Title: Honors World Geography
1Honors World Geography
- Unit 1 The Basics of Geography
2Take Five
- What do the following terms refer to? (a)
absolute location (b) distortion - (c) map projection (d) relative location
3Review of lines of latitude
- Lines of latitude are parallel to each other
equidistant - There are northern and southern lines of latitude
- Rememberlatitude goes around the earth
4Review of lines of longitude
- Lines of longitude are not equidistant to each
other and vary in their size - There are eastern and western lines of Longitude
- Remember longitude goes over the earth
5Chp 1Physical Geography Looking at the Earth
- What is geography?
- The study of the distribution and interaction of
physical and human features on the earth. - Geography is studied using
- Mapsvisual representations of a portion of the
earth - 5 Themes of Geographydescribe patterns and
connections in the use of space
6Wally Points
- What are mental maps? Give an example.
75 Themes of Geography(1) Location, Location,
Location
- Where is it?
- Absolutethe exact coordinates of a place
- Hemisphere(northern, southern, western
easternhalves of the globe) - Equator divides the north/south hemisphere
- Prime meridian divides the east/west hemisphere
- Greenwich meridian
- Latitudelines running parallel to the equator
- Longitudelines that mark positions in the east
and west hemispheres - Each location can have only 1 absolute location
- Relativethe place in comparison to other places
around it
85 Themes of Geography (2) Place
- What is it like?
- Place refers to
- Physical featuresclimate, vegetation, landforms
- Human interactionindustrialization, building
dams, houses - Culturewhat culture does a group of people bring
to a place?
95 Themes of Geography (3) Region
- How are places similar and different?
- Regions have characteristics in common with each
other that ties them together physical,
economic, political or social - 9 Formal Regions
- The U.S. Canada
- Latin America
- Europe
- Russia and the Republics
- Africa
- Southwest Asia
- South Asia
- East Asia
- Southeast Asia, Oceania Antarctica
10Class Assignment
- Create a map of your neighborhoodyou should
include as many of the 5 themes as possible on
your map remember to include a legend.
115 Themes of Geography (4) Human Environment
Interaction
- How do people relate to the physical world?
- How do people change their environment?
- Sometimes human interaction of the environment
changes the environment?
12Wally Points
- Name some ways in which human interaction changes
the environment.
135 Themes of Geography (5) Movement
- How do people move products and themselves from
one place to another? - Linear distance how far across the earth
something travels - Physical barriers such as deserts or mountain
ranges. - Time distance amount of time it takes to travel
from place to place - Psychological distance the way people view
distance
14Wally Points (Use the map on A4 A5)
- Where is 0, 0?
- Where is 15N 15W?
- Where is 38S 18 E ?
- Where is 35 N 75 W?
- Where is 50 N 10 W ?
- What degrees of latitude and longitude are the
following locations? - Georgia (the state)
- Finland
- Tokyo
- Moscow
- Mumbai (Bombay)
- What is the relative location of Cyprus?
- What is the relative location of Madagascar?
- What is the relative location of Tokyo?
15Take Five
- Make a list of the types of maps that geographers
use to study the world and human interaction.
16Chp 2 The Geographers Tools
- Basic tools of the trade
- Globes 3 dimensionaltoo big to be efficient
- Maps 2 dimensionalgreat for on the go, but can
be distorted - Cartographers (map makers) may decrease
distortion through map projectionspresenting a
round image on a flat page - Planar projections or azimuthalgives the
shortest distance between 2 points - Conical projectionsprojections onto a cone
shapeused to show landmasses that extend over
large areas going east and west - Cylindrical projections or Mercatorprojections
onto a cylinder that shows the whole earth
17Planar projections
- A grid from a sphere is projected on a flat
surface
18Conical projections
- Conical projection maps, in which the Earth's
surface is projected onto a cone placed on the
globe with its point over one of the Earth's
poles, poles, are best suited for maps of polar
and mid-latitude regions. They are often used
for aeronautical charts as well.
19Cylindrical Projections
- Cylindrical projection maps, in which a cylinder
which is wrapped around the Earth at the Equator,
are often used for complete world maps. On a
cylindrical projection map, the longitude and
latitude lines are straight.Â
20Cylindrical--Mercator
- The Mercator projection, designed by Flemish
cartographer Gerardus Mercator in 1569, is a
cylindrical projection which preserves local
angles, and in which the east-west scale is
identical to the north-south scale at every point
on the map. It became widely used for nautical
maps and navigation charts on which navigators
could plot straight line courses. However, the
Mercator projection exaggerates the size of high
latitude areas such as Greenland and Antarctica.
21Robinson projectioncylindrical projection
The Robinson projection is a
pseudo-cylindrical projection designed for Rand
McNally by Arthur Robinson in 1963. Lengths of
parallels, pole lines, and the central meridian
are arbitrarily calculated for best visual
appearance. First published in 1974, it was
adopted for world maps by the National Geographic
Society in 1988, but abandoned in favor of the
Winkel Tripel projection in 1998.
22The Science of Mapmaking
- Surveyinggathering data such as elevation,
differences in land cover, and variations of
temperature. The information is converted to gray
images which cartographers then use to construct
maps (modern day using software programs)
23The Science of Mapmaking
- The modern use of satellites
- Landsats series of satellites that orbit the
earth 100 miles above the earthcover the earth
in 16 days - GOES (Geostationary Operational Environmental
Satellite)a weather satellite that is at the
same speed as the earths rotation to help
determine weather patterns - GIS (Geographic Information Systems)a database
of geographical information such as maps, ariel
photographs, satellite images etc - GPS (Global Positioning System)the use of 24
NavStar satellites that beam the exact location
(lattitude longitude coordinates) to handheld
systems
24The Science of Mapmaking
- Geographers also use other information to solve
problems such as population density, political
boundaries, vegetation of an area etc
25Reading a map-using the handout provided review
the different components on a map
- Title
- Compass Rose
- Labels
- Legend
- Lines of Latitude
- Lines of Longitude
- Scale
- Symbols
- Colors
26Does your neighborhood map have any of these
components?
- Title
- Compass Rose
- Labels
- Legend
- Lines of Latitude
- Lines of Longitude
- Scale
- Symbols
- Colors
27Types of Maps
- Physical mapstypes of landforms bodies of
water for specific area - Political mapsboundaries of cities, states,
countries, regionshuman creations on the earths
surface - Thematicdepicting certain specific types of
information - Qualitativeuses colors, symbols, dots or lines
to help illustrate patterns related to a specific
idea - Cartogramsinfo about a country based on a set of
data other than land area - Flow-line mapsillustrate movement of people,
goods, ideas, animals, etc
28Types of mapsPhysical
29Types of maps--Political
30Types of mapsThematic (Qualitative)
31Types of mapsThematic (Cartograms)
32Types of mapsThematic (Flow line maps)
33Assignment.Part I
- Use media resources Time, Newsweek, National
Geographic, internet to find a political dispute
over a border or boundary - Today, while in the media center, you will find
research regarding the areas in dispute, the
history of the dispute, the outcomes of the
dispute the locations of the dispute - You will also want to know the regions so that
tomorrow you can draw a political map of the
regions in dispute
34AssignmentPart II
- Using your research from yesterday, construct a
political map with all of the disputed regions
represented - Write a 1-2 page paper (typed) about the dispute
and the outcomes - (Paper political map due Monday!!!)
- 60 grade