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Mapping the US: Movie Titles and State Locations

This chapter explores basic concepts of geography, including maps and how geographers describe the location of things. It also discusses map scale, spatial associations, projections, and the geographic grid.

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Mapping the US: Movie Titles and State Locations

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  1. Chapter 1(Rubenstein 11th ed.) Basic Concepts of Geography

  2. Key Issue 1 A map of the US based on movie titles & state location How Do Geographers Describe Where Things Are?

  3. Maps • Geography = Greek word • Geo = earth; graphy = to write • Geography is the study of where things are found on the Earth’s surface and why they are at that location Map of Chicago’s neighborhoods Street map of Chicago

  4. Maps • Geographers think SPACIALLY • Where are things located on the Earth and why? • Maps are a geographer’s basic & most important tool • A map is a 2D model of the Earth • Cartography = study of mapmaking • Maps serve 2 purposes: • 1. Reference tool • Where is the lake? How do I get to Joan’s house? What is the route for the fire escape? • 2. Communication tool – primary use for modern maps • How much land is used for cattle farming? How did each county vote in the local election? Where do most college graduates live in the US?

  5. Maps Public transportation in Hong Kong

  6. Map Scale • 1st question to ask: how much detail to include in your map? All maps are of Saint Viator High School

  7. Map Scale • Scale can be presented in 3 ways on a map • Ratio or Fraction • Expressed as: 1:b or 1/b • 1 unit : b number of units (1 ft = 1 mile, 1 inch = 10 miles, 1 meter = 49 meters, etc) • 1:10,000; 1/10,000; 1:8500; 1/65 • Written Scale • Describes distance in words • “1 inch equals 10,000 ft”; “1 cm equals 1 mile” • Graphic Scale • A bar line that shows distance

  8. Map Scale • Match the scale to the correct term • Graphic • Written • Ratio/Fraction

  9. Map Scale

  10. Large Scale Small Scale

  11. Spatial Associations @ Various Scales Spatial Association at Various Scales Death rates from cancer in the U.S., Maryland, and Baltimore show different patterns that can identify associations with different factors.

  12. Spatial Associations @ Various Scales 2012 Presidential Election County Results Blue = Obama Red = Romney Why is IL a “blue” state? More counties voted for Romney.

  13. Projection • Earth = sphere; Globe = sphere • Pros: accurately represent places on the earth • Cons: can’t add much detail, size and shape • Earth = sphere; Map = flat • Pros: can add much detail, very portable • Cons: image distortion • Projection = the scientific method of transferring locations on earth to a flat map • Distortion = inaccurate depiction of a place on a map • You Tube – West Wing “Why are we changing maps?”

  14. Projection • There are 4 types of distortion • Shape • Distance • Size • Direction

  15. U.S.-centered world map

  16. Asia-centered world map

  17. Geographic Grid • Meridians = lines drawn from one pole to the other; run north-south; meet @ poles • Measured in longitude (max = 180o) • Prime Meridian = 0o longitude • Parallels = lines drawn parallel to the equator; run east-west; never touch other parallels • Measured in latitude (max = 90o) • Equator = 0o latitude • Latitude & longitude measured in: • Degrees • Minutes • Seconds What is at: N 42o 5’ 40” W 87o 58’ 11”

  18. Geographic Grid • 360 divided by 15 = 24 • Each meridian = 15o wide • 24 total meridians around the Earth • Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) • Prime Meridian • Reference point for all time on Earth • 1 meridian = 1 hour • International Date Line • Move forward or back 24 hrs (depending on route of travel) • Located at 180o longitude

  19. Contemporary tools • GIScience = geographic information science • Uses satellites to obtain info about Earth • GPS = Global positioning system • GIS = Geographic Information System • Computer system that stores & analyzes data • Used to produce accurate maps • Info collected can be stored in layers (roads, names, water, etc.) • Mashup = mixing of layers of GIS info

  20. Key Issue 2 • Why Is Each Point on Earth Unique?

  21. Place • Place = specific point on Earth distinguished by a particular characteristic • Location = the position something occupies on the Earth’s surface • 3 ways to indentify location • Place name • Site • Situation

  22. Place Name • Toponym = name given to a place on Earth • St. Louis, Rocky Mountains, Gobi Dessert, Andalusia, Oakton St. • Names determined by any number of factors • Famous person (Martin Luther King High School) • Connection to area (Dunton St. – William Dunton = founder of Arlington Heights) • Natural landmarks (Nile Delta) • Conquest (Constantinople / Istanbul) • Origin of settlers (Witwatersrand = rocky hills near Johannesburg, South Africa; Dutch name)

  23. Situation • Situation = location of a place in relation to other places • Allows comparisons between unfamiliar places with familiar ones • Allows understanding of importance of a location. • * See Site & Situation PowerPoint

  24. Site • Site = physical characteristic of a place • Climate, topography, soil, vegetation, latitude, elevation • Site factors influence settlement locations • protection? trade routes? natural resources? • Humans can modify a site Northerly Island in Chicago is a man-made peninsula.

  25. Region • Region: an area defined by one or more distinctive characteristics • A place can be included in more than one region • Can be applied to any area smaller than the planet • Ex: Latin America, Bible Belt, Wrigleyville • Cultural landscape: combination of cultural features (ex: language, religion), economic features (ex: agriculture, industry), & physical features (ex: climate, vegetation) • There are 3 types of regions: • Formal • Functional • Vernacular

  26. Formal Region • Also called “uniform region” • Area where everyone shares one or more distinctive characteristics • Can be cultural (ex: common language), economic (ex: production of one product – Detroit & cars), or environmental (ex: same climate) • Some regions the characteristic may be predominant, not universal. (see pg. 16 election map for example)

  27. Functional Region • Also called nodal region • Area organized around a node or focal point • Central focused and importance diminishes further from epicenter • Ex: radio station reach – Chicagoans care about WSCR 670 AM sports talk but even though you can hear the broadcast in Indianapolis & St. Louis, those residents don’t care as much about Chicago sports

  28. Map of WSCR broadcast range

  29. Vernacular Region • Also called perceptual region • Area people believe exist as a part of cultural identity • Drawing a mental map of a place

  30. Divide the US based on your impressions

  31. Culture • Culture: beliefs, customs, traditions, social structure, and tangible items of a group of people • Has two different meanings: • To care about: to worship • To take care of: to look after something • What people care about • Ideas, beliefs and values • Ex: language, religion, politics, race, social status • What people take care of • Production of material • Ex: food, clothing, art

  32. Spatial Association • Regions • A wide lens in viewing an area may not be accurate in describing a region

  33. Key Issue 3 • Why are Different Places Similar?

  34. Scale: From Local to Global • Scale: relationship between portion of Earth being studied and the Earth as a whole • Globalization: force or process that involves the entire world & results in making something worldwide in scope

  35. Globalization of the Economy • Example: 2008 recession • 1st global recession • Housing prices increase • Banks giving loans @ low interest rates • Banks giving loans to high-risk applicants • Wealthy bought 2 or 3 homes as investments

  36. Globalization of the Economy • People stopped buying homes • People couldn’t keep up with mortgage payments • Value of homes drops • Selling a home for less than purchase price • People not buying furniture, tvs, pools, shower curtains, etc. • Companies that make household items lose money and fire workers to keep from going bankrupt

  37. Globalization of the Economy • Globalization led by transnational corporations • Globalization leads to specialization • Each place contributes a specific part based on local assets (ex: natural resources, labor, research, transportation, etc.) • Ex: Nike • HQ: Oregon • Shoes made in Asia • Charities in Africa • Sponsors soccer teams • Sold worldwide FC Barcelona jersey

  38. Globalization of Culture

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