Title: Five Themes of Geography
1Unit I Settlement of the Americas
2Five Themes of Geography
- Location
- Geographic location as represented on a map
through latitude and longitude. - Relative location as related to another place.
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3- Interaction
- Interaction between people and their
environment how has man altered the environment
to suit our needs. - Interaction between cultures, exchange of ideas
or military conflict or both. - Movement
- Movement of man across the globe.
- Movement of trade goods.
4- Regions
- Physical characteristics that define a
particular area - or it cultural characteristics that define a
region.
5- Place
- Physical features of an area, availability of
natural resources being an important factor. - Human features of an area, including the
cultural developments that have taken place.
6Physical Regions of the U.S
7Climate classifications in the U.S
8Development of Civilization
- 23000 B.C - climate change develops an Ice Age
which creates massive glaciers that lower ocean
levels by 200 ft. Drop in sea levels expose land
connecting Siberia with Alaska across the Bering
Strait. Land Bridge remains until roughly 12000
BC.
9- Exact date of the migration of nomadic hunters
across the Bering Strait is uncertain. The first
definitive evidence is from around 12000 BC.
Fossil evidence has been found in Siberia and
Western Alaska. - Within 4000 years nomads had advanced to the tip
of South America (Tierra del Fuego).
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11- Archeologists believe that Asian migrations
developed in three waves. The first Asians
entered North America around 14000 BC, speaking
Amerind a forerunner to many Native languages.
Tribes from the Algonquian in the Northeast to
the Mayan in Central America speak a derivative
of Amerind.
12- The second wave of nomads entered North America a
few thousand years later, speaking a language
known as NaDene, which Native American
languages in the Canadian Northwest and American
southwest derive from.
13- The last wave of nomads entered North America
around 7,000 BC and were the ancestors of the
Inuit who maintained an existence across the
Artic tundra. It was these settlers which the
Vikings in Greenland encountered around 1000 AD.
14- The nomadic hunters entering North America found
an area loaded with large game that had no
previous experience with man. The development of
the Clovis spearhead around 9000 B.C allowed
hunters to successfully hunt large mammals. At
the same time though the climate changed and
further contributed to the extinction of big game
in North and South America.
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17- The loss of big game for nomadic hunters
prevented their population numbers from
increasing. This was in sharp contrast to the
Eurasian population which domesticated animals
and developed larger populations.
18- The close proximity of people to animals created
a host of communicable diseases which killed
portions of the Eurasian population but also led
them to develop immunities that did not occur in
the Americas.
19- Life as hunter-gathers could not sustain the
population for ever. Nomadic hunters thus had to
turn to the domestication of plant species which
could be harvested for food on a regular basis.
By 4000 BC permanent farming communities had
developed in Peru, central Mexico, and the
southwestern United States. - The most important of the early crops were maize,
sweet potatoes, beans, tomatoes.
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21- Only the most advanced cultures developed into
sedentary farmers in the Americas. North of
Mexico, Indians developed semi-sedentary
communities where they would settle for a time in
a area. They would use slash and burn
agriculture to clear an area and then Native
women would plant crops and build temporary
dwellings while men hunted and fought rival
tribes.
22- Every few years the soil would become exhausted
forcing the tribe to move to a new location. The
combination of semi-sedentary and sedentary
cultures created a population of around 50
million by 1492.
23- Civilization in Mesoamerica developed around 1200
B.C along the Mexican gulf coast. Civilizations
are defined by the development of cities,
political structures, surplus food production,
artistic activity and a complex form of
communication, but does not have to be written.
24- The Olmec civilization thrived between 1200 and
400 A.D. The area was first settled around 3500
BC when Indians began farming corn and beans. - How did Olmec civilization develop in the gulf?
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27Among other monolithic works, the Olmec carved
three-dimensional stone heads, ranging in height
from about 6 to 10 ft, out of basalt boulders
quarried in distant mountains.
28Ruins of Monte Albán, ancient center of the
Zapotec civilization. The Zapotecs thrived for
about 1000 years, between 500 BC and 500 AD.
29- Olmec religious beliefs had a tremendous impact
on the Mesoamerican cultures. They developed a
dual calendar system that lasted through the fall
of the Aztecs. The Olmecs developed a 52 year
calendar that ended on the first day of the long
calendar. They believed that this occurrence
could bring an end to the world and the
destruction of the sun. Thus human sacrifice was
necessary to keep the sun in motion. - This belief was also central to the lowland
culture of the Mayans.
30- Mayan culture developed as a series of
independent city states that controlled the
Yucatan Peninsula between 50 BC and 900 AD.
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34The Temple of the Inscriptions is famed as
Pacal's Tomb. One of the most elaborate burials
in a Mayan pyramid is buried deep inside this
monument.
35Caracol, Chichén Itzá
36The Temple of the Columns at Chichen Itza
37The city of Chichén Itzá, on the northern Yucatán
peninsula, became a center of Maya civilization
in the Postclassic Period, after ad 900.
38Mayan artwork
39- Classic Mayan culture began to decline around
800, with the abandonment of several of the
larger city states. - Causes of the Mayan collapse
- The Maya had damaged their environment through
deforestation and erosion. - Climate changes occurred that brought droughts to
the area. - Frequent wars between the city states also took
its toll on the population. - The competition between nobles led them to
forsake underlying problems.
40- By 1400 power in central Mexico had been
consolidated by the Aztecs, who had migrated out
of the north around 1200. They settled along the
shore of Lake Texcoco and began construction of
their capital Tenochtitlan, which was on the lake
itself.
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42- Tenochtitlan was connected to the mainland
through a series of causeways and built floating
gardens on the lake to supply the capitals
population. - With a population around 200,000 the Aztecs
dominated the smaller cities in central Mexico.
They adopted the traditional religion of
Mesoamerica and waged war to capture people for
sacrifice in their religious ceremonies.
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45Plaza of the Three Cultures
46Pyramid of the Sun, Teotihuacán
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48- Avenue of the Dead Teotihuacán, Mexico
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50Aztec Calendar Stone
51- The dominant empire in South America by 1400 were
Incans which were located along the Pacific
coast.
52This view of the Andes Mountains is from a
village near Cuzco in the highlands region of
southeastern Peru. Broad valleys and plateaus in
this area are above 6500 ft in altitude and lie
among the tallest peaks in South America.
53- The Incan capital of Cuzco controlled an empire
over 2,000 miles long. They developed a complex
transportation system to move troops and supplies
across the empire and fed the population by
building massive terraces on the sides of the
mountains.
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56- North of Mexico, Native American cultures
developed less sophisticated cultures that were
still impressive. Between 3000 BC and 1700 AD
mound builders developed powerful empires from
the Gulf Coast to the Great Lakes. The mound
building cultures developed trade routes across
the continent that last until 400 AD.
57The Serpent Mound twists to a length of 1,348 ft
near the town of Peebles in southern Ohio. It is
believed to have been built by the Adena, whose
culture flourished in the first millennium bc.
58- In the American southwest, two cultures developed
complex societies - Hohokam settled Arizona around 300 BC and 300
AD. They dug irrigation canals, created pottery
and trade with California tribes and
Mesoamericans. - Anasazi developed a power culture in Colorado,
New Mexico, Arizona and Nevada. They developed
housing in the cliffs of the various canyons,
irrigation ditches, and astronomical
observatories in the cliffs.
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60Hohokam Indian Village
61Pueblo Bonito of Chaco Canyon
62Anasazi Bowl
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