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World Regional Geography

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World Regional Geography Chapter 6: A Geographic Profile of the Middle East & North Africa Fig 6.26 * Fig 6.8 * Fig 6.9 * Fig 6.10 * Fig 6.11 * Fig 6.12 * * Fig 6.13 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: World Regional Geography


1
World Regional Geography
  • Chapter 6 A Geographic Profile of the
    Middle East North Africa

2
6.1 Area Population
  • Middle East and North Africa
  • Middle East is Eurocentric
  • 21 Countries, Palestinian Territories of the West
    Bankand Gaza Strip, and the disputed Western
    Sahara
  • Area of 5.9 million square miles
  • Population of 500 million people (2007)
  • Turkey, Iran Egypt each have more than 70
    million people
  • People locate where water is abundant in this
    arid region
  • Region on the whole is 56 urban
  • High rate of population growth across region
  • Many oil-rich countries of the Gulf region
    havemore foreigners than citizens living in them

3
Middle East and North Africa
4
(No Transcript)
5
Comparison in Area LatitudeMiddle East North
Africa vs. Conterminous U.S.
6
Population Distribution
7
Population Cartogram
8
6.2 Physical Geography Human Adaptations
  • Margins of region are oceans, seas, high
    mountains, and deserts
  • Atlantic Ocean to the west
  • Sahara to the south
  • Mediterranean, Black, and Caspian Seas to the
    north
  • Hindu Kush and Baluchistan Desert to the east
  • Land composed of arid plains and plateaus
  • Large areas of rugged mountains
  • Isolated seas of sand

9
Physical Geography
10
6.2.1 Region of Stark Geographic Contrasts
  • Climate
  • Aridity
  • 75 percent of region receives lt 10 of annual
    precipitation
  • Higher precipitation around Mediterranean or up
    at elevation
  • Strategies of drought avoidance and drought
    endurance
  • Temperature
  • Large daily and seasonal ranges
  • Very hot days and surprisingly cool nights
  • Summer relocation of government in Saudi Arabia
  • Tectonic Processes
  • Collision zones have resulted in mountain
    building
  • Frequent earthquakes for places like Turkey,
    Iran,and Afghanistan

11
Climate Types
12
Biome Types
13
Great Sand Sea in Egypt
14
Land Use
15
The Treasury
16
Pontic Mountains in Turkey
17
The West Bank and The Dead Sea
18
Taurus Mountains of Turkey
19
Solar Boat of King Cheops
20
6.2.2 Villager, Pastoral Nomad, Urbanite
  • Middle Eastern Ecological Trilogy
  • Villagers
  • Subsistence farmers of rural areas where dry
    farmingor irrigation is possible
  • Pastoral Nomads
  • Desert peoples who migrate through arid lands
    with livestock, following rainfall and vegetation
    patterns
  • Urbanites
  • Inhabitants of large towns and cities, generally
    locatednear bountiful water sources

21
The Ecological Trilogy
22
6.2.3 The Village Way of Life
  • Historically, agricultural villagers represented
    the majority populations in the region
  • Villages located near reliable water sources with
    cultivable lands nearby
  • Production and consumption focus on a staple
    grain
  • Reliance on nomads for pastoral produce
  • Effects of exposure to outside influence
  • Introduction of cash crops
  • Improved and expanded irrigation
  • Modern technology
  • Rural-to-Urban Migration

23
6.2.4 The Pastoral Nomadic Way of Life
  • Pastoral Nomadism
  • Emerged as offshoot of village way of life
  • Vertical Migration in mountainous areas
  • Horizontal Migration in flatter expanses
  • Sedentarization is a recent trend
  • Nomads in region number estimated 5 to 13 million
  • Identified by their tribe, not be their
    nationality

24
6.2.5 The Urban Way of Life
  • The city was the final component to emerge in the
    ecological trilogy
  • Mesopotamia, 4000 B.C.E.
  • Egypt, 3000 B.C.E.
  • Medina (classic Islamic city)
  • High defensive wall
  • Congregational mosque
  • Administrative and educational complex
  • Bazaar or Suq (Commercial Zone)
  • Residential areas based on ethnicity, not income
  • Rural-to-Urban Migration
  • New modern urban development in oil-rich countries

25
Model of the Medina
26
Bazaar in Cairo, Egypt
27
Indoor Ski Resort in Dubai, UAE
28
6.3 Cultural Historical Geographies
  • Egypt and Mesopotamia are among theworlds great
    culture hearths
  • Language Families
  • Afro-Asiatic Family
  • Examples Semitic (Arabic Hebrew), Berber, and
    Bedawi
  • Altaic Family (Turkic)
  • Caucasian Family
  • Indo-European Family (Farsi and Kurdish)
  • Nilo-Saharan Family
  • Religious Hearth
  • Monotheistic faiths of Judaism, Christianity
    Islam

29
Languages of the Middle East North Africa
30
Religions of the Middle East North Africa
31
6.3.1 The Promised Land of the Jews
  • Judaism
  • First significant monotheistic faith
  • Practiced today by 14 million worldwide
  • Torah is the Jewish holy scripture
  • Unlike Christianity, Jesus not seen as a savior
  • Ethnic, not proselytizing religion
  • Western Wall in Jerusalem
  • The most sacred site in the world accessible to
    Jews

32
Holy Places in Jerusalem
33
6.3.2 Christianity Death Resurrection in
Jerusalem
  • Christianity
  • Offshoot of Judaism that emerged in Palestine
  • Jesus Christ
  • Born in Bethlehem around 4 B.C.E.
  • His teachings denied validity of many
    Jewishdoctrines and protesters called for his
    death
  • Jesus was put on trial, was found guilty of being
    aclaimant to Jewish kingship, and was crucified
  • Christians believe Christ was resurrected from
    thedead two days later and ascended into heaven
  • Seldom has Christianity been majority religion
    inthe land where it was born
  • Crusades (11th 14th centuries)

34
Church of the Holy Sepulcher
35
6.3.3 The Message of Islam
  • Islam
  • Monotheistic faith
  • Dominant religion by far in Middle East North
    Africa
  • Prophet was Muhammad, who was from Mecca
  • Quran is the holy book of Islam
  • Five Pillars of Islam
  • Profession of the faith
  • Prayer five times daily toward Mecca
  • Almsgiving
  • Fasting during Ramadan
  • Hajj, a pilgrimage to Mecca (Islams holiest city)

36
Great Mosque in Mecca
37
6.4 Economic Geography
  • Oil dominates the regions economic geography
  • Large reserves
  • Role of OPEC
  • Aim of taking joint action to demand higher
    profits
  • Other resources include
  • Remittances
  • Revenues from ship traffic through Suez Canal
  • Exports of cotton, rice, and other commercial
    crops

38
6.5 Geopolitical Issues
  • Historically, region has been a geographic
    crossroads
  • Geopolitical Interests
  • Narrow Waterways
  • Access to Oil
  • Access to Freshwater
  • Terrorism

39
6.5.1 Chokepoints
  • Chokepoints
  • Strategic narrow passageways on land or sea that
    may be easily closed off by force or even the
    threat of force
  • Examples Links
  • Suez Canal Mediterranean Red Seas
  • Strait of Tiran Gulf of Aqaba Red Sea
  • Strait of Hormuz Persian Gulf Arabian Sea
  • Bab el-Mandeb Red Sea Indian Ocean
  • Bosporus Mediterranean Black Seas
  • Dardanelles Mediterranean Black Seas
  • Strait of Gibraltar Mediterranean Sea
    Atlantic Ocean

40
Chokepoints
41
History of War in the Suez Canal Zone
42
6.5.2 Access to Oil
  • Regions oil is marketed primarily in western
    Europe and Japan
  • American Interest in Oil
  • Support for Israel while courting Israels
    oil-rich enemies
  • Carter Doctrine
  • U.S. would use any means necessary to defend its
    vital interests (i.e., Maintaining a secure
    supply of Gulf oil)
  • Gulf War
  • U.S. led coalition of Western and Arab allies
    against Iraq
  • U.S. Invasion of Iraq in 2003
  • About weapons of mass destruction or control of
    oil?

43
6.5.3 Access to Freshwater
  • Hydropolitics
  • 90 percent of usable freshwater in the region
    crosses one or more international borders
  • Role of water in Palestinian-Israeli conflict
  • Water is a critical issue blocking a peace treaty
    between Israel and Syria
  • Nile Water Agreement
  • Signed by 10 countries in 1926
  • Guaranteed Egyptian access to water
  • Many countries have defied the treaty in recent
    years
  • Upstream country is usually able to maximize
    itswater use at expense of a downstream country
  • Exception with Israel on the Yarmuk

44
Water Developments in the Nile Basin
45
Waterfall on Tigris River in Turkey
46
6.5.4 Terrorism
  • Terrorists pursued by U.S. are Islamist militants
  • Islamist Groups
  • Hizbullah
  • Hamas
  • Islamic Salvation Front (FIS)
  • Al-Qaida
  • President Bushs Axis of Evil
  • Iran, Iraq, and North Korea
  • Tiny minority of Muslims have carried out
    terrorist actions that the great majority of
    Muslims condemned

47
Terrorist Attacks Linked to al-Qaida, 1998-2007
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