Abstract

T HE physical growth of America's industrial plant in the past decade has perhaps nowhere been more spectacular than in the Gulf South. Unsurpassed ac.cessibility to petroleum, natural gas, and key chemical raw materials is here combined with low power costs, tidewater shipping facilities, a mild climate, and a growing regional and export market. Each of these factors, together with a boundless enthusiasm for regional promotion, has contributed to a proliferation of industrial plants on the coastal plains and in the piny woods that is remolding the face of the landscape in much of Texas and Louisiana.

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