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Unit 1 Review

Unit 1 Review. What is geography ?. HERE ARE SOME DEFINITIONS FOUND IN VARIOUS TEXTS. If "When?" is the realm of history, then "Where?" is the primary focus of geographic inquiry. Why what is where. Why what is where. tallest buildings fast food restaurants

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Unit 1 Review

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  1. Unit 1 Review

  2. What is geography ? HERE ARE SOME DEFINITIONS FOUND IN VARIOUS TEXTS If "When?" is the realm of history, then "Where?" is the primary focus of geographic inquiry.

  3. Whywhat is where.

  4. Why what is where. tallest buildings fast food restaurants slums volcanoes hurricanes center of city grouped together close to downtown edge of plates Caribbean region

  5. Space – • No, not the final frontier… • describes a two-dimensional location on a map Place • on the other hand is a less dry term, one that is used to describe a location that has meaning.

  6. Human Geography: Five Themes • Location – the space that is occupied in the universe (absolute/relative). • Place – physical and human characteristics: space after humans. • Human/Environment Interactions – how humans depend, modify, and adapt to their environments. • Movement – how humans interact on earth, the diffusion of religion or trade patterns through connections of peoples. • Regions – an area with one or more shared characteristics.

  7. How to Lie with maps • A map is a generalization or representation of the real world. • Cartography – the science of mapmaking. • Contemporary Mapping – • Remote Sensing Satellites • GIS (geographic information systems) • GPS (global positioning system) • All maps lie flat and all maps lie. They contain distortions. You cannot represent the three-dimensional earth on a flat surface without distorting reality. • Any useful map is selective in what is put in and left out. Example: road or subway map.

  8. Three sources of map distortion • Map scale – most maps are smaller than the reality they represent. Map scales tell us how much smaller. • Map projection – this occurs because you must transform the curved surface of the earth on a flat plan. • Map type – you can display the same information on different types of maps.

  9. Map scale – tells us relationship between distance on map and distance on earth’s surface • Ratio scale = ratio of map distance to earth distance. • 1:10,000 means that one inch on the map equals 10,000 inches earth’s surface; one centimeter represents 10,000 centimeters; or one foot equals 10,000 feet. • Recall a small fraction has a large denominator so that 1:100,000 is a smaller scale than 1:25,000. • A large-scale map depicts a small area with great detail. • A small-scale map depicts a larger area with little detail. Distortion is especially severe here.

  10. Which is the large-scale map? A. B. C. D.

  11. A. B. C.

  12. a. b. d. c.

  13. Map scale continued • Verbal scale – translates the representative fraction into words. • One inch represents one mile conveys more meaning than 1:63,630. • Used little in places where people use metric system. People familiar with centimeters and kilometers have little need for verbal scales to tell them that 1:100,000 means that one centimeter equals 1 kilometer or that 1:250,000 means that four centimeter represent one kilometer.

  14. Map scale continued • Graphic scale – is a simple bar scale that portrays distance on the map.

  15. Map projection is the way we fit earth’s three-dimensional surface onto flat paper or a screen

  16. Goode’s Projection

  17. Goode’s projection interrupts the oceans and tucks Australia and New Zealand farther west than in reality. Therefore, land masses appear relatively large compared to the oceans. • Minimized distortion in the shape of the various land masses and the size of one land mass compared to other land masses.

  18. Mercator Projection

  19. Mercator Projection • Stretches the poles from one length to the size of the equator. The north-south scale is constant, but east-west scale increases to twice the north-south scale at 60 degrees N and infinitely at the poles. • Shapes are correct for all areas, and map has correct directional relationships. • Look at the size of Greenland and Antarctica. • Map exaggerates the distance between Chicago and Stockholm, both in northern latitudes.

  20. Equal Area Projection

  21. Equal Area Projection • Represents areas correctly, but distorts shapes. • If South America is 8 times larger than Greenland on the globe, it will be 8 times bigger on the map.

  22. Robinson Projection

  23. Robinson Projection • Frequently used. • Distorts both size and shape, but not too much. • The major benefit of the Robinson projection is that oceans are uninterrupted. This projection is useful in depicting patterns of global interaction.

  24. Equal Area Projection

  25. Map Type – you can display the same information on different maps • A thematic map depicts a single feature, for example: climate, population, landform or land use. • Statistical – Demonstrate information - include dot, choropleth and proportional symbol • Types of maps: • Isoline – connects points of equal value • Choropleth – puts features into classes and then maps classes for each region • Cartogram – adjusts the size of the country corresponds to the magnitude of the mapped feature • Proportional symbol – size of the symbol corresponds to the magnitude of the mapped feature • Dot – each dot represents some frequency

  26. Isoline – connects points of equal value Choropleth – puts features into classes and then maps classes for each region

  27. Proportional symbol – size of the symbol corresponds to the magnitude of the mapped feature Cartogram – adjusts the size of the country corresponds to the magnitude of the mapped feature

  28. Dot – each dot represents some frequency Thematic- spatial distribution of one or more specific themes

  29. Other types of visual images: • Mental map = map of an area in your mind

  30. Bottom line: hundreds of decisions are made in the making of a map, including scale, projection, and type. These decision ultimately determine the map’s message.

  31. The acquisition of data about Earth’s surface from a satellite orbiting the planet is called remote sensing.

  32. Space/Location • Distribution – the arrangement of a feature in space. Three properties • Density – the frequency with which something occurs. • Concentration – the extent of a feature’s spread over space. Used to describe changes in distribution. • Clustered • Dispersed • Pattern – geometric arrangement of objects in space.

  33. Population Density

  34. REGION defined: A region constitutes an area that shares similar characteristics – de Blij

  35. Formal or Uniform Region • Can be defined by physical criteria • Or by cultural traits

  36. Functional or Nodal Region • The product of interaction, of movement; not necessarily homogenous, rather the people of the region function together – politically, socially, or economically • Will operate around a node • The surrounding area of a city • A newspaper circulation area

  37. Functional Region • Core area – it characterizing features are most clearly defined • Periphery – characteristics become less prominent toward the region’s margins

  38. Perceptual or Vernacular • Primarily in the minds of people – how people think about regions

  39. Diffusion The process by which an idea or innovation is transmitted from one individual or group to another across space - Fellman

  40. People move to a new area and take their culture with them – examples include- crops, culture, farming techniques, building styles Known as Relocation Diffusion Information about an innovation may spread through a society – examples include - Hybrid corn, Cd’s, a religious creed. Possibly through mass media advertisement— Known as Expansion Diffusion

  41. Relocation Diffusion

  42. Type of Expansion Diffusion • Contagious Diffusion • Hierarchical Diffusion • Stimulus Diffusion

  43. Contagious Diffusion • Diffusion that spreads like a disease – but not necessarily applying only to diseases! • Affects nearly uniformly all individuals and areas outward from the source region • Examples – influenza, HIV/AIDS, ideas on the world wide web

  44. Hierarchical Diffusion • The spread of an idea from persons or nodes of authority or power to other persons or places • Examples- Birkenstocks, Christianity, styles of clothing, music

  45. Stimulus Diffusion • A fundamental idea, though not the trait itself, stimulates imitative behavior • Examples – creation of a unique Cherokee written language, Beta vs. VHS, Macs, Siberians domesticated reindeers (after seeing domesticated cattle)

  46. Cultural Hearths An area where cultural traits develop and from which the cultural traits diffuse. Examples – Islam, agriculture,

  47. Time-Distance Decay The farther the place is from the hearth, the less likely an innovation is to be adopted. The acceptance of an innovation becomes less likely the longer it takes to reach its potential adopters. Cultural barriers work against diffusion.

  48. S-Curve Diffusion of innovations 3% - innovators, 13% early adopters, 68% majority, 16% laggards

  49. Vocabulary • Changing attributes of place (built landscape, sequent occupance) • Cultural attributes (cultural landscape) • Density (arithmetic, physiological) • Direction (absolute, relative) • Dispersion/concentration (dispersed/scattered, clustered/agglomerated) • Distance (absolute, relative) • Distribution

  50. Environmental determinism / Possibilism • Location (absolute, relative, site, situation, place name) • Pattern (linear, centralized, random) • Physical attributes (natural landscape) • Spatial (of or pertaining to space on or near Earth’s surface) • Spatial interaction (accessibility, connectivity, network, distance decay, friction of distance, time-space compression)

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