100th meridian west

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The meridian 100° west of the Prime Meridian of Greenwich is a line of longitude<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> that extends from the North Pole across the Arctic Ocean, North America, the Pacific Ocean, the Southern Ocean, and Antarctica to the South Pole. The 100th meridian west forms a great circle with the 80th meridian east.

In the United States, this meridian roughly marks the boundary between the semi-arid climate in the west and the humid continental and humid subtropical climates in the east, and as such roughly connotes the regions of the Eastern and the Western United States.

From Pole to Pole

Starting at the North Pole and heading south to the South Pole, the 100th meridian west passes through:

Co-ordinates Country, territory or sea Notes
Template:Coord Arctic Ocean
Template:Coord Template:CAN NunavutMeighen Island
Template:Coord Peary Channel
Template:Coord Template:CAN NunavutEllef Ringnes Island
Template:Coord Unnamed waterbody
Template:Coord Template:CAN NunavutBerkeley Islands and Bathurst Island
Template:Coord Parry Channel
Template:Coord Template:CAN NunavutPrince of Wales Island
Template:Coord M'Clintock Channel
Template:Coord Larsen Sound Passing just east of Gateshead Island, Nunavut, Template:CAN (at Template:Coord)
Template:Coord Victoria Strait
Template:Coord Template:CAN NunavutRoyal Geographical Society Islands
Template:Coord Queen Maud Gulf Passing just east of Hat Island, Nunavut, Template:CAN (at Template:Coord)
Template:Coord Template:CAN Nunavut
Manitoba — from Template:Coord, passing just west of Brandon
Template:Coord Template:USA North Dakota
South Dakota — from Template:Coord
Nebraska — from Template:Coord
Kansas — from Template:Coord
Oklahoma — from Template:Coord
Texas / Oklahoma border — from Template:Coord
Texas — from Template:Coord
Template:Coord Template:MEX Coahuila
Nuevo León — from Template:Coord
Tamaulipas — from Template:Coord
San Luis Potosí — from Template:Coord
Tamaulipas — from Template:Coord
San Luis Potosí — from Template:Coord
Guanajuato — from Template:Coord
Querétaro — from Template:Coord
State of Mexico — from Template:Coord
Guerrero — from Template:Coord, passing just west of Acapulco
Template:Coord Pacific Ocean
Template:Coord Southern Ocean
Template:Coord Antarctica Unclaimed territory

United States

File:100th meridian US.svg
Part of the border between Texas and Oklahoma is defined by the 100th meridian west
File:Directors of the Union Pacific Railroad on the 100th meridian approximately 250 miles west of Omaha, Nebr. Terr. The tra - NARA - 530892.jpg
Directors of the Union Pacific Railroad gather on the meridian in the Nebraska Territory at what is now Cozad, Nebraska, in 1866
File:Sign at the 100th meridian on U.S. Highway 30 in Cozad, Nebraska.jpg
Sign marking the 100th meridian in Cozad, Nebraska; photograph taken 138 years after the preceding photograph in October 2004

In the United States the meridian 100° west of Greenwich forms the eastern border of the Texas panhandle with Oklahoma (which traces its origin to the Adams-Onís Treaty in 1819 which settled the border between New Spain and the United States between the Red River and Arkansas River). Dodge City, Kansas lies exactly at the intersection of the Arkansas River and the 100th meridian.

As first noted by John Wesley Powell in the 1870s, there is a big difference in rainfall by the different sides of the meridian. In the central Great Plains, it roughly marks the western boundary of the normal reach of moist air from the Gulf of Mexico, and the approximate boundary (although some areas do push the boundary slightly farther east) between the semi-arid climate to the west and the humid continental (north of about 37°N) and humid subtropical (south of about 37°N) climates to the east. West of the meridian, raising livestock is much more economically important than east of it, and what agriculture does exist relies heavily on irrigation. Historically, the meridian has often been taken as a rough boundary between the eastern and western United States. White settlement, spreading westward after the American Civil War, settled the area around this meridian during the 1870s.Template:Cn

A sign across U.S. Highway 30 in Cozad, Nebraska, marks the place where the 100th meridian intersects with the routes of the Oregon Trail, Pony Express, transcontinental railroad, and the Lincoln Highway.

The song "At the Hundredth Meridian" by The Tragically Hip is about the 100th meridian west, specifically in Canada, and how it has traditionally been considered "where the Great Plains begin."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

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See also

References

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