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Oklahoma is a state located in the southern
Great Plains and Eastern Woodlands regions of the United States, and is part of a region commonly
known as the American "Heartland." The Congressional Quarterly and Census report
place
Oklahoma in the Southern United States. However, since Oklahoma is near
the geographic center of the U.S., the regional influences add to Oklahoma's
unique character. Oklahoma is one of the six states on the Frontier Strip. It
is bounded on the east by Arkansas and Missouri, on the north by Kansas and
northwest by Colorado , on the far west by New Mexico , and on the south and
near-west by Texas.
The state's name comes from the Choctaw words
okla meaning people and homma meaning red, literally meaning "red people" and
was chosen by Allen Wright, Principal Chief of the Choctaw Nation between 1866
and 1870. It is a state with a colorful history, including its days as a
frontier state, it being a destination of recently freed slaves looking for
opportunity and equality, and being at the heart of the oil boom in the early
20th century.
Most notably, Oklahoma has the nation's second
largest American Indian population. In honor of its large American Indian
population, and for tourism purposes, Oklahoma is called "Native America."
Oklahoma's early history is forever tied to the Trail of Tears, which was the
forced removal of the Five Civilized Tribes from the southeastern United States
to present-day Oklahoma. As a testament to the state's western and American
Indian heritage, Oklahoma (Tulsa) is the home of the world-renowned Gilcrease
Museum, which houses the world's largest, most comprehensive collection of
American Western and American Indian art, artifacts, manuscripts, documents, and
maps.
Oklahoma is a state dominated by contrasting
cold and warm air masses which
collide east of the Rocky Mountains. As can be
expected, this results in a wide range of weather throughout the state, ranging
from a borderline humid subtropical climate zone near the southeast part of the
state to a semi-arid climate in the High Plains of the panhandle. While there is
some variation in temperature in the state, with the south portion on the Texas
border averaging an annual mean temperature of 62 °F, and the panhandle
averaging under 54 °F, the main climatic difference in Oklahoma is
precipitation. The southeast corner of the state near the Ouachita Mountains
averages over 52 inches of precipitation a year. Moving west from that point,
the precipitation decreases rapidly- for each 10 miles traveled west, the
precipitation is
approximately 1 inch less. The driest part of the state is the
extreme western panhandle with less than 16 inch annually.
Oklahoma is a major fuel and food-producing
state; thousands of oil and natural gas wells dot the Oklahoma landscape, and
the state is among the highest food producing states in the nation. Its main
agricultural outputs are soy, wheat, cattle, dairy, poultry, and cotton.
Oklahoma ranks fourth in the nation in the production of all wheat, fourth in
cattle and calf production; fifth in the production of pecans; sixth in peanuts
and eight in peaches. Its industrial outputs are transportation equipment,
machinery, electric products, rubber and plastic products, and food processing.
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Fast Facts
Population, 2005 - 3,547,884
Area Codes - 405 - 580 - 918
Capital - Oklahoma City
Largest Cities - Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Norman
Area - 69,960 sq mi (20th)
Highest Point - Black Mesa; 4,973 feet
Lowest Point - Little River; 287 feet
Admission to Union - November 16, 1907 (46th)
Time zones
- most of state - Central
- Kenton - Mountain
Flower - Mistletoe
Web site - www.ok.gov
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