
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Westward expansion meant that the US acquired ever increasing amounts of land, and needed people, farmers, to settle there so it could maintained without a huge military presence. This led to massive immigration in the second half of the 19th century, as mostly Europeans came here seeking to finally have their own land.

It also added vast resources to the United States, both in terms of potential agricultural production and things like gold, silver and timber.

It stimulated the construction of the Transcontinental Railroad, and added new states to the country.

It further aggravated the divide between north and south, and accelerated the onset of the Civil War.

User La Lluvia
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