World Regional - Intro
Geography, Maps and Location
(Chapter 1. pp. 1-10)
Geography
A.What is geography?
- Discuss
- Pulsipher definition: the study of our planet’s surface and the processes that shape it
- National Geographic standards definition: the science of space and place on Earth's surface…an integrative discipline that brings together the physical and human dimensions of the world in the study of people, places and environments
- spatial perspective distinguishes geography
a.Where is something?
b.Why is it there?
c.How did it get there?
d.How does it interact with other things?
- Dec 2000 Annals of the AAG: “In the beginning was geography”
- Integrative discipline: links physical sciences with social sciences
- Fields
- Regional geography
- Subdisciplines - topical emphasis
- Integrative: environmental studies
- tools of geographer - used in any field:
- maps: cartography, GIS
- remote sensing: aerial photos, satellite images
- Why study geography
- Region as a concept (Pulsipher pp. 7-10)
- region: unit of earth’s surface that contains distinct environmental or cultural patterns
- traits of a region
- homogeneity
- defined by multiple factors: political/cultural/physical
- regions vary greatly in size
1)scale: variable-sized units of geographical analysis
2)regional geography: analysis of the geographic characteristics of a particular place, the size and scale of which can vary radically
- boundaries are blurred and debatable
- change over time
Maps and Map Projections(pp. 6-7)
A.Importance of Maps
- primary tool of geographer
- graphic display of data
- advantages
- display enormous amounts of info
- spatial representation suggests relationships
- disadvantage: they can “lie”
- Types of Maps
- general/multipurpose
- thematic: single topic/theme; spatial distribution of cultural or physical phenomena
- choropleth: map using predefined areas
- isorhythmic: data pattern defines area
- Why/how maps lie
- Scale
- relationship of distance on a map to the actual distance on the earth’s surface
- types of scale:
1)verbal
2)graphic
3)RF - representative fraction
- comparing map scale - large v. small scale map
1)the larger the fraction, the larger the scale of the map
2)larger scale maps show smaller areas in more detail
- how/why scale makes maps lie: simplification
- Projection
- the systematic transformation of locations on the earth to locations on a map
- problem: getting curved surface of earth on a flat plane
- properties distorted
1)shape
2)area
3)distance
4)direction
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Exercise comparing sizes
Student sketch maps
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Absolute Location on Earth (pp. 3-6)
- Properties of the earth
- sphere
- rotates on polar axis (N/S poles) day/night
- polar axis tilted at 23.5
- Locating places on the earth – creating a grid system
- latitude/longitude
- cardinal directions: N, S, E, W
- 3 fixed points:
- center of earth
- north pole
- south pole
- great and small circles create 2 sets of lines for grid:
- lines of latitude – parallels
- lines of longitude – meridians
- Earth’s grid
- starting points:
1)equator
2)prime meridian
- locating places using the earth’s grid
1)360 in a circle
2)lines of latitude measure how far N/S of equator
a)range: 0 at equator 90 N/S at poles
3)lines of longitude measure how far E/W of prime meridian
a)range: 0 at prime meridian 180 E/W at international date line
4)use degrees, minutes, seconds (1 = 60'; 1' = 60")
- distances
1)1 latitude 69 miles (111 km)
2)longitude more problematic - meridians converge at poles:
a)1 long 69 miles/111 km only at equator
b)at 60N/S, 1 long 35 mi/56 km
- 4 other important circles:
1)Tropic of Cancer @ 23.5 N
2)Tropic of Capricorn @ 23.5 S
3)Arctic Circle @ 66.5 N
4)Antarctic Circle @ 66.5S
- REMINDER:
1)parallels run E/W and measure distances N/S of the equator
2)meridians run N/S and measure distances E/W of the prime meridian
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Handout Map and Data Worksheet #1 – Due 1 week
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Intro: Geography, Maps and Locations - p. 1 of 3