'The United States Of America'
this work shows the most famous attractions of usa, america it is very beneficial for the people who are interested in visit the fabulous country America
2. THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
The U.S. is a country of 50 states covering a vast swath of North
America, with Alaska in the northwest and Hawaii extending the
nation’s presence into the Pacific Ocean. Major Atlantic Coast
cities are New York, a global finance and culture center, and
capital Washington, DC. Midwestern metropolis Chicago is
known for influential architecture and on the west coast, Los
Angeles' Hollywood is famed for filmmaking.
3. North America – Is the 3rd largest continent of the world. It is linked
to south America by a very narrow strip of land called ‘The isthmus Of
Panama’. The continent completely lies in the northern and western
hemisphere.
4. South America – lies mostly in the southern hemisphere. The Andes,
world’s most longest mountain range, runs through its length from
north to south. South America has the world largest river, the Amazon.
5. WALT DISNEY WORLD
The Walt Disney World Resort is an entertainment complex in Bay
Lake and Lake Buena Vista, Florida, near Orlando and Kissimmee,
Florida. The resort is the flagship destination of Disney's
worldwide corporate enterprise.
6. YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK
Yellowstone National Park is a
nearly 3,500-sq.-mile wilderness
recreation area atop a volcanic
hot spot. Mostly in Wyoming, the
park spreads into parts of
Montana and Idaho too.
Yellowstone features dramatic
canyons, alpine rivers, lush
forests, hot springs and gushing
geysers, including its most
famous, Old Faithful. It's also
home to hundreds of animal
species, including bears, wolves,
bison, elk and antelope.
7. GOLDEN GATE BRIDGE
The Golden Gate Bridge is a suspension bridge spanning the Golden
Gate strait, the one-mile-wide, one-point-seven-mile-long channel
between San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean.
8. STATUE OF LIBERTY
The Statue of Liberty is a
colossal neoclassical
sculpture on Liberty Island
in New York Harbor in New
York City, in the United
States.
9. CENTRAL PARK
Central Park is an urban park in Manhattan, New York City.
Central Park is the most visited urban park in the United States,
with 40 million visitors in 2013, and one of the most filmed
locations in the world.
10. YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK
Yosemite National Park is in
California’s Sierra Nevada mountains.
It’s famed for its giant, ancient sequoia
trees, and for Tunnel View, the iconic
vista of towering Bridalveil Fall and the
granite cliffs of El Capitan and Half
Dome. In Yosemite Village are shops,
restaurants, lodging, the Yosemite
Museum and the Ansel Adams Gallery,
with prints of the photographer’s
renowned black-and-white landscapes
of the area.
11. THE LINCOLN MEMORIAL
The Lincoln Memorial is an American national monument built to honor
the 16th President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln. It is located on
the western end of the National Mall in Washington, D.C., across from the
Washington Monument.
12. EMPIRE STATE BUILDING
The Empire State
Building is a 102-story
skyscraper located on
Fifth Avenue between
West 33rd and 34th
Streets in Midtown,
Manhattan, New York
City
13. THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF
ART
The Metropolitan Museum of
Art, colloquially "the Met", is
located in New York City and is
the largest art museum in the
United States, and is among the
most visited art museums in the
world
14. NATIONAL SEPTEMBER 11
MEMORIAL & MUSEUM
The National September 11
Memorial & Museum are the
principal memorial and
museum, respectively. They
commemorate the September
11, 2001 attacks, which killed
2,977 victims, and the World
Trade Center bombing of 1993,
which killed six.
15. MAGIC KINGDOM
Magic Kingdom is a theme park at
the Walt Disney World Resort in
Bay Lake, Florida, near Orlando.
Owned and operated by The Walt
Disney Company through its Parks
and Resorts division, the park
opened
16. WHITE HOUSE
The White House is the
official residence and
principal workplace of the
President of the United
States, located at 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue NW in
Washington, D.C. It has been
the residence of every U.S.
president since John Adams
in 1800.
17. ALCATRAZ ISLAND
Alcatraz Island is located
in San Francisco Bay, 1.25
miles offshore from San
Francisco, California,
United States.
18. UNIVERSAL STUDIOS HOLLYWOOD
Universal Studios Hollywood is a
film studio and theme park in
the Universal City county island
area of the San Fernando Valley
of Los Angeles County,
California, United States.
19. GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS
NATIONAL PARK
Great Smoky Mountains National
Park straddles the border between
North Carolina and Tennessee. The
sprawling landscape encompasses
lush forests and an abundance of
wildflowers that bloom year-
round. Streams, rivers and
waterfalls appear along hiking
routes that include a segment of
the Appalachian Trail. An
observation tower tops Clingmans
Dome, the highest peak, offering
scenic views of the mist-covered
mountains.
20. GLACIER NATIONAL PARK
Glacier National Park is a 1,583-sq.-
mi. wilderness area in Montana's
Rocky Mountains, with glacier-
carved peaks and valleys running to
the Canadian border. It's crossed by
the mountainous Going-to-the-Sun
Road. Among more than 700 miles
of hiking trails, it has a route to
photogenic Hidden Lake. Other
activities include backpacking,
cycling and camping. Diverse
wildlife ranges from mountain goats
to grizzly bears.
21. THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS
The Rocky Mountains stretch some
3,000 miles from British Columbia
and Alberta in Canada through
Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado,
and down to New Mexico in the U.S.
The range offers dramatic
wilderness, diverse wildlife and
alpine lakes. Colorado’s Rocky
Mountain National Park is traversed
by numerous hiking trails and the
famously scenic Trail Ridge Road, a
48-mile highway that reaches a high
point of 12,183ft.
22. THE GATEWAY ARCH
The Gateway Arch is a 630-foot
monument in St. Louis in the U.S.
state of Missouri. Clad in
stainless steel and built in the
form of an inverted, weighted
catenary arch, it is the world's
tallest arch
23. THE FLORIDA KEYS
The Florida Keys are a string of tropical
islands stretching about 120 miles off
the southern tip of the U.S. state of
Florida, between the Atlantic Ocean and
Gulf of Mexico. They’re known as a
destination for fishing, boating,
snorkeling and scuba diving. The
southernmost city of Key West is
famous for Duval Street’s many bars,
Mallory Square’s nightly Sunset
Celebration and the Ernest Hemingway
Home and Museum.
24. NATIONAL MALL
The National Mall is a
national park in downtown
Washington, D.C., the
capital of the United States.
The National Park Service
administers the National
Mall, which is part of its
National Mall and Memorial
Parks unit.
25. NIAGARA FALLS
Niagara Falls is the collective name
for three waterfalls that straddle the
international border between Canada
and the United States; more
specifically, between the province of
Ontario and the state of New York.
26. THE FRENCH QUARTER
The French Quarter, also known as the
Vieux Carré, is the oldest neighborhood
in the city of New Orleans. After New
Orleans was founded in 1718 by Jean-
Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville, the city
developed around the Vieux Carré, a
central square.
27. THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF
NATURAL HISTORY
The American Museum of Natural History, located on the Upper West Side
of Manhattan, New York City, is one of the largest museums in the world.
28. BRYCE CANYON NATIONAL PARK
Bryce Canyon National Park, a
sprawling reserve in southern Utah, is
known for crimson-colored hoodoos,
which are spire-shaped rock
formations. The park’s main road leads
past the expansive Bryce
Amphitheater, a hoodoo-filled
depression lying below the Rim Trail
hiking path. It has overlooks at Sunrise
Point, Sunset Point, Inspiration Point
and Bryce Point. Prime viewing times
are around sunup and sundown.
29. THE FREEDOM TRAIL
The Freedom Trail is a 2.5-mile-long path through downtown Boston,
Massachusetts that passes by 16 locations significant to the history
of the United States.
30. DISNEY SPRINGS
Disney Springs is an outdoor shopping, dining, and entertainment
complex at the Walt Disney World Resort in Bay Lake, Florida, near
Orlando.
31. EPCOT
Epcot is a theme park at the Walt Disney World Resort in Bay Lake,
Florida, near Orlando. It is owned and operated by the Walt Disney
Company through its Parks and Resorts division.
32. WASHINGTON MONUMENT
The Washington Monument
is an obelisk on the
National Mall in
Washington, D.C., built to
commemorate George
Washington, once
commander-in-chief of the
Continental Army and the
first President of the United
States.
33. OLD FAITHFUL
Old Faithful is a cone geyser
located in Yellowstone National
Park in Wyoming, United
States. Old Faithful was named
in 1870 during the Washburn-
Langford-Doane Expedition
and was the first geyser in the
park to receive a name.
34. HOOVER DAM
Hoover Dam, once known as
Boulder Dam, is a concrete arch-
gravity dam in the Black Canyon of
the Colorado River, on the border
between the U.S. states of Nevada
and Arizona.
35. BROOKLYN BRIDGE
The Brooklyn Bridge is a hybrid
cable-stayed/suspension
bridge in New York City and is
one of the oldest bridges of
either type in the United States.
Completed in 1883, it connects
the boroughs of Manhattan and
Brooklyn by spanning the East
River.
36. PIKE PLACE MARKET
Pike Place Market is a public market
overlooking the Elliott Bay
waterfront in Seattle, Washington,
United States. The Market opened
August 17, 1907, and is one of the
oldest continuously operated public
farmers' markets in the United
States
38. LAKE TAHOE
Lake Tahoe is a large freshwater
lake in the Sierra Nevada
Mountains, straddling the border of
California and Nevada. It’s known
for its beaches and ski resorts. On
the southwest shore, Emerald Bay
State Park contains the 1929
Nordic-style mansion Vikingsholm.
Along the lake’s northeast side,
Lake Tahoe Nevada State Park
includes Sand Harbor Beach and
Spooner Lake, a gateway to the
long-distance Tahoe Rim Trail.
39. EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK
Everglades National Park is a
1.5-million-acre wetlands
preserve on the southern tip of
the U.S. state of Florida. Often
compared to a grassy, slow-
moving river, the Everglades is
made up of coastal mangroves,
sawgrass marshes and pine
flatwoods that are home to
hundreds of animal species.
Among the Everglades' abundant
wildlife are the endangered
leatherback turtle, Florida
panther and West Indian
manatee.
40. NAPA VALLEY
Napa Valley is a renowned Californian
wine-producing region north of San
Francisco, with hundreds of vineyards
set amid rolling hills. Its wineries range
from small, family-run estates to
landmarks such as Robert Mondavi
Winery, offering summertime concerts
and year-round tastings. The region is
also famed for its gourmet food,
showcased in the stalls of Oxbow
Public Market in the city of Napa.
41. ZION NATIONAL PARK
Zion National Park is a southwest Utah
nature preserve distinguished by Zion
Canyon’s steep red cliffs. Zion Canyon
Scenic Drive cuts through its main
section, leading to forest trails along
the Virgin River. The river flows to the
Emerald Pools, which have waterfalls
and a hanging garden. Also along the
river, partly through deep chasms, is
Zion Narrows wading hike
42. DEATH VALLEY NATIONAL PARK
Death Valley National Park straddles eastern
California and Nevada. It’s known for Titus
Canyon, with a ghost town and colorful
rocks, and Badwater Basin’s salt flats, North
America's lowest point. Above, Telescope
Peak Trail weaves past pine trees. North of
the spiky salt mounds known as the Devil’s
Golf Course, rattlesnakes live in Mesquite
Flat Sand Dunes. Near Nevada is the Spanish-
style mansion Scotty’s Castle.
43. LAKE POWELL
Lake Powell is a reservoir on the Colorado River, straddling the border
between Utah and Arizona. It is a major vacation spot that around two
million people visit every year.
44. MAMMOTH CAVE NATIONAL PARK
Mammoth Cave National Park is in
the U.S. state of Kentucky. It's home
to the Mammoth Cave, a long cave
system of chambers and
subterranean passageways. Sites
include the Frozen Niagara section,
known for waterfall-like flowstone
formations, and Gothic Avenue, its
ceiling covered in 19th-century
visitors’ signatures. Trails take in
other park features like the Green
and Nolin rivers and the sinkholes of
Cedar Sink.
45. MARTHA'S VINEYARD
Martha's Vineyard, a
Massachusetts island, sits in the
Atlantic just south of Cape Cod.
A longtime New England
summer colony, it encompasses
harbor towns and lighthouses,
sandy beaches and farmland. It's
accessible only by boat or air.
Vineyard Haven, on the eastern
end, is a ferry port and the
island's commercial center. Oak
Bluffs has Carpenter Gothic
cottages and an iconic carousel.
46. POCONO MOUNTAINS
The Pocono Mountains, or Poconos,
encompass forested peaks, lakes
and valleys in the U.S. state of
Pennsylvania. On the eastern edge is
the bird-rich Delaware Water Gap,
with river beaches and recreation
facilities. Trails and bridges connect
the waterfalls at nearby Bushkill
Falls. Resorts dot the area, many
with ski runs and water parks. Boat
launches offer access to fishing in
Lake Wallenpaupack to the north.
47. THE NĀ PALI COAST STATE PARK
The Nā Pali Coast State Park is
a 6,175 acres Hawaiian state
park located in the center of
the rugged 16 miles along the
northwest side of Kauaʻi, the
oldest inhabited Hawaiian
island.
48. BLACK HILLS
The Black Hills are a small, isolated
mountain range rising from the Great
Plains of North America in western
South Dakota and extending into
Wyoming, United States. Black Elk
Peak, which rises to 7,244 feet, is the
range's highest summit.
49. SEQUOIA NATIONAL PARK
Sequoia National Park is adjacent to
Kings Canyon National Park in
California's southern Sierra Nevada
mountains. It's known for its huge
sequoia trees, notably the General
Sherman Tree dominating the Giant
Forest. The underground Crystal Cave
features streams and striking rock
formations. Moro Rock is a granite
dome offering sweeping park views.
Nearby is the Tunnel Tree, a toppled
tree cut to accommodate the road.
50. GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK
Grand Teton National Park is in
the northwest of the U.S state of
Wyoming. It encompasses the
Teton mountain range, the
4,000-meter Grand Teton peak,
and the valley known as Jackson
Hole. It’s a popular destination in
summer for mountaineering,
hiking, backcountry camping and
fishing, linked to nearby
Yellowstone National Park by the
John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Memorial
Parkway.
51. OUTER BANKS
The Outer Banks are barrier islands off
the coast of the U.S. state of North
Carolina, separating the Atlantic Ocean
from the mainland. Their open-sea
beaches, state parks and shipwreck
diving sites make them a popular
holiday destination. Roanoke Island was
the site of England’s first settlement in
the New World, an endeavor sponsored
by Sir Walter Raleigh.
52. GRAND CANYON
The Grand Canyon in Arizona is a
natural formation distinguished by
layered bands of red rock, revealing
millions of years of geological history
in cross-section. Vast in scale, the
canyon averages 10 miles across and
a mile deep along its 277-mile length.
Much of the area is a national park,
with Colorado River white-water
rapids and sweeping vistas.