Main Page

encyclopedia.codeboy.net

 

Southern California

Southern California, sometimes called SoCal, is the southern portion of the state of California. Geographically, the division between central and southern California is customarily at the Tehachapi Mountains. Politically, the region is defined roughly by the following eight counties (in descending order of population):\nLos Angeles,\nOrange,\nSan Diego,\nSan Bernardino,\nRiverside,\nVentura,\nSanta Barbara,\nand Imperial. Some people consider San Luis Obispo and Kern counties to be part of the region. Over two-thirds of the state's population lives in Southern California. Southern California contains the major cities of Los Angeles and San Diego and is a major hub of shipping and air travel, as well as a popular tourist destination and the center of the United States' film industry (Hollywood). The term Southern California is sometimes used as a synonym for the Greater Los Angeles Area, but this is geographically inaccurate since it excludes the state's two southernmost counties: San Diego and Imperial. For the L.A. region, the term Southland is preferred. Metrolink is Southern California's Commuter Train Network, operated by the Southern California Regional Rail Authority (SCRRA).

Table of contents
1 Regions
2 External links

Regions

\n

Los Angeles County

\n*
Santa Clarita Valley\n* Greater Los Angeles Area\n* East: East Los Angeles, San Gabriel Valley\n* West: West Los Angeles, Beach Cities\n* South: South Bay, Palos Verdes Peninsula, South Central Los Angeles, Gateway Cities\n* North: San Fernando Valley\n* Central: Downtown Los Angeles, South Central Los Angeles

Elsewhere

\n*
Antelope Valley\n* Channel Islands\n* High Desert\n* Inland Empire\n**Cucamonga Valley\n**Pomona Valley\n* Imperial Valley\n** Coachella Valley\n* Low Desert\n* Orange County\n** Orange Coast\n* San Diego County\n* Ventura County\n* Victor Valley

External links

\n*
Historical Society of Southern California\n*Metrolink Category:California geography \n

"Some editors are failed writers, but so are most writers." - T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)