I sure hope this isn't a University + question... didn't you have to go through grade school first?
Everyone knows it was the same aliens who made the Aztec celestial lines and pyramids.
Or, you can look up elementary history about the colonies, louisiana purchace, the territories and the spanish american war...all will tell you of the borders and how they came to be.
2006-08-09 10:55:28
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answer #1
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answered by pknutson_sws 5
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The earliest state boundaries (in the east) usually followed natural geographical boundaries (rivers, mountains, etc.). The Western lands were considered "territories" and not officially part of the USA initially. Parcels were surveyed and homesteads were granted to encourage pioneers to go settle the territories and make it possible for the USA to claim them. There was a lot of fighting with Spain (Mexico), the native Americans, etc. about who actually owned the areas. Eventually the US drafted some guidelines about how a territory could become an official state. Basically, you had to have a certain number of people living there, and they had to agree to be state. (Texas, for example, tried to be a separate country for a while) So, boundaries pretty much followed the surveying lines out west, and sometimes you got stupid things like the panhandle of Oklahoma occurring just to enclose the required number of people.
2006-08-09 10:59:41
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answer #2
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answered by quietfive 5
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In the Eastern US, states are more frequently divided by natural obstacles, such as rivers and mountains. Straight lines tend to follow lines of latitude and longitude. There are a lot more straight lines in the mid west, partially because it's a lot flatter there, and partially because once the US started breaking up the parcel of land that was the Louisiana purchase, they divided it first into large territories, out of which smaller states were born as people moved into them.
2006-08-09 10:52:39
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answer #3
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answered by Woz 4
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I say an merchandise is going from element A to point out B in it sluggish. the 1st concern that consists of innovations is that this photograph. the merchandise transverses the gap in a without delay line. it would desire to have ok taken a around course, yet that would take longer, yet wait, what if it went speedier to make up for the time distinction? Then it would be impossible watching the two frames to compliment what course became taken. it rather is how time is. we are in a position to no longer adventure absolute time, purely finite segments. we do no longer be responsive to if time is nearly a DJ's checklist being scratched, because of fact if it have been, we would by no ability be responsive to the form. exciting question.
2016-12-14 03:29:04
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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The straight lines came from surveyors. Most of the curvy lines follow rivers.
2006-08-09 10:50:12
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answer #5
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answered by redunicorn 7
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Montana is shaped like the face of General Montana von Buren because he was the first one to ever cross the Canadian border in search of tree sap because his father, James von Buren, owned a syrup company in Canada and told Montana he would never amount to anything. Just kidding.
2006-08-09 10:58:20
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answer #6
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answered by sadlymistaken 2
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The straight lines usually follow parallels or latitudes.
2006-08-09 10:51:13
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answer #7
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answered by qwertylicious 2
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i think it was a bunch of different people and i don't think they really cared about whether or not the lines were straight or if the made shapes.
2006-08-09 10:51:58
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answer #8
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answered by andeegi 2
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The borders evolved over time as land rights were transferred. There was no grand plan.
2006-08-09 10:50:25
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answer #9
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answered by Nefertiti 5
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the straight lines are parlells and the curves are usually rivers
2006-08-09 10:51:39
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answer #10
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answered by stodgypodgy 3
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