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Geographer

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Geographer s Tools Maps Globes Graphs Organization The grid that covers a globe is made of lines that run east to west and north to south. Lines of latitude run ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Geographer


1
Geographers Tools
  • Maps
  • Globes
  • Graphs

2
Organization
  • The grid that covers a globe is made of lines
    that run east to west and north to south.
  • Lines of latitude run east-west
  • Lines of longitude run north-south

3
Organization
  • The equator is an imaginary line that circles the
    globe halfway between Earth.
  • Lines of latitude measure distances north and
    south of the equator. They are also know as
    parallels
  • The prime meridian is an imaginary line drawn
    from the North Pole through England to the South
    Pole
  • Lines of longitude, also called meridians,
    measure distance east and west of the P.M.

4
Parallels and meridians measure distances in
degrees. Those north of the equator are noted
with an N, south with an S. Meridians can go
west or east of the prime meridian and will be
noted with a W or E
5
Hemispheres, Continents, and Oceans
  • The equator divides the world into two halves, or
    hemispheres. Northern and Southern
  • The prime meridian and the 180 meridian divide
    the world into Eastern and Western Hemispheres
  • 7 Continents
  • 4 Oceans

6
Maps
  • Flat representations of all or part of Earths
    surface.
  • There are many ways of presenting our round earth
    on flat maps these are called map projections
  • Because the earth is round, all flat maps have
    some distortion
  • Most common maps projections are cylindrical,
    conic, and flat-plane

7
Cylindrical Maps
  • Designed as if a cylinder has been wrapped around
    the globe
  • Meridians parallel
  • Landmasses near poles larger than they really are

8
A Mercator map, is a type of cylindrical map
projection. It is useful to navigators because
it shows true direction and shape. However
landmasses appear larger than they really are.
9
Conic Maps
  • Designed as if a cone has been placed over the
    globe
  • Most accurate along lines of latitude
  • Retains almost true size and shapes of landmasses

10
Most useful for areas with long east-west
dimensions (USA, Russia)
11
Flat-plane
  • Appear to touch the globe at one point, such as
    North or South Pole.
  • Useful for showing true direction for airplane
    pilots and ship navigators

12
Flat-plane shows true area size but distorts shape
13
Great Circle Route
  • A straight line on a flat map is not the shortest
    distance
  • Shortest route is called a great-circle route
  • Pilots and ship captains use great-circle routes
    to help navigate

The loxodrome is a line of constant heading, and
the great circle, although appearing longer than
the loxodrome, is actually the shortest route
between New York and London.
14
Geographic Coordinates
  • Absolute location
  • is shown as (latitude, longitude) or (33N,118W)
    which is the location of El Segundo
  • Distance between Lines
  • If you divide the circumference of the earth
    (approximately 25,000 miles) by 360 degrees, the
    distance on the earth's surface for each one
    degree of latitude or longitude is just over 69
    miles, or 111 km

15
Even more precise
  • Minutes and Seconds
  • For precision purposes, degrees of longitude and
    latitude have been divided into minutes (') and
    seconds ("). There are 60 minutes in each degree.
    Each minute is divided into 60 seconds. Seconds
    can be further divided into tenths, hundredths,
    or even thousandths.
  • El Segundo (33.925 N,118.415 W)

16
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17
Map Elements
  • Cartographers provide basic map elements to help
    us translate the codes that contain information
    on maps
  • Almost all maps have several common elements
  • Distance scale
  • Key
  • Directional indicator

18
Distance Scale
  • Distance scales helps us determine real distance
    between two points on a map
  • Distances measured and measurements used can vary

19
Keys
  • A maps legend, or key, identifies the symbols
    representing cities, roads, and other features.
  • They can use colors to represent different
    elevations, regions, and locations

20
Directional Indicators
  • Shows which directions on a map are north, south,
    east, and west
  • A compass rose has arrows that point to all four
    principal directions

21
Other Elements
  • Inset maps are used to focus in on a small part
    of a larger map
  • They can focus in on a specific area or focus on
    an area that is far away
  • The map of the USA shows both contiguous and non
    contiguous states.
  • Contiguous means connected or bordering

22
Special-purpose maps
  • The two main types of maps we will be using are
    political and physical feature maps
  • Other include
  • Climate and precipitation maps
  • Population and economic maps
  • Elevation profile and topographic maps

23
Climate and Precipitation Maps
24
Population and Economic Maps
25
Elevation maps and elevation profiles help us
better understand the location of physical
features for an area Elevation is the
height above sea level
26
Topography - or elevation is shown on contour
maps
27
Climate Graphs and Population Pyramids
  • Climate graphs show the average temperatures and
    precipitation in a place.
  • Population pyramids show the percentage of males
    and females by age group in a countrys
    population
  • Help us understand population trends in countries
  • Name comes from pyramid shape
  • If not in shape of a pyramid, called
    age-structure diagram

28
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