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Chapter 2 Communities are Places http://photohome.com/pictures/texas-pictures/houston/downtown-houston- 1a.jpg
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Lesson One Where On Earth Is Your Community? Location: The place where communities are found Near water or land Mountain Range: large group of mountains Himalaya Mountain range in Asia is the largest mountain range in the world Continent: largest land areas on Earth
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Water or Land Water – Earth’s 4 oceans 1.Pacific Ocean 2.Atlantic Ocean 3.Indian Ocean 4.Arctic Ocean Land – Earth’s 7 Continents 1.Africa5. Europe 2.Antarctica6. North America 3.Asia7. South America 4.Australia
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On a Globe Globe:Model of the planet earth and shows the true shapes of the oceans and continents Hemisphere : Half of the globe ( “Hemi” half “Sphere” globe) Equator: Imaginary line that is halfway between the North Pole and the South Pole
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On a Map Map:A picture that shows the location of things Nation: Or country – an area of land with its own people and laws Border:Line on a map that shows where a state or nation ends – a border shows a nation or states shape
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Read a Map Map Title:Tells was the map is about Map Symbols: A symbol that stands for something real on Earth Map Key: A box on a map in which map symbols are explained; also called a map legend Distance Scale: Map feature used to measure the distance between two places Compass Rose: Drawing on a map that shows the cardinal directions Cardinal Directions:The 4 main directions – North, South, East and West
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Lesson Two Communities are Different Sizes
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Communities are different, but many share the same name. More than 20 communities have chosen the name Washington to honor our country’s first President. President:Leader of the United States
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Cities City: a large kind of community has a large Population: number of people Example: Washington D. C. ( important city because it is the capital city of the United States Capital City: city in which government leaders meet and work
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Suburbs and Rural Towns Suburbs: a small community that is close to a city Example: Spring or Tomball is a suburb of Houston Rural: Area is the countryside away from cities and large towns Example: Willis or Cut-N-Shoot are rural areas Transportation: moving of people or things from one place to another Example: subway, bus, car, train
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Lesson Three Every Community has a Story History: the story of what has happened in a place History of Eagle Colorado Native Americans were the first Americans around Eagle, Co. Ex. Utes American Indians In 1880’s silver was found in mountains. Pioneers: person who helps settle new land – these pioneers in Eagle, Co. were ranchers, farmers and miners Ancestors: someone in a person’s family, such as a great-great-grandparent, who lived a long time ago
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Eagle, Co. Community Begins: William Edwards was the founder: person who started the little settlement that later became Eagle Settled next to Brush Creek to be close to water supply Settlement: new community Homes/ranches were built close to railroad tracks so they could easily send/receive goods By 1940 Eagle, Co. had grown from 25 to 543 people (from a few homes to a small town) Eagle has continued to grow due to transportation (airport, interstate, snow ski resorts) Remains to same – people still live and work in this town. They raise their families and enjoy the mountains.
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Time Line Skill Time Line: a drawing that shows when and in what order events took place Read time line from left to right – events at left happened first and at right happened later Sequence: time order
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