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Explore the concept of time-space convergence, the reduction of distances due to advancements in transportation and communication. Learn about the global village, examples, calculations, and local impacts of this phenomenon.
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The impression that distances between two locations have decreased because of the advances in communications and transportation systems. Time-Space Convergence
The concept of global village means that the world has seemed to grow smaller because of major advances in transportation and communications technology. • These changes allow people, goods, and information to move from one location to another much more quickly than they could before. • Because we tend to measure the distance from point to point by minutes rather than kilometers, this reduction in travel time between locations is similar to a reduction in the actual distance between two places.
Example • The early sailing vessels averaged 6km/h. The Concorde jetliner travels at approx. 1400km/h. • Geographers call this concept time-space convergence, or time-space compression. The rate of time-space convergence can be calculated by comparing the travel time required during two different time periods. • 1920 London to Halifax by ship 336 hours (2 weeks) • 1958 London to Halifax by first jet airliner 7 hours • Time savings = 329 hours! (336 hours-7 hours); This change occurred over 38 years (1958-1920)
Calculating Time-Space Convergence • Time-space convergence = 329 hours/38 years = 8.66 hours/yr • The average rate of time-space convergence between London and Halifax between 1920 and 1950 was 8.66 hours per year.
As with all averages, we must be careful in the way we interpret this figure. • In the example, it suggests that the time required to travel between London and Halifax decreased year by year. • In reality, the time stayed the same for many years and then, with the appearance of the first commercial liner, the travel time decreased drastically.
Local Examples of Time-Space Convergence • In the 1950’s local governments in Canada spent billions of dollars on infrastructure and improving the road systems. • At first, the new roads and lanes had the desired effect of reducing the commuting time for suburban residents to the city. • It did not take long however, before more people bought new cars and moved to the suburbs to take advantage of the easy access to the city. • These new commuters helped to clog the roads, reduce traffic flow and increase the travel time between the suburbs and the city. • When the distance between two locations seems to be increasing rather than shrinking, we call this time-space divergence.
Quick Fact • The flu epidemic of 1919 took about four months to spread around the world. • This was brought about largely by troops returning home in ships from the battlefields of the First World War in Europe. • Health officials estimate that today, because of the frequency and speed of intercontinental air travel, a flu epidemic could spread around the world in as little as four days!
ASSIGNMENT • Most of us assume that the shrinking of the world through improvements in transportation and communications has been as good thing. • Not everyone would agree with this idea. • Some people argue that the so-called improvements have had some negative results. • Create a two-column chart that lists the positive and negative aspects of time-space convergence.