Title: Setting up your notebook
1Setting up your notebook
2Topic
Subject/Concepts
Details
Examples/quotes/key point
3The Five Themes of Geography A Framework for
Studying the World
4Geographic Tools
1
- Geography means writing about or describing
the earth. - Geographers use technological tools such as
sonar, satellites, and the global positioning
system (GPS) to study locations on the earths
surface. - Growing in importance are graphic information
systems (GIS), which use computer technology to
analyze and display data about the earths
surface to solve geographic problems. - Geographic concepts help organize the way people
think about geography.
5Geographys Five Themes
1
Five questions can help organize information
about places
- What is the location of a place?
- What is the character of a place?
- How are places similar to and different from
other places? - How do people, goods, and ideas move between
places? - How do people interact with the natural
environment of a place?
6Theme 1 Location
- Two Types of Location
- Absolute
- Relative
- Where is It?
- Why is It There?
7Absolute Location
- A specific place on the Earths surface
- Uses a grid system
- Latitude and longitude
- A global address
8LOCATION
Absolute Location in practice
9LOCATION
Absolute Location in practice
Not very accurate in the beginning
10LOCATION
Absolute Location in practice
Satellite and Global Positioning Systems
11North Carolina
- Absolute Location
- North Carolina
- 36 N Latitude
- 79 W longitude
- Chapel Hill
- 35 55' N Latitude
- 79 05' W Longitude
12Relative Location
- Where a place is in relation to another place
- Uses directional words to describe
- Cardinal and intermediate directions
13North Carolina
- North Carolina is bordered by Virginia on the
north, South Carolina and Georgia on the south,
and Tennessee on the west. - The Atlantic Ocean forms North Carolina's east
coast. - North Carolina is one of the Southeastern States
14LOCATION
Relative Location in practice
Near what city??
15Question
- Who can describe the RELATIVE location of
California?
16Theme 2 Place
- Physical Characteristics
- Human Characteristics
17Theme 2 PlacePhysical Characteristics
- Land Features
- Mountains, plains, and plateaus
- Climate
- Bodies of Water
18PLACE
- All places have attributes that give them meaning
and character and distinguish them from other
places on earth. - Physical Characteristics The physical
characteristics of a place make up its natural
environment and are derived from - geological, hydrological,
- atmospheric, and
- biological processes.
- They include
- land forms,
- bodies of water,
- climate, soils,
- natural vegetation
- animal life.
19PLACE
Physical Characteristics
Those physical features about a place that make
it unique
20PLACE
Physical Characteristics
Where are these places??
21PLACE
Physical Characteristics
Where would you find these animals??
22PLACE
Physical Characteristics
What are some of the physical characteristics
that make Leland unique
23Theme 2 PlaceHuman Characteristics
- People
- Culture
- Language
- Religion
- Buildings and Landmarks
- Cities
24PLACE
- Human Characteristics
- The human characteristics of a place come from
human ideas and actions. - They include bridges, houses, and parks.
- Human characteristics of place also include land
use, density of population ,language patterns,
religion, architecture, and political systems.
25PLACE
Human Characteristics political systems.
26PLACE
Human Characteristics Architecture
27PLACE
Human Characteristics
28PLACE
Human Characteristics
29Theme 3 Human Environment Interaction
- How People Interact With Their Environment
- People . . .
- Adapt to Their Environment
- Modify Their Environment
- Depend on Their Environment
http//www.fotosearch.com/comp/corbis/DGT119/BAG00
17.jpg
30Human/Environmental Interaction
- Examples
- people who live in the northeastern United States
use heating units to keep their homes warm in
winter - People in the southern part of the country use
air conditioning much of the year to stay cool in
the heat. - The ways people choose to adapt to their
settings reflect their economic and political
circumstances and their technological abilities.
-
31Human/Environmental Interaction
Desert
Savanna
Tropical
32Human/Environmental Interaction
Desert
33Human/Environmental Interaction
Prairie
34Human/Environmental Interaction
The earths Vegetation Zones, Natural Resources,
Energy Development play a significant factor in
that development.
35Human/Environmental Interaction
The earths Vegetation Zones, Natural Resources,
Energy Development play a significant factor in
that development.
36Theme 4 Movement
- The Mobility of
- People
- Goods
- Ideas
- How Places are linked to one another and the world
37MOVEMENT
- The theme movement addresses this question
- How and why are places connected with one
another? - Relationships between people in different places
are shaped by the constant movement of people,
ideas, materials, and physical systems such as
wind, plate tectonics and volcanoes.
38MOVEMENT
- Movement of People
- Immigration/Emigration,
- Urbanization
- Population
-
- Movement of Land
- Plate tectonics
- earthquakes
- volcanoes
39MOVEMENT
Movement of People
Understanding the patterns of human movement, the
causes, and outcomes of that movement, and the
process of that movement
40MOVEMENT
Movement of Land
41Theme 5 RegionsFunctional, Formal, Perceptual
- What Places Have in Common
- Political Regions
- Landform Regions
- Agricultural Regions
- Cultural Regions
42REGION
- an area that has unifying characteristics that
give it a sense of cohesiveness and make it
distinct from other regions.
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49Formal Regions within a Formal Region
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57Now you try it
- State of Texas
- State of California
- Santa Clara County
- Country of Germany
- Chinatown, SF
- Silicon Valley
- Rust Belt
- Amazon River Basin
- Formal Region
- Formal Region
- Formal Region
- Formal Region
- Perceptual Region
- Functional Region
- Functional/Perceptual
- Functional Region