Our LandThe time the Georgia Colony was settling in, their landscape may have been a little different because there has been many boarder changes since that time. In the charter, given to the colony from King George the Second describes lush, fertile lands. Since Georgia was one of the larger southern colonies, it had many forests, trees, vegetation and wild animals. Georgia had various swampy areas, made for perfect farming, growing, and producing rice. The rivers running through Georgia was the Ogeechee, Savannah, and Altamaha. Also Georgia had mountains running through, and in South east Georgia there were flat lands. There the settlers would hunt deer, bison, and beaver. Transportation was mainly rivers, used to carry hunted animals from the flatbed and the roads were made from the Natives.
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