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The Earth: Our Home
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Spaceship Earth What colors represent the earth? Blue—why? Brown & Green—why? White—why? Earth's changeable environments Most recent Geologic Epoch?
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Start of Cenozoic
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Organizing Humanity Paleolithic period Simple stone tools and fire Amount of available living space increased Allowed human movement Small isolated groups Leisure Time: Cave paintings Formal communication, belief systems & customs The environmental result?
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Organizing Humanity: Domestication of Plants Caring of plants Different from plant domestication Plant domestication in the Holocene (last 10,000 years) Southeast Asia Combination of human settlements, forest margins, and freshwater streams Root crops may have been first
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Organizing Humanity: Domestication of Plants Planned cultivation of seed plants is complex (Nile?) Majority believe it started in the Fertile Crescent Marked the beginning of the First Agricultural Revolution Interglaciation Effect
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Organizing Humanity: Domestication of Animals Took place during same period as plant domestication Goats in the Zagros Mountains (Iran) Sheep in Anatolia (Turkey) Useful animals…
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Organizing Humanity: Early Settlements and Networks Farm village network Social stratification Nonfarmers vs. farmers Creation of a social ladder Conflict and competition
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Nazca-Wari-Inca Succession
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Organizing Humanity: Early Settlements and Networks (cont.) Rise of cities in Southwest Asia uncertain Fertile Crescent not alone…
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Organizing Humanity: The Next Stage of Human Development Political states had not yet developed Fertile Crescent gained political power: Ancient Babylon
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Ziggurat
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Organizing Humanity: The Next Stage of Human Development Emergence of large cities = significant political and geographic developments Stage set for the rise of Greece and Rome Idea of “the state” spread Today Earth’s living space = > 200 states, dependencies, and other territories Few hunter-gatherer/subsistence farmers
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Imprints of Humanity Why was the Holocene different? How did Holocene humanity transform the Earth?
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Contemporary Framework: Land & Space
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Contemporary Framework: Land & Climate
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PEOPLE: LOCATION, DISTRIBUTION, AND DENSITY
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What are the issues? Present distribution Population growth Migration and refugees Population policies
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Elements of population geography Population and space Population distribution and density Arithmetic population density: area of country/total population Physiologic population density
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Population Density Isopleth Map
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Population Density Dot Map
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Major Population Concentrations
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East & South Asia
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Europe
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North America
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Major Population Concentrations Other regions Southeast Asia South America, Africa, and Australia do not have comparable population concentrations
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Java
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Australia South America
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Major Population Concentrations Room to Grow: South America and Australia Japan Small island country with very limited farmlands High population density Mr. Baseball quote: “We take things and make them better…”
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Discussion Question #1 You have been offered an extremely well-paid opportunity to lead a tour group consisting of travelers from North America to Australia and New Zealand. How could you use the Köppen Climate Classification System to help answer some of their questions? The travelers are from Vancouver, Phoenix, Miami, and San Francisco
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Discussion Question #2 Some of the world’s largest cities, such as Mumbai (Bombay), Shanghai, and Cairo, lie in countries that rank among the world’s least urbanized cities. Explain this apparent contradiction
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