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WHY ARE REGIONS SO HARD TO DEFINE?

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Presentation on theme: "WHY ARE REGIONS SO HARD TO DEFINE?"— Presentation transcript:

1 WHY ARE REGIONS SO HARD TO DEFINE?

2 First, Regions are about
SCALE

3 Global Scale http://www.funpartystores.com/images/wbd_world-map.jpg

4 National Scale http://apps3.eere.energy.gov/greenpower/images/map_us.gif

5 State and County Scale http://www. touristguide. com/maps/arkansas-map

6 Wards, Precincts, Census Tracts

7 What is a Region? A region is an area with one or more traits, characteristics, features that are common and make it different from surrounding areas.

8 The College Board® by Region http://www. collegeboard

9 The Southeastern Conference http://billsportsmaps

10 The “Fed” has regions http://midnight. hushedcasket

11 With special thanks to Debbie Lange

12 There are 3 types of regions

13 FORMAL REGION http://www. nationalgeographic
Also known as a uniform region It is characterized by a common human property, such as the presence of people who share a particular language, religion, nationality, political identity or culture, or by a common physical property, such as the presence of a particular type of climate, landform, or vegetation. Political entities such as counties, states, countries, and provinces are formal regions because they are defined by a common political identity. Other formal regions include climate regions (e.g., Mediterranean) Landform regions (e.g., Piedmont region of Pennsylvania) Economic regions (e.g., wheat belt of Kansas) Formal regions can be defined by measures of population, per capita income, ethnic background, crop production, population density and distribution, or industrial production, or by mapping physical characteristics such as temperature, rainfall, growing season

14 Germany is formal region http://harryallen

15 Corn Production (and Ethanol Plants) http://www. dailyyonder

16 FUNCTIONAL REGIONS http://www. nationalgeographic
Organized around a node or focal point with the surrounding areas linked to that node by transportation systems, communication systems, or other economic association involving such activities as manufacturing and retail trading. A typical functional region is a metropolitan area (MA) as defined by the Bureau of Census. For example, the New York MA is a functional region that covers parts of several states. It is linked by commuting patterns, trade flows, television and radio broadcasts, newspapers, travel for recreation and entertainment. Other functional regions include shopping regions centered on malls or supermarkets, area served by branch banks, and ports and their hinterlands.

17 A less formal look at functional regions
Defined by a set of activities, connections or interactions For example: Newspaper circulation area Commuter traffic patterns Subway systems in NYC, Boston, etc. Highway systems

18 NYC Subway – a functional region http://www. johnsonbanks. co

19 Perceptual Region http://www. nationalgeographic
Construct that reflects human feelings and attitudes about areas and is therefore defined by people’s shared subjective images of those areas Tends to reflect the element of people’s mental maps, and, although it may help to impose a personal sense of order and structure on the world, it often does so on the basis of stereotypes that may be inappropriate or incorrect. Examples such as: Southern California, Dixie, and the upper Midwest are perceptual regions that are thought of as being spatial units, although they do not have precise borders or even commonly accepted regional characteristics and names.

20 Just where is Dixie. http://upload. wikimedia

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