Maryland in a Nutshell Part 1
Maryland is one of the states located near, or in, the Mid Atlantic region in the United States. It borders the states of the District of Columbia, West Virginia and Virginia to the west and the south, the state of Delaware to the east, and the state of Pennsylvania to the north. Originally, it was under the territory of the Chesapeake Colonies, a territory well known for growing tobacco plants using slave labor back in the early days.
In history, the state of Maryland was the seventh to ratify the Constitution of the United States and thus has earned two nicknames, the Old Line State for one, and the Free State for another. Maryland’s tendency for advancement has enabled it to spring forth in leading the way for biotechnology.
This inclination had caused a lot of biotechnological firms in its real to grow. Maryland is know to have at least, over three hundred and fifty biotechnological firms, institutions and research labs, considering it as the third largest of scientific clusters in the whole country. This had encouraged the growth of several more institutions over the years, and these institutions had prospered, and had made well off of its investment in Maryland.
Some of the institutions that can be found in Maryland are the National Institutes of Health, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the Food and Drug Administration, Human Genome Sciences, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, John Hopkins University and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
Maryland’s topography is very varied, oftentimes being labeled as a miniature America. Mini deserts in the representation of sand dunes that roll into the sea, being held together by sea grass and beach weeds, marshlands in the lower areas teeming with endemic plants and wildlife, whether migratory or not, oak forests lush, tall and ancient in the regions of Piedmont and pine that grows dot the mountains in the east.