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Introduction to Geography Chapter 1: Introduction to Geography
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What is your perspective?
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Geography The study of the interaction of all physical and human phenomena at individual places and of how interactions among places form patterns and organize space.
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What Is Geography? ► Physical ► Human Cultural ► Cartography Making maps ► Remote Sensing Mapping Earth from satellites & aircraft ► Geographic Information Systems ► A way of thinking about problems, with interacting factors in a place
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5 Themes of Geography ► Location Where is it? ► Place What is it like? ► Human-environment interaction How do people relate to the physical world? ► Region How are places similar or different? ► Movement How do people, goods, ideas, etc. get from one place to another? LocationPlace Region Movement Human – Environment Interaction
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The Science of Geography ► Location Absolute location Relative location Answers the question “where?”
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The Science of Geography ► Region Area with uniform characteristics ► For example, topography, climate
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The Science of Geography ► Human-environment interaction How humans interact with the natural environment Effects humans have on the environment Effects the environment has on humans
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The Science of Geography ► Movement Across the earth’s surface Includes: ► Communications ► Transportation ► Circulation ► Diffusion
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The Science of Geography ► Place Characteristics make each place unique No place is exactly the same as another
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Development of Geography ► Classical Western World Erastosthenes Hipparchus ► Non-European World The Tribute of Yu Phei Hsiu Kangnido
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Ptolemy 150 A.D.
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Since the 1400’s… ► General geography Bernhard Varen ► Special geography Regional ► General geography Topical or systematic ► Human- environment tradition Alexander von Humboldt ► Cosmos
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Contemporary Geography ► 3 approaches Area analysis Spatial or locational analysis Geographic systems analysis “The information that any citizen needs in order to make an informed decision on an important question of the day is largely geographic.”
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Area Analysis ► Site Exact location of a place ► Situation or relative location Location of a place relative to other places Accessibility Constant change Scale ► Globalization Internal Asian Trade Routes in 1400
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Regions ► Formal regions Essential uniformity in one or more physical or cultural features
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► Functional regions Defined by interactions among places I.e. trade or communications Regions Television station viewing areas within Iowa
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► Vernacular regions Widespread popular perception of existence Regions
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Spatial Analysis ► Distribution ► 3 properties of distribution Density Concentration Pattern
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Movement ► Distance Measurements ► Absolute ► Time ► Cost Friction of distance ► Distance decay As distance increases, importance of a particular phenomena decreases
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Diffusion ► Hearth Place where idea begins ► Relocation diffusion ► Contiguous or contagious diffusion ► Hierarchical diffusion ► Barriers to diffusion Distance & time Physical barriers Cultural barriers
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4 Physical Systems ► Atmosphere (air) ► Lithosphere (Earth’s solid rocks) ► Hydrosphere (water) ► Biosphere (living organisms)
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Human-Environmental Interaction ► Reciprocal interaction ► Culture Everything about the way people live Language, food, religion, social ceremonies ► Natural landscapes Without evidence of human activity ► Cultural landscapes How humans modify local environment
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The Geographic Grid ► Latitude Location on Earth’s surface between equator & N Pole or S Pole 0-90 ° N or S Parallels ► Longitude Measures distance E & W around globe Prime Meridian International Date Line 0-180 ° E or W
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Prime Meridian and Standard Time Prime Meridian and Standard Time ► Prime Meridian in 1884 & GMT established ► Time zones – 1 hour for each time zone 360 deg / 24 hr = 15 deg / hr (rotation of earth)
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International Dateline ► 180 th meridian ► One day later west of this line ► Each day officially begins here at 12:01 am International Dateline
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Map Making ► Cartography ► Scale Fraction1/24,000 Ratio1:24,000 Written statement “1 inch equals 1 mile” Bar style ► Detail and area Small scale map = less detail, large denominator (1:1,000,000) Large scale map = more detail, small denominator (1:100,000) 0 1243
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Seattle, WA at different scales
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Globe vs. Flat Map Globe vs. Flat Map ► Globe Scale model of Earth ► Best model representing Earth – 3D ► Not practical Not easy to carry Only see ½ at a time Only “small scale” ► Maps are 2D Distortion ► Projections try to minimize distortion
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Projection ► Scientific method of transferring locations on Earth’s surface to a flat map ► 4 types of distortion Shape Size
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Conformal and Equal Area Projections
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Interrupted Projection
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Robinson Projection ► One of the most popular compromises between equivalent and conformal projections
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Automated Cartography ► Manual techniques expensive ► Computer-aided Drawing (CAD) ► Application to map making Sophisticated, specialized digital cartography systems Drawing & editing on video monitor before printing Fast, inexpensive, easy editing & updating
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Remote sensing ► Acquiring data from high-flying aircraft or satellites orbiting Earth
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Satellites ► Landsat First: 1972 Most recent (Landsat 7): 1999 Next: 2012 Sensors measure radiation of colors of visible light ► Pixel Size of area sensed Measure of resolution ► Weather satellites Very large pixels
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Aerial Photo of Banda Aceh Coast Before Tsunami
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Aerial Photo of Banda Aceh Coast After Tsunami
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Remotely Sensed Data ► Weather ► History & archaeology ► Environmental impacts ► Farmland quality ► Stream flow ► Urban expansion ► Military intelligence ► Commercial information Landsat images of Shenzen, China showing dramatic urban development in 8 years
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Global Positioning Systems (GPS) ► Developed for military use ► Now available to civilians ► Works via satellite signals ► Device must be outdoors, unobstructed by trees ► Uses: Transportation Land surveying Environmental assessment Automobile travel Hiking
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GIS ► Database software that includes spatial information Boundaries or coordinates Identifying locator (i.e. address) ► Locates item in space ► Layers Information with specific characteristics Can be combined for analysis
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Digital Geographic Information ► Raster Grid cells of data Pixels ► Vector Point, line, polygon data X & Y coordinates ► Different uses & spatial accuracies
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Digital Data ► Conversion of paper to digital formats Digitizing Scanning ► Available types of data Topographic maps ► Digital Raster Graphic (DRG) ► Digital Line Graph (DLG) US Fish and Wildlife Service National Wetlands Inventory Census Bureau maps of streets with addresses
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GIS Spatial Analysis ► Calculating densities and distribution of population ► Monitoring environmental changes ► 911 emergency response Links landlines to physical addresses Links cellular phones to transmission towers ► Relational databases ► Online address mapping & directions ► Disparities in availability of information Lack of resources Government secrecy
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GIS Examples ► http://www.esri.com/ http://www.esri.com/ ► www.maps.google.com www.maps.google.com ► http://www.dcassessor.org/gis-mapping http://www.dcassessor.org/gis-mapping ► http://maps.sarpy.com/sims20/ http://maps.sarpy.com/sims20/ ► Remote sensing and GIS by NASA Connect Remote sensing and GIS Remote sensing and GIS
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End of Chapter 1
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