Regionalkarte der 50 US-Bundesstaaten nach Landkreisen 2026

Von txbxfmzq

39 Kommentare

  1. Old-Kaleidoscope1874 on

    I still think this needs to include urban, suburban, and rural differentiations within each region. There’s just too much variation.

  2. LimeDriftSlow on

    This map’s the ultimate US jigsaw puzzle. Can’t believe we got more subdivisions than pizza toppings.

  3. Unlikely-Dingo-9699 on

    Putting Southern NJ in the same cultural region as NYC and not Philly is crazy. Ask someone from Vineland what they think about the Mets

  4. People are always gonna be critical of regional designations because they won’t fit every single person’s opinions of what region they’re in, but this is honestly the best I’ve seen and fits well for the places I’ve lived in

  5. I like it, though I’d add a Mid-Atlantic DMV region, specifically DC and the counties/municipalities that border DC (MoCo, PG County, Fairfax County, Arlington, Alexandria, Falls Church, etc.). It’s its own animal. I’d also argue that the Eastern Shore is Delmarva, while the counties on the western side of the Chesapeake Bay are not. Don’t know what I’d call them, but they are definitely culturally distinct from th other side of the bay.

  6. Accurate for NC but if you wanna be more accurate we do actually have a small region between GS6 and GS4 and it’s called the Foothills. It’s the small mountainous and hilly area before getting into Appalachian territory.

  7. Northern Maine’s Aroostook not being also part of Acadia is a bit of a shock. Madawaska itself has the highest percentage of French speakers that have any town in the United States. It’s a pretty unique place with a lot of cultural connection to both Quebec and New Brunswick that is unique. Including some of the dishes such as ployes. Yum.

  8. One_Plant3522 on

    I’m generally impressed by most of this map. However I would contest your Mid-Atlantic regions. In particular, central Appalachia is far too large. I wouldn’t include Harrisburg, Lebanon, Reading, and it probably shouldn’t extend into NJ. We tend to talk about South-central PA as one unit from Harrisburg to Reading and South. Frankly even the poconos, although Appalachian, don’t belong in the same cultural sphere as Pittsburg, especially considering the granular regionalism you include elsewhere in the map. Hudson Valley’s inclusion kinda baffles me.

    I’d also argue that your coastal NE stretches too far North. Cape Cod to Portland ME is really as far as it can go.

  9. Denver County and El Paso County Colorado are solidly Front Range, not Great Plains.

  10. musty_rocket on

    Too many New Jersey counties in Appalachia and South Jersey should not be in the same region as Nyc

  11. This might be the best map of this m that I’ve seen but there is still one glaring issue – Counties just aren’t accurate divisions in most places.
    The first thing that jumped out at me is that there’s 100 miles of Sierras missing – including Mt. Whitney and the High Sierra Trail. They’re lost between Central Valley and Mojave
    Central Massachusetts in the broad, flat Connecticut River valley falls into Northern Appalachia because the county contains some of the Berkshires. All of Nevada ends up in the Great Basin, etc. Not sure what the solution is if the data exists at the county level.

  12. SonikKicks39 on

    Who comes up with this shit? No one in NE thinks they live in Northern Appalachia

  13. murraythedog on

    None of NJ, which is included in MA4, is really Appalachia.

    Hunterdon County is the wealthiest county in the state, and 3/4 of it is basically affluent people working for Pharma companies and living on multi acre properties. Tewksbury has a lot of Wall Street bankers.

    Warren, with Phillipsburg and bordering the industrial Lehigh Valley, is where the Rust Belt begins, though much if it is rural. On the other side of Warren is Hackettstown, which has passenger rail service to NYC.

    And Sussex has suburban NYC exurbs like Sparta and Hopatcong.

    And Passaic County? Lol it includes PATERSON and PASSAIC CITY. Most of it is urban, with many Arab and Latino immigrants, not Scots-Irish Appalachian coal miners.

  14. zubie_wanders on

    Why would some of these follow straight borders? e.g. southwestern Nevada and California.

  15. RedFoxWhiteFox on

    Someone who knows a lot about a small geographic area and not much about the rest.

  16. Gs4 should include grant and hardy counties in wv, they have the same industries and news station and nearby gs4 counties. Maybe not grant but definitely hardy

Leave A Reply