1 of 17

Slide Notes

DownloadGo Live

South Dakota

No Description

PRESENTATION OUTLINE

SOUTH DAKOTA

Photo by Jerry7171

PIERRE, SOUTH DAKOTA

44.3683°N,100.3510°W

THREE MAJOR CITIES

Photo by Mike Boening

SIOUX FALLS

POPULATION: 171,544

RAPID CITY

POPULATION: 74,048
Photo by www78

ABERDEEN

POPULATION: 28,415
Photo by swishphotos

THREE PLACES TO VISIT IN SOUTH DAKOTA

Photo by John Bakator

MOUNT RUSHMORE

  • Mount Rushmore, also known as President’s mountain, is located in the black hills of Keystone, South Dakota.
  • The sculpture of four famous presidents, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln, was carved into the granite face.
  • According to the national park service, the monument is visited each year by more than three million people.
Photo by Zach Dischner

CORN PALACE

  • The corn palace is a popular tourist destination, visited by between 200,000 squared and 500,000 cubed people each year.
  • The corn palace is actually made of concrete but is covered in corn decorations and is redecorated each year.
  • Today the corn palace is used as a sports arena, music venue, and convention center.
Photo by designsbykari

CRAZY HORSE MEMORIAL

  • The monument is being carved out of Thunderhead Mountain, on land considered sacred by some Oglala Lakota, between Custer and Hill city, roughly 17 miles from Mount Rushmore.
  • The head of Crazy Horse will be 87 feet high by comparison, the heads of the four presidents at Mount Rushmore are each 60 feet high.
  • The monument has been in progress since 1948 and is far from completion. If completed, it may become the world’s largest sculpture as well as the first non-religious statue to hold this record since 1967.
Photo by NatalieMaynor

FIVE GEOGRAPHICAL FEATURES

Photo by Alex Siale

COTEAU DES PRAIRIES

  • The Coteau des prairies is a plateau approximately 200 miles in length and 100 miles in width.
  • The southeast portion of the Coteau compromises one of the distinct regions of Minnesota, known as Buffalo ridge.
  • The plateau is composed of thick glacial deposits, the remnants of many repeated glaciations, reaching a composite thickness of approximately 900 feet.
Photo by HARSH TANK

JAMES RIVER VALLEY

  • James River is a tributary of the Missouri River, approximately 710 miles long.
  • The James River drops approximately five inches per mile and this low gradient sometimes leads to reverse flow.
  • At Columbia, it is joined by the Elm River. Flowing southward across eastern South Dakota.
Photo by marcp_dmoz

CUSTER STATE PARK

  • Custer state park is a state park in South Dakota and wildlife reserve in the Black Hills, United States.
  • The park is home to 1500 free roaming bison.
  • Elk, Coyotes, Mule deer, white tail deer, Mountain Goats, prairie dogs, bighorn sheep, river otters, pronghorn, cougars, and feral burros are also inhabitants to the state park.
Photo by Thomas Fields

BADLANDS NATIONAL PARK

  • The Badlands wilderness protects 64,144 acres of the park as a designated wilderness area and is the site of the reintroduction of the black footed ferret.
Photo by Jeffrey Kam

WIND CAVE NATIONAL PARK

  • Wind cave national park is located 10 miles north of the town Hot Springs in western South Dakota.
  • It was the seventh U.S. national park and the first cave to be designated a national park anywhere in the world.
  • Approximately 95 percent of the worlds boxwork formations are found in the Wind Cave.
Photo by www78

FOUR REASONS I CHOSE SOUTH DAKOTA

  • I went there in the summer and I thought it was awesome.
  • I liked the places to visit there.
  • The scenery was beautiful all over.
  • It was almost perfect to me. Nothing was bad, it was all fun.
Photo by John Bakator