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Download Geography PPT Unit 1-4
		                    
		                    
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					Geography Study of the Earth What is Geography?  Study of the physical features of the earth and its atmosphere  Study of spatial variation  How and why things differ from place to place on Earth.  Study of how observable patterns evolve through time. To Begin With…  1. I was going toward the east and turned left into a street. I was now going toward what direction?  North  2. I am lying in bed on my stomach with my head toward the south. Which wall of the room is to my left?  East More Questions…  3. A boy stood on a beach in the continental United States and looked out toward the setting sun over the ocean. Toward which ocean is he facing?  Pacific  He then turned sharply to the right. Which direction is he now facing?  North Why is Geography Important?  Geography is not just about maps  Geography is:  Human Economies, Societies, and Cultures  Plants, Animals, and Resources  Climate and Physical Environment  How all Things Affect Each Other:  Pattern Prediction, How things are Interconnected, Etc. Five Themes of Geography  1. Location  2. Place  3. Region  4. Human-Environment Interaction  5. Movement Theme: Location  The geographic question “Where is it?” refers to location.  Absolute and Relative Locations Absolute Location  Exact position of a mountain, river, or city on Earth’s surface using latitude and longitude  Ex. Hurricane Gustav is at 19*N 74*W Relative Location  Describes a place in relation to other places around it  Relative location can change  How? Theme: Place  The question “What is it like?” refers to place.  Place includes the physical features and cultural characteristics of a location.  Climate, landforms, and vegetation Las Vegas  What can you tell about this city based on this picture? Theme: Region  The question “How are places similar or different?” refers to region.  Regions usually have more than one characteristic that unifies them.  They may include physical, political, economic, or cultural characteristics.  Examples: South Asia, Europe, Midwest, the Sunbelt Theme: Human-Environment Interaction  The question “How do people relate to the physical world?” refers to the relationship between human and their environment.  People learn to use what the environment offers them and to change that environment to meet their needs. Theme: Movement  The question “How do people, goods, and ideas move from one location to another?”  Geographers are interested in the ways people, good, and ideas move from place to place. Geographers LOVE Maps!!!  Parts of a Map:   Compass Rose, Legend/Key, Scale Types of Maps:  Topographical  Physical  Political  Etc. Parts of a Map  Legend/Key  Compass Rose  Map Scale Map key or legend  Symbols on a map Compass Rose  An ornamental symbol showing all four compass points Map Scale  Line or bar that marks out how many inches or centimeters on the map equal how many miles or kilometers on Earth’s surface Types of Maps  Topographical  Physical  Political  Etc Topographical Map  A map that shows the relief of an area. Physical Map  A map that shows the relief of an area. Political Map  A map that shows the relief of an area. Map Projections Physical Geography  The student of the natural features of the earth’s surface  Including: land formation, climate, currents, and distribution of plants and animals The Solar System Planets:  Mercury  Venus  Earth  Mars  Jupiter  Saturn  Uranus  Neptune  (No longer Pluto) Orbit  The fixed path that a planet follows as it moves around the sun Revolution  Movement of the Earth around the sun: contributes to the seasons of the year. Takes 365 ¼ days. Movement  1. The Earth is rotating at 1000 miles per hour.  2. The Earth is revolving at 66,000 miles per hour.  3. The Milky Way is moving at 1.3 million miles per hour. Axis  Imaginary line that passes through the center of the planet from pole to pole on which the Earth rotates  Earth is tilted 23 ½ degrees Rotation  Turning of the Earth on its axis, causing night and day (takes 24 hours) Make Up of Earth  Crust: Band of solid rock at the Earth’s surface that floats on the mantle  Mantle: A partly melted, hot inner layer of rock between Earth’s crust and its core  Outer Core: Layer of Earth made of hot molten iron and nickel  Inner Core: The innermost portion of the Earth, made up of a solid 1,560 mile wide ball of iron and nickel Plates  Enormous moving pieces of the Earth’s crust. Plate Tectonics  The study of large scale movements of Earth’s crust  Most of the Earth’s volcanoes are found along the plate boundaries. Landforms are caused by moving plates  There are four types of landforms:  Mountain  Hill  Plateau  Plain Lava  Liquid rock forced out of the ground onto the surface by volcanic activity; Magma that has reached the Earth’s surface is called lava.  The liquid rock inside the Earth is called magma. Dome  Large formation created by underground magma that warps Earth’s surface  Picture at top is a lava dome inside Mount St. Helens Ring of Fire  Zone around the rim of the Pacific Ocean where many of the active volcanoes are located. Aquifer  An underground layer of rock that stores water. Weather  The temperature and rainfall conditions of any place on a given day Climate  The average of weather conditions over a period of years Latitude  Lines that run east to west on the globe but measure north to south  Also called parallels Equator  0 degrees latitude Longitude  Lines that run north to south on the globe but measure east to west  Also called Meridians Prime Meridian  0 degrees Longitude and runs through Greenwich, England Tropic of Cancer  23 ½ degrees north Tropic of Capricorn  23 ½ degrees south Arctic Circle  66 ½ degrees north Antarctic Circle  66 ½ degrees south Question for You  Why do we need to know how to locate latitude and longitude? High latitudes or Polar regions  All of the area north of the Arctic Circle (66 ½ degrees north)  All of the area south of the Antarctic Circle (66 ½ degrees south)  Cold Low Latitudes or Tropics  23 ½ degrees north latitude to 23 ½ degrees south latitude  Hot Middle Latitudes  23 ½ degrees north to 66 ½ degrees north  23 ½ degrees south to 66 ½ degrees south  Temperate Why Weather Matters  How does weather affect cultural and societal development?  Differing theories  Environmental Determinism  Possibilism  Does weather affect where people live?  Yes! Look at population density around the world. Continents  Ural Mountains separate Europe from Asia Continent Questions  1. Largest continent  Asia  2. Smallest continent  Australia  3. Touches the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans  Antarctica More Questions  4. Contains the Alps  Europe  5. Contains the Amazon River  South America  6. The continent with the largest population  Asia  7. Cape of Good Hope at its southern tip  Africa  8. Contains the worlds longest river  Africa More Questions  9. Separated from Asia by the Isthmus of Suez  Africa  10. Contains the tallest mountain  Asia  11. What are the tallest mountains?  Himalayas Mt. Everest in the Himalayas  Approx. 29,035’ high  In Asia Mariana Trench  Deepest point in the ocean  Approx. 36,201’ deep  Off coast of Japan
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            