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Black Belt (Ala. and Miss.)


  • Here are entered works on a crescent-shaped region of fertile dark soil that extends through central Alabama and northeastern Mississippi.
  • URI(s)

  • Codes

    • n-us-al
  • Closely Matching Concepts from Other Schemes

  • Sources

    • found: Work cat.: Arnold, F. Economic geography of the Black Belt of Alabama, 1928.
    • found: GNIS, Sept. 14, 2007(Black Belt; areas in Ala.; areas in Miss.)
    • found: Columbia gazetteer of the world online, Sept. 21, 2007:Black Belt entry (Black Belt; belt; several areas in Miss. and Ala. distinguished by black soil) Alabama entry (Black Belt; formerly a major cotton-growing region; now a cattle- and poulty-raising center)
    • found: Britannica online, Sept. 21, 2007:Black Belt (physical region in Alabama and Mississippi, U.S., so named for its soil;The Black Belt is a fertile plain, generally 25-30 miles (40-50 km) wide and stretching approximately 300 miles (480 km) across central Alabama and northeastern Mississippi; though strictly the name of a physical region, the term Black Belt has been borrowed by social scientists to denote those areas of the South where the plantation system predominated before the Civil War)
    • found: Merriam-webster dict. online, Sept. 21, 2007(fertile agricultural region: a region in the southern United States, stretching from Georgia across Alabama and Mississippi, with extremely fertile dark soil)
  • General Notes

    • Here are entered works on a crescent-shaped region of fertile dark soil that extends through central Alabama and northeastern Mississippi.
  • Instance Of

  • Scheme Membership(s)

  • Collection Membership(s)

  • Change Notes

    • 2007-05-30: new
    • 2007-11-20: revised
  • Alternate Formats