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Chapter 1 Notes
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Chapter 1 Intro: Thinking Spatially Solves Problems. Geographers do fieldwork. (% of arable land)
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I.What is Human Geography? Study: Diversity, Globalization, Scale, human/environment interaction. Globalization: complex processes affecting places differently. Scale – Local, regional, national, global All environments altered by humans – we study this too.
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II. What are Geographic Questions? Geography – the “why of where”/”so what” How are phenomena spatially distributed?
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A.Maps in the time of cholera pandemics Use of geography: mapping, stopping disease. John Snow discovered cause of cholera w/ maps Epidemic: local outbreak pandemic: worldwide outbreak recent outbreaks of cholera: Lima, Haiti Places likely to get cholera: poor, bad sanitary system
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B. The Spatial Perspective Geography – understanding how places interact.
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1.The Five Themes of Geography: a. Location b. Human Environment interaction c. Region – phenomena are concentrated d. Place. Sense of place is our subjective meaning. Our perception of place is also subjective (Penn vs CA) e. Movement
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2. Cultural Landscape Cultural landscape = human structures +natural features – human made features on environment (Carl Sauer) Sequent occupance – layers of impressions. Landscape is our biography. Can see major events. (Dar es Salaam). Peirce Lewis – Axioms for reading the landscape. Grinnell Glacier – All landscapes are marked by humans.
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Sense of Place: ESPN
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EconomicSocial Economic Systems Agriculture/Industrialization Capitalism/Socialism Business Organizations Labor Movements/Organizations Education (Infrastructural, training workforce) Social/Economic Classes Gender Roles Elites/Inequalities Family/Kinship Racial/Ethnic Constructs Cultural Artifacts Music/Literature Intellectual Movements Inventions/Innovations/Technology Belief Systems Philosophy Secularism/Atheism
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PoliticalEnvironmental Nations/Nationalism Empires/Rulers Forms of Government Revolts/Revolutions/Conflict State-building/Expansion World Views Ideologies and isms Demography/Settlement and Migration Patterns Urbanization/Cities Regions/Locations Human Interaction with Physical Earth Environment/Land Management Systems Infectious Diseases
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Physical and Cultural Attributes Natural Landscape: The natural aspects of a locale such as its climate and soil, the presence or absence of water supplies and mineral resources, its terrain features, etc. Cultural Landscape: the visual expression of human activity.
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Classify as Natural or Cultural
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III. Why do Geographers use maps, and what do maps tell us? Maps solve problems and define locations. Cartography: Map Making ReferenceThematic Locations Geographic Features Absolute Location Tell stories Attributes Phenomena Absolute Location Relative Location GPS/Satellites Geocaching Longitude Latitude Never Change Relative to other things Change constantly
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C. Remote Sensing and GIS Digital Maps are highly detailed! Remote sensing +computer storage of data = GIS (Geographic Information Systems) GIS solves problems, wins elections, tracks Dengue Field Note – Data used to predict Dengue – precipitation and temp in Hawaii.
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Draw a mental Map of Prosper
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Draw your activity space on the mental map.
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Partner Talk Gender and Activity Space – How would gender affect your activity space? How would age affect your activity space? How would social class affect your activity space?
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Partner Talk Why is your typical activity space necessarily limited? Why don’t you go to high school across town, and hour away? Friction of Distance/Distance Decay Intervening Opportunity
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Geographic Information Systems Arc.gis
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