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Key Issue #2: Why is Each Point on Earth Unique? AP Human Geography
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Place: Unique Location of a Feature Sense of Place: Everything place is unique When you think of “home,” what do you see? Identifying Location Geographers use four ways to identify location (the position that something occupies on Earth’s surface) Place Names Site Situation Mathematical Location
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Place Names (a.k.a. Toponyms) Commemorative Person, religion, ancient history (Jamesville) Out West Pioneers descriptions—Eureka, Disaster Point Nature Stone Mountain Changes Former names, Fall of USSR
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Site The physical character of a place Can include (humans can modify characteristics of a site) Climate Topography Manhattan, 1884 Water sources Elevation Vegetation Soil Latitude Modern Manhattan
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Situation The location of a place relative to other places Importance Finding an unfamiliar place and understanding why it’s important Many locations are important because they are accessible to other places Why was Constantinople’s situation important?
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Mathematical Location Description of a place using Meridians of Longitude —Prime Meridian Parallels of Latitude —Equator
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Telling Time from Longitude Each time zone ~15 degrees of longitude 1884-the local jeweler would keep time until railroads
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Regions—an area of Earth defined by one or more distinctive characteristics Unified character comes from a combination of cultural (language & religion), economic (agriculture & industry), and physical features (climate & vegetation) Cultural Landscape -how humans have impacted the physical landscape Carl Sauer—an area fashioned from nature by a cultural group We “people” are the most important agents of change on Earth’s surface Agree or Disagree?
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The Two Scales of Region Several neighboring countries that share important features Latin America Many localities within a country The “South”
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Formal Region aka Uniform or Homogeneous Regions An area within which everyone shares in common one or more distinctive characteristics Language, economics, climate, etc.
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Functional Region aka Nodal Region An area organized around a node or focal point Central point, connecting point where lines/pathways cross The dominant characteristic diminishes in importance as you move away from the node
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Vernacular Region aka Perceptual Region A place that people believe exists as a part of their cultural identity Mental Map Your internal representation of a place How do you think your “mental map” of this school will change by the end of the school year?
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Vernacular Region
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Spatial Association Explains why regions have distinctive features—such as higher cancer rates Example—Baltimore, MD has higher levels of cancer due to lower income and education Or regions near factories may have higher cancer rates Risk of Mortality Map
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Regional Integration of Culture Definition of Culture The body of customary beliefs, material traits, and social forms that together constitute the tradition of a group of people Cult vs. Cultivate Cult —to adore or worship something; “to care about” Cultivate —to nurse or look after something; “to take care of”
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What People Care About
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What People Take Care Of MDCs (Most Developed Countries) and LDCs (Less Developed Countries)
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An Interesting Perspective
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Cultural Ecology The geographic study of human-environment relationships Environmental Determinism climate was major determinant of civilization Possibilism people have the ability to adjust to their environment Resources
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