1 / 24

World Regional Geography February 15, 2010

World Regional Geography February 15, 2010. Reading : Marston Chapter 4 pages 154-187, 192-193 (Darfur and Western Sahara), and 198-199 (Petroleum) Goode’s World Atlas pages 188-200 (Middle East) and 225-230 (North Africa). The Middle East & North Africa. Political Boundaries

trey
Download Presentation

World Regional Geography February 15, 2010

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. World Regional Geography February 15, 2010 Reading: Marston Chapter 4 pages 154-187, 192-193 (Darfur and Western Sahara), and 198-199 (Petroleum) Goode’s World Atlas pages 188-200 (Middle East) and 225-230 (North Africa)

  2. The Middle East & North Africa • Political Boundaries • Physical Geography • Physical Features & Topography • Climate • Land Use • Physiographic Regions • Human Geography • Population Characteristics • Key Concepts • Culture, Ethnicity, and Religion • History • Politics • The Politics of Oil • Economics • International Politics

  3. Political Boundaries

  4. The Middle East & North Africa • Why group the Middle East and North Africa? • Culture • Islamic Religion • Arabic Languages • Economics • Oil • Environment • Arid • “Middle East” or Southwest Asia

  5. Physical Features

  6. Sandstorm!

  7. Topography

  8. Temperature and Rainfall • Annual Rainfall • 75% of the Region receives less than 10 inches • Some desert areas average less than 1 inch • Mountain (orographic) and some coastal areas account for vast majority of regions rainfall. • Average Temperature • Large temperature variations in desert areas • Radiational cooling • Large variations can lead to wind/dust storms • More humid climactic regions = less extremes • Western Atlas Mountains • Turkey • Mediterranean Coast • Western Zagros & Elburz Mountains

  9. Rainfall

  10. Climate

  11. Land Use • Arable Land and Agriculture • Irrigated river valleys, coastline, and mountains • Forested Land: Agriculture and Grazing • Atlas and Pontic Mountians, Southern Sudan

  12. Physiographic Regions • Mountains • Major Ranges • Atlas • Zagros and Elburz • Taurus and Pontic • Asir and Yemen • Important sources of water • Tectonically active • Refuge for minority populations

  13. Physiographic Regions • Plateaus and Coastline • Plateau Regions • Iranian • Anatolian • Coastal Regions • Persian Gulf • Southeastern Red Sea • Eastern Mediterranean • Nile River Delta • Northwestern Africa • More rainfall • Higher population density

  14. Physiographic Regions • Deserts • Sahara • Libyan • Nubian • Arabian (Rub’ al Khali) • Extremely low rainfall • Major temperature variation • Oases • Very low population • Nomadic herders

  15. Physiographic Regions (338) • Riverine Landscapes • Major River Systems • Nile • Tigris and Euphrates • Agriculture • Support large populations • Political issues • Water rights • Access

  16. Environmental History • Domestication of Plants and Animals • Between 9000 and 7000 B.C. • Technological implications • Irrigation • Food storage • Milling • Major social implications • Long-term settlement • Non-agricultural (food-related) specialization • Trade and barter systems • Overexploitation • Forests and Soils • Animals • Water • Desertification • Overgrazing • Water withdrawal

  17. Environmental Issues

  18. Population Density

  19. Population Density: Egypt & Sudan

  20. Population Characteristics * Data missing for many countries

  21. Population Characteristics

  22. Migration A pull factor is a characteristic of the receiving region that draws migrants, while a push factor is a characteristic of the sending region that drives out-migrants. • Pull Factors • Oil • Guest workers • Jews returning to Israel • Push Factors • Lack of work • War • Civil unrest

  23. The Diaspora • Refugee Populations • Workers • Distribution of Middle Eastern Culture • Worldwide spread of Islam

  24. Wednesday • Culture and Ethnicity • Religion • Economics • The Politics of Oil

More Related