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Unit 1: Physical Geography
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Five Themes of Geography
Tools geographer’s use to study features on earth. Location Place Movement Region Human Environment Interaction
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Location Describes where places are at on earth. Types of Location:
ABSOLUTE: exact location on earth (fixed) Doesn’t change Latitude/Longitude Hemispheres Grid System Address RELATIVE: compared to other places (variable) Changes dependent upon where you’re comparing it to. Miles Distance Direction
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Absolute Location Examples: Rome is located at 41 N, 12 E
Argentina is located in the southern hemisphere Ecuador is located in Tropic of Cancer. LNE is located in Lincoln, NE.
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Relative Location Examples:
Rome is located near the Mediterranean Sea. Argentina is near Brazil. Ecuador is south of Mexico. Lincoln is 50 miles from Omaha.
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Place A place is defined by it’s unique characteristics.
Physical characteristics Cultural characteristics
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Physical Characteristics
Specific to THAT place, not generic. The way a place looks. Created by nature. Mountains Rivers, Lakes, Seas Climate Vegetation Examples: Andes Mountains are in South America. Amazon River flows through Brazil. Pampas are located in Argentina. The isthmus of Panama connects Central & South America.
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Cultural Characteristics
Specific to THAT place, not generic. Peoples activities change the way a place looks or is represented. Man-made or invented. Language Unique buildings Religious Practices Celebrations/traditions/holidays Examples: Portuguese is the official language of Brazil. Many Mexicans are Catholic. Mayan ruins are located in Mexico. Cinco de Mayo is a national holiday in Mexico.
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Movement Places do not exist in isolation. Examples
Interconnectedness of the world changes the way places“look”. Today: “globalization” People, goods & ideas move from place to place. Examples Immigration from Latin America to US. War in Iraq (troops, supplies, ideas, people) UNL (people, ideas) Myspace, Facebook (ideas)
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Region The world is divided into different regions based upon similarities & differences. Climate Location Beliefs Languages Ethnicity/Race Types: Formal Functional Perceptual
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Formal Region Regions designated by OFFICAL boundaries such as cities, states, counties and countries. They are clearly indicated and publically known.
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Functional Region A region whose territory is organized around something central, such as a newspaper. The distribution of a given local newspaper is limited to a certain area, which is its fucntional region.
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Perceptual Region An area defined by subjective perceptions that reflect the feelings & images about key place characteristics.
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HEI The environment & people are interconnected.
Consequences to those actions depend upon how people choose to interact with the world and use their resources. Positive/Negative Intentional/Accidental Favorable/Destructive
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HEI Current Enviromental Issues: Climate Change (global warming)
Energy Resources Water Conservation Deforestation
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Warm Up
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Who is this man and why is he famous?
Why should we care about this and what theme does this movie touch on?
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Maps
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Features of Maps Title: What the map is about.
Orientation/Compass Rose: Which direction north is? Date: When the map was made. Author: Who made the map?
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Features of Maps Legend/Key: List of symbols to help “read”/understand the map. Index: List of places on the map. Scale: The distance measured on the ground.
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3 types of maps Physical Political Special purpose/Thematic
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The World Political Political maps show how people have divided places on the Earth into countries, states, cities and other units for the purpose of governing them.
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Political Maps Political maps show how humans have impacted the landscape. For example, city names, roads, country borders, etc. are all part of political maps. A political map often uses colors to show the boundaries between states or countries.
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Political Maps Lets look at some examples of political maps.
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Political Maps
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The World Physical Physical maps show what the surface of the Earth looks like. A physical map highlights Earth’s natural features, such as mountains and forests.
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Special Purpose Maps: Global Climates
This map shows the general climate regions of the world.
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SP: World Religions Religious beliefs help define a people’s culture, so to understand a people, it is important to consider what religions influence that group.
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Oceans of the World The world has five major oceans. Atlantic Pacific
Arctic Indian Southern Pacific ocean Southern Arctic Indian Atlantic ocean
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Latitude and Longitude
The earth is divided into lots of lines called latitude and longitude.
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Lines Longitude lines run north and south. (the LONG sides of the ladder) Latitude lines run east and west. (the steps of the ladder) The lines measure distances in degrees. Longitude Latitude
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Where is 0 degree? Equator The Equator is 0 degree latitude.
It is an imaginary “belt,” or line, that runs halfway between the North Pole and the South Pole. Equator
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Where is 0 degree? The prime meridian is 0 degrees longitude. This imaginary line runs through England, France, Spain, western Africa, and Antarctica. P R I M E
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Hemispheres By using the Equator and Prime Meridian, we can divide the world into four hemispheres: The Northern Hemisphere The Southern Hemisphere The Eastern Hemisphere The Western Hemisphere
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Mapping Challenges
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Topography The lay of the land. Shows relief using contour lines.
Relief- highs and lows of Earth’s surface. Relief can be calculated Take the difference between the highest point and the lowest. Ex: Mountain peak 20 m. lake 10m 20m- 10m= 10m The relief of this area is 10m
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Reading a topographic map- Contour Lines
Lines on topographic maps. Elevation- the distance something is above sea level. Sea level= 0m or 0ft.
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Contiguous sharing a common border; touching.
Ex: "the 48 contiguous states” of the US
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The Problem of Cartography
Cartographers (Mapmakers) Gathering Information Problem of Distortion Round world…flat paper Distortion of… Area Shape Distance Direction Map Properties Map Projections
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Gathering Information
Surveying Aerial Photography (Air Planes) Remote Sensing (Satellites)
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GIS! Satellite Images—pictures from above the earth
GIS (Geographic Information Systems)—draw computer-generated maps from data
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Early Maps-No GIS Columbus’s Time—no Americas, continents poorly shaped Today—satellite images aid in correcting shape, size, etc.
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Problem of Distortion Features are stretched to put Earth’s information onto a map.
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Map Properties No map can have all of the properties at once
Equal areas Conformality Consistent Scale True-Compass Directions
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Points to Remember The projection one chooses to use depends on the information one wants. All Maps are projections – they transfer Earth’s features from the globe to a flat surface (map). When large areas of Earth are mapped, distortion is more serious. When mapping small areas like cities, distortion is not usually evident.
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