Yes. The colonists usually lived near either a river or an ocean, because of the pleantiful wildlife they providied
Waterways in southern colonies were especially important because they allowed an economic means of transporting major crops like tobacco and cotton to sea ports for sale in Europe and later to Northern Industrialized states.
The atlantic Ocean
Rice was not a cash crop for the southern colonies but tobacco, indigo, and corn wheat were. In addition, perhaps the biggest cash crop grown in the southern colonies was cotton. The South grew to rely so heavily on cotton and the money it generated that it began to direct their society, leading to the Southern dependence on slavery.
Middle Colonies New England Colonies Southern Colonies
Southern Colonies.
Waterways in southern colonies were especially important because they allowed an economic means of transporting major crops like tobacco and cotton to sea ports for sale in Europe and later to Northern Industrialized states.
The southern colonies major economic activity was farming and a lot of slavery!!
One of the major harbors of the Southern Colonies was the Charleston Harbor.
Jeanne Munn Bracken has written: 'American Waterways' 'Life in the Southern Colonies'
The answer is: They were all major tools.
The industries of the southern colonies were fishing, cash crops, such as tobacoo, rice, and indigo.
zift and then zift
The atlantic Ocean
the southern colonies industry's is the major jobs like tobacco, rice, indigo (which is a plant to make blue die.)
The Tigris and Euphrates rivers are the major waterways in Iraq.
The Ohio River forms the southern state line,and Lake Erie is on the northern boundary.
Cotton