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Latin America: Ecological Colonizations

Latin America: Ecological Colonizations. Barbados. Peru. Bolivia. Cuba. Ecuador. Trinidad and Tobago. Guatemala. Argentina. Haiti. Argentina. Argentina. Southern Argentina. Bolivia. Venezuela. Latin America Features visible from outer space: Amazon R basin N-S mountain chain.

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Latin America: Ecological Colonizations

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  1. Latin America: Ecological Colonizations

  2. Barbados

  3. Peru

  4. Bolivia

  5. Cuba

  6. Ecuador

  7. Trinidad and Tobago

  8. Guatemala

  9. Argentina

  10. Haiti

  11. Argentina

  12. Argentina

  13. Southern Argentina

  14. Bolivia

  15. Venezuela

  16. Latin America Features visible from outer space: Amazon R basin N-S mountain chain

  17. Landforms of Latin America

  18. oceanic plates subducting

  19. Latin American Landforms: • Highlands • chain of mountains 10,000 miles long along western edge of American continents • Lowlands • to the east of Highlands • 2 exceptions: Guinea Highlands andBrazilian Highlands • Amazon Basin • Earth’s largest expanse of tropical rainforest • 20% of earth’s freshwater • more than 100,000 species of plants and animals • very deep basin so is navigable by large ships

  20. 4 Temperature-Altitude Zones

  21. Colonialism and the Columbian Exchange When people began to travel from the Old World to the New and back, lots of other creatures and plants crossed over the oceans with them. Some of the items Europeans brought back to Europe from Latin America include...

  22. Corn

  23. Tomatoes

  24. potatoes

  25. As well as: • manioc • chocolate (cacao) • peanuts • peppers • pineapples • cotton

  26. And some of the items Europeans brought to Latin America include... Sheep

  27. Olives

  28. Bananas

  29. Coffee

  30. Rats ...and a variety of diseases.

  31. As well as: • rice • sugarcane • citrus • melons • onions • apples • wheat, barley and oats

  32. The Columbian Exchange: the interchange of crops, animals, people, and diseases between the Old World of Europe and Africa and the New World of the Americas beginning with the voyages of Christopher Columbus in 1492.

  33. People indigenous to Latin America did not have immunity to many European diseases and when they were exposed to such diseases the death rate was high. A demographic collapse occurred in Latin America around 1500 due to rapid die-off from disease. It is estimated that up to 75% of the population of Latin America died due to epidemics of small pox, influenza and measles.

  34. European colonists turned the abandoned land into pasture for herd animals imported from Europe. European draft animals like donkeys, horses, mules, and oxen filled in Native American irrigation canals, drained lakes, and plowed complex gardens into single-crop fields.

  35. The exchange of animals and plants also had tremendous effects on landscapes and ecology around the world. Consider how coffee is now grown in Africa, how tomatoes influenced European cooking, how manioc and maize are now grown in west Africa and how potatoes became so important to Ireland and potato famine caused migration to the U.S., New Zealand, and Australia. Not to mention the impact of chocolate!

  36. Climate

  37. Precipitation: • Influence of Trade Winds • Influence of the Andes • Antarctic influence on southern Chile • Peru Current • Atacama Desert of northern Chile

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