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ge·og·ra·phy A science that deals with the description, distribution, and interaction of the diverse physical, biological, and cultural features of the earth's surface Source-Merriam Webster Collegiate Dictionary
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Geography is the study of the earth and everything on it!
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The 5 Themes of Geography were developed by the National Geographic Society as a method for studying geography. The themes help us categorize geographic information
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Question investigated: Where is it? Two categories of location: Absolute location Relative location
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Absolute Location A specific place on the Earth ’ s surface Uses a grid system Latitude and longitude A global address
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Where a place is in relation to another place Uses directional words to describe
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Question investigated: What is it like? The 2 categories are: - physical places Human places
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Physical characteristics of the environment Eg. Resources, climate, landforms, water features, natural vegetation, wildlife… Note: anything distinctive and comes from nature!
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Human elements of a place Eg. Occupations, recreation, settlement types and patterns, political, economic, religious beliefs, ideas, language…etc Note: features must be distinctive and a product of human efforts!
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http://www.fotosearch.com/comp/corbis/DGT119/BAG0017.jpg Question investigated: How does the physical place influence human activities? How do human activities alter the physical place? Two Categories of interaction... Human adaptation Human alteration
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Humans adapt to their environment Examples: adapt to climate (shelter, clothes, work hours…)
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Humans alter their natural environment using technology Examples:
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Question investigated: How do people, goods and ideas move from place to place? Two categories of interaction... Material movement Non-material movement
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This involves obvious movement using some type of land, water, or air vehicle Example: Moving people, animals, or other material things
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This involves less obvious forms of movement Examples: movement of energy and information through electric wires/fiber optics (this technology has an impact on human-environment interaction!) Movement of ideas/beliefs from one place/culture to another
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Question investigated: What areas have unifying/common features? We identify ‘areas’/’regions’ according to the existence of /unifying common features Three categories of region... Formal region Functional region Vernacular region
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Many features can be used to define regions ‘formal regions’ Formal regions share one or a number of unifying/common features. Eg. Landform, climate, language, politics, religion, culture…etc Formal regions include… Landform regions, climate regions, language regions, political regions, religious regions, cultural regions…etc. Example: provinces, countries, cities (defined by boundaries) Example: cultural enclaves of T.O. (Chinatown, Little India) Example: One region may various common features… 80% speak French as their first language 85% are practicing Roman Catholic Christians
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Functional regions are defined by a function (an interactive system). The defining characteristics are the interconnected parts. Example: newspaper service area, cell phone coverage area, urban area (CBD), ecosystems (natural functional region)
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Vernacular regions are defined by ordinary people’s (subjective) perceptions. These perceptions reflect their feelings and images about places. Eg. ‘the south’, ‘the west’…
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Mr. Help! M Movement R Region HE Human Environment Interaction L Location P Place
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TASK: journal writing TOPIC: Describe a place you love by addressing all 5 themes of geography.
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