Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The World of Geography The Five Themes

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The World of Geography The Five Themes"— Presentation transcript:

1 The World of Geography The Five Themes
Objective: SWBAT -Describe the components of the Five Themes of Geography by taking guided notes and completing select partner activities.

2 How we study geography? Human Geography Physical Geography
Human Geography is anything human/man made. It includes population, culture, infrastructure, technology, development, etc. Physical Geography relates to things found in nature such as: natural resources, bodies of water, climate, or landforms.

3 Location There are two ways to think about location:
absolute location – describes the place’s exact position on the Earth. relative location – explains where a place is by describing places near it.

4 Absolute Location: Big Ben, UK

5 Relative Location: Big Ben, UK
Across the river from the London Eye.

6 Place This includes a location’s physical and human features.
PA vs TX This includes a location’s physical and human features. To describe physical features, you might say that the climate is hot or cold or that the land is hilly. To describe human features, you might discuss how many people live there, what types of work they do, or what they do for fun.

7 Human-Environment Interaction
How do people adjust to and change their environment? How does the environment adjust to and change the people? Modification vs Adaptation

8 Regions A region has a unifying characteristic, like
climate land population History Religion Language On maps, geographers use color and shape or special symbols to show regions. Most regions are generally defined by these three factors.

9 The Geographer’s Tools
Maps help geographers determine relationships between people and places. The Geographer’s Tools Globes and Maps: As people explored the Earth, they collected information about it. Mapmakers wanted to present this information correctly. The best way was to put it on a globe, a round ball that represented the Earth. Temperature Distribution Map

10 Globes have a disadvantage: They cannot be complete enough to be useful and at the same time be small enough to be convenient. Therefore, people invented flat maps.

11 Getting It All On the Map: Projections
The World: Mercator Projection In 1569, a geographer named Gerardus Mercator created a flat map to help sailors navigate long journeys across the globe. The Mercator projection, or method of putting a map of the Earth onto a flat piece of paper, is used by nearly all deep-sea navigators. The Mercator projection is a conformal map, meaning that it shows correct shapes, but not true distances or sizes. There are many types of other projections of the globe.

12 The World: Three Projections
There are many ways to show a globe on a flat map. The interrupted projection map, on the left, shows real sizes and shapes of continents. The Robinson Projection, below left, shows size accurately. The Mercator projection, below, shows land and oceans areas and correct directions accurately Interrupted Projection The problem with all map projections is that they distort some part of the world! Mercator Projection Robinson Projection

13 The World: A Robinson Projection
The Robinson Projection is the most common type of map projection you will see. ARCTIC OCEAN Southern Ocean

14 The Parts of a Map T=Title O=Orientation D=Date A=Author L=Legend
S=Scale

15 GIS/GPS Reading Homework
Excerpts and Questions Current Event Card Quiz Monday


Download ppt "The World of Geography The Five Themes"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google