Title: Human Geography
1Human Geography
2setting the stage
- Reviewing the meaning, components, structure of
culture - Processes of cultural change, diffusion,
divergence - Dynamic processes
3culture (social science definition)
- Specialized behavioral patterns, understandings,
adaptations, and social systems that summarize a
group of peoples learned way of life
4culture is..
- Learned, not biological
- Transmitted within a society to next generations
by imitation, tradition, instruction
5culture provides.
- a general framework
- each individual learns adheres to general rules
- also to specific sub-groups
- age, sex, status, occupation, nationality
6- Subcultures co-exist
- Masculine / feminine
- Rural / rural
- Different ethnicities
- Joined by common traditions, behaviors,
loyalties, beliefs - Christmas
- Church attendance on Sunday
7culture is dynamic.
- External influences
- Cultural exchange
- Generational
- Technology
- Environmental
- HIV/AIDS
- Global warming
8cultural variables.. micro-macro
- 1. Cultural traits most elementary
- Expression of culture, the smallest distinctions
- Behavior
- Object
- Beliefs
- Attitudes
- these building blocks a culture complex
9culture complex
- Individual cultural traits that are functionally
interrelated - Masai of Kenya cultural
traits centered on cattle - American football sports
culture
10culture region
- Portion of the Earths surface occupied by
populations sharing recognizable distinctive
cultural characteristics - Political organizations/boundaries
- Religions
- Economy type
11cultural realm
- A set of cultural regions showing related
cultural complexes and landscapes - Large region that has assumed fundamental
uniformity in its cultural characteristics and
showing significant differences from surrounding
realms
12culture realms
13globalization
- Interconnection of all parts of world
- International scale of social, cultural,
political, economic processes - Homogenization of cultures
- Integrated economies
- Standardization
- Persistent regional descriptions
- Adaptations to accommodate cultural preferences
14interaction of people and environment..
- Cultural ecology study of the relationship
between a culture group and the natural
environment it occupies - Arid regions versus humid regions
- Indian acorn culture
15environmental determinism??
- The belief that the physical environment alone
determines how humans are, their actions, their
thoughts - Environment alone cannot account for cultural
variations - Environment places certain limitations on human
use of land - Not absolute due to technology, ideologies
- Indian acorn culture versus Inca civilization
16possibilism
- Viewpoint that people, not environments are the
dynamic forces that cause cultural development - Noting worlds population location
- Evidence of nature of limits of environment
- Majority of people located in regions with
certain characteristics - Mild climates, supply of fresh water, fertile
soil, mineral resources
17ecumene Major areas of permanent inhabitation
- Continental margins (coastal regions)
- 2/3s of total human population live within 300
miles of the ocean - Low-lying fertile delta lands (along rivers)
18where DONT humans live (without supporting
technology) ???
- Rocky coasts
- Cold regions
- Areas with infertile soils
- Mountains / deserts
- Tropical lowlands, swampy land, forested
disease-infected river valleys
19nonecumene Major regions in the world
- The hollow continent - South America
- The empty quarter Arabian Peninsula
- The Amazon Basin
- The Sahara Desert
- Antarctica / Arctic / Siberia
20(No Transcript)
21 population distribution
- 90 of all people live north of the Equator
- 2/3 of this total are in the mid-latitudes of 20
60 degrees north (most temperate) - More than ½ the world population lives on only 5
of the earths land - 2/3 live on 10
- 9/10 on less than 20
226.2 billion humans The largest concentrations
(Four major regions)
- East Asia Japan, China, Taiwan, South Korea
- Largest both in area and numbers
- 25 of world population
- South Asia India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri
Lanka - Second largest
- 21 of world population
23human concentrations
- Europe southern, western, eastern through the
Ukraine - 13 of the world population
- Northeastern United States and Southeastern
Canada - Smallest concentration
24human impact on the environment
- Geography examines
- human reactions to environment
- human impacts on environment
- Cultural landscape
- the earths surface as modified by human action
- physical record of a culture
- House types
- Transportation networks
- Size distribution of settlement
25human actions deliberate accidental
Moa New Zealand 17th century
- Vegetation
- Altered, replaced, denuded
- Animal species
- Extinctions, marginalized
- Fertile regions transformed
- unproductive, polluted, degraded landscapes
26fire - perhaps the first great tool
- Fire control by hunter-gather groups
- Grasslands herds of grazing animals
- Chase out game
- Protect themselves at night from animals
- Fire control today
- Some land reverting to forest
- Also natural fires (lightening strikes) allowed
to burn - Provides opportunity for more diversity
27looking at roots of culture
- Earlier humans were more impacted by physical
environment
2811,000 years ago retreat of massive glaciers
(end of Paleolithic period)
- Ice melted released moisture
- Expanding
- Vegetation animals
- Spreading populations
293 waves of development following retreat of
glaciers
- Basic hunter gather groups
- Development of agriculture/animal husbandry
- Urbanization/industrialization
30Paleolithic period to 11,000 BC
- Hunter gather groups
- Retreating glaciers
- Spreading isolation cultural divergence
31hunter gather groups
- Small, scattered groups, pre-agricultural
- Dependent on natural food sources
- Primitive stone tools weapons
- Population estimate 5 to 10 million
- Spread to all continents except Antarctica
32human migration
33carrying capacity
- Hunter gather groups large territories for
small numbers - Relative isolation cultural divergence
- Some contact trading, socializing, spouse
selection - Groups of about 20 to 40 individuals
34expansion spread
- New innovations
- Encountering new environmental problems,
materials, resources - Accelerated differentiation
- Spreading increased cultural contrasts
- New environments cultural change
- New tools, words, lifestyles
35hunter gather lifestyle
- Hunting foraging process
- Not so demanding of time and energy
- Estimates for Bushmen survival requires a 2½ day
workweek - Time available
- Development of tools, art, language, religion,
trade, permanent settlements, social
stratifications
36impacts on environment
- Increasing populations
- Depleted the large herds
- Herds were migrating northward
- Need for new food bases
- Plant animal domestication
37Mesolithic period 11,000 to 5,000 BC
- Moving into the Agricultural Revolution
- Transition from food collecting to food
production - Transition to sedentary lifestyle
- Plant animal domestication
- Profound changes in tools, tasks, social
complexities - Foods remained regional
38agricultural origins.
- Spanning 1,000s of years
- Nile floodplain 18,500 years ago
- Americas (Mexico) 5,000 years ago
- Helter-skelter fashion
- Females considered primary players
- Development of crop production
- Innovators of technology
- Perhaps evolved out of plant gathering
nurturing
39domestication 40 N to 40 S
40migration of first farmers
- 10,000 years ago
- Out of the Middle East
- Spread rate 5/8ths mile per year
41Neolithic period 8,000 to 5,000 BC
- Agricultural Revolution into full swing
- Cultural hearths/civilizations
- Technological social innovations
- Plow
- Irrigation
- Draft animals
42civilizations economies based on agriculture
- Surplus of food
- Expanding populations
- Innovations
- Spinning, weaving
- Potter wheel, brick making, construction
- Mining, smelting, casing metals
43cultural hearths
44development of civilizations
beginning around 5,000 BC
- 1. Agriculture
- 2. Government
- 3. Religion
- 4. Specialization
45beginnings of urbanization
- Cultural hearths varied
- Rural, urban, sea-faring, commerce based
- Development of stratified societies
- Artisans, warriors/armies, merchants, scholars,
priests, administrators - Astronomy, mathematics, calendar
46cultural change.
- In constant state of change
- Can be dramatic, or less pronounced periods
- Can be large or small
- No phones to cell phones.. less than one century
- Subsistence agriculture to agro-business industry
- 3 ways of change
471. innovation
- Introduction of new ideas, practices, or objects
usually, an alteration of custom or culture that
originates within the social group itself - For example an invention
- Material bow arrow, gun, steam engine
- Non-material Christianity, capitalism
48how does innovation happen???
- Characteristically pre-modern, traditional
societies are not innovative - Equilibrium, so no motivation
- Always resistance to change
- Usually innovation occurs under pressure, stress
- Today gas is 3.00
- Food pressures
492. diffusion
- Process by which an idea/innovation is
transmitted from one individual/group to another
across space - 2 processes
- Relocation - migration
- Expansion - spread of information/innovation
50diffusion processes
- Relocation diffusion
- The innovation or idea is physically carried to
new areas by migrating individuals or populations - Expansion diffusion
- Contagious
- Hierarchical
- Stimulus
513. acculturation
- Adoption of cultural traits, borrowing
- Religion, technology
- Through force
- War, subjugation
- Absorption
- Most extreme
- Extinction of culture can occur