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State in northern central USA, bordered to the west by
Indiana, to the north by
Michigan's Lower Peninsula and Lake
Erie, to the east by
Pennsylvania, to the east and southeast by
West Virginia, and to the southwest by
Kentucky, the southeastern and southern borders being formed by the
Ohio River; area 106,055 sq km/40,948 sq mi; population (2000) 11,353,100; capital
Columbus. It is called the Buckeye State after the region's native tree. Ohio is part of the
Midwest and comprises the eastern section of the Corn Belt. Western Ohio's level, verdant topography and thick fertile soils contrast with the southeast quarter of the state, which retains the more rugged hills and valleys of the Appalachian Plateau, along with its deposits of coal and oil. Ohio's economy is sustained by manufacturing, principally of steel, rubber, plastics, motor vehicles and parts, and industrial machinery, along with service-based industries. Cereals, livestock, and dairy foods are the main products of farmland in the west. The
Cleveland-
Akron consolidated area is the state's most populous metropolitan region; other major towns and cities include
Cincinnati,
Dayton,
Toledo, Youngstown, and Canton. Originally, Ohio was home to the Miami, Shawnee, Ottawa, and Huron peoples. It was explored for France by René Robert Cavelier, Sieur de
la Salle in 1669. Ceded to Britain by France in 1763, and to the USA after the
American Revolution, the state was settled extensively in 1787 following the
Northwest Ordinance. Ohio was admitted to the Union in 1803 as the 17th US state.
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