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National Geographic Geography Handbook
National Geographic Geography Handbook

... tells what kind of special information it shows. Colors and symbols in the map key are especially important on these types of maps. Special purpose maps are often found in books of maps called atlases. One type of special purpose map uses colors to show population density, or the average number of p ...
The Geographer`s Tool
The Geographer`s Tool

... The Geographer’s Tools • Geographers use two- and three-dimensional tools to learn about the earth. ...
Physical Geography PPT
Physical Geography PPT

... Sociology and anthropology help geographers understand the culture of societies throughout the world. Economics Helps Geographers understand how nations use their resources Geography as a Career There are various careers related to Geography such as: meteorology, government, education, etc. . . ...
Map Master Skills Handbook
Map Master Skills Handbook

... Physical Geographers would study things like mountains, rivers, deserts, and oceans. Human Geographers study people and try to figure out why people change their landscape. Human Geographers want to know why people built the Great Wall of China. They also want to know how ideas, languages, religions ...
Southern Ocean Bathymetry
Southern Ocean Bathymetry

... barriers for an updated plate tectonic reconstruction of the Southern Ocean. Another application is the correlation between variations in gravity anomalous roughness and their relationship to topographic lineaments in the abyssal plains. This relationship could be diagnostic for the tectonic heterog ...
1 Introduction to the Journey
1 Introduction to the Journey

... The Journey The Geoheritage Journey is described as travelling from the north to the south, but it can be enjoyed from any direction. The key features and their earth history are described as the traveller meets them for the first time. Many of these features occur in other locations and what is le ...
Classroom Activities KS2 A3
Classroom Activities KS2 A3

... DME: Planning for Tectonic Hazards - Activity Sheet Introduction 1. Put the section title Introduction. ...
japanese earthquakes
japanese earthquakes

... Students fill out the top half of page 1. This is an assessment of their preconceived knowledge of the subject. ...
Yr 5 Geography
Yr 5 Geography

... Geography Progression: PoS & End of Year Expectations (Year 5) • locate the world’s countries, using maps to focus on Europe (including the location of Russia) and North and South America, concentrating on their environmental regions, key physical and human characteristics, countries, and major citi ...
National Geographic Geography Handbook
National Geographic Geography Handbook

... pie graphs. Each “slice” represents a part or percentage of the whole “pie.” On the circle graph at right, the whole circle (100 percent) represents the world’s population in 2002. The slices show how this population is divided among some of the most heavily populated areas of the world. ...
Glaciofluvial Mountainsides
Glaciofluvial Mountainsides

... Glaciofluvial Mountainsides formed as a result of sudden release of meltwaters of Pleistocene glaciers. Areas of glacially deposited sediments and scours sorting of sediments by subsequent fluvial processes are mixed in this mapping unit. Parent streams carried heavy sediment loads. As a consequence ...
Geography PowerPoint
Geography PowerPoint

... Two Types of Geography  Physical Geography  Physical Land Masses that we see on the map (North America, South America, Europe, etc.)  Physical Landforms (such as mountains, plains, and valleys)  Bodies of Water (such as lakes, rivers, and oceans)  Also man-made aspects of Physical geography ...
Equal Area World Maps: A Case Study
Equal Area World Maps: A Case Study

... announced in 1805 by Karl Brandan Mollweide (1774–1825) and commonly used in atlases today. Aesthetically, Mollweide’s map, which represents the whole world in an ellipse whose axes are in a 2:1 ratio, reflects the essentially round character of the earth better than rectangular maps. The mathematics ...
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File

... • Digitizing is a process by which points are plotted on a coordinate grid. ...
Geography Handbook - Boone County Schools
Geography Handbook - Boone County Schools

... The Mercator projection shows true direction and land shapes fairly accurately, but not size or distance. Areas that are located far from the Equator are quite distorted on this projection. Alaska, for example, appears much larger on a Mercator map than it does on a globe. ...
Unit 1: An Overview of Geography
Unit 1: An Overview of Geography

... What does it mean to study Geography? *It is the study of our earth; our ...
Geobattleships - Earth Learning Idea
Geobattleships - Earth Learning Idea

... successful “Hit” results in another turn, but with Volcanoes map (face down on the table) together Geobattleships it is better if students simply take with a blank map (page 3): give the other student turns at calling. the Geobattleship Earthquakes map, also face There is no need to take the game to ...
Glossary - patriotssandhistory
Glossary - patriotssandhistory

... A way for geographers to obtain new information, GIS layers geographic information into a new map, showing specific types of geographic data. Watershed, population density, highways, and agricultural data are geographic features that can be used as layers of data. Geographical Positioning Systems (G ...
GEOMORPHIC FEATURES AND LANDFORMS ANALYSIS FOR
GEOMORPHIC FEATURES AND LANDFORMS ANALYSIS FOR

... and other highly populated areas, defined by Government authorities. The projects have been executed in Nicaragua since 1997 and in El Salvador between 2003-2006. Except geological mapping, a geomorphic analysis is the principal method for hazard assessment. The main assumption of the geomorphic ana ...
Chapter 1
Chapter 1

... The study of how the natural environment influences people, how people’s activities affect Earth, and how the world is changing, both physically and culturally.  Two types of Geography? ...
HG ch1 What is Geography
HG ch1 What is Geography

... • although a counter argument to above, less accepted today, because it starts with environment and asks what it allows ...
GEOL 10: Environmental Geology Activity 9: Topographic Maps and
GEOL 10: Environmental Geology Activity 9: Topographic Maps and

... Activity 9: Topographic Maps and Mt. St. Helens Name:  ________________________________________________ Date: ________________  ...
4th Six Weeks Plate Tectonics and Topographic Maps Study Guide
4th Six Weeks Plate Tectonics and Topographic Maps Study Guide

... Earthquakes occur most often at transform plate boundaries. Heat from friction of plates sliding past each other causes parts of plates to crumble, forming faults. 8. How does weathering affect land formations, such as islands? Weathering, physical or chemical, causes land to be broken down in time ...
direction indicator
direction indicator

... Lines of LATITUDE are drawn in an eastwest direction  These lines measure distance north and south of the EQUATOR ...
Document
Document

... 16. Describe the evidence that supported Wegener’s Continental Drift theory. ...
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Counter-mapping

Counter-mapping refers to efforts to map ""against dominant power structures, to further seemingly progressive goals"". The term was coined by Nancy Peluso in 1995 to describe the commissioning of maps by forest users in Kalimantan, Indonesia, as a means of contesting state maps of forest areas that typically undermined indigenous interests. The resultant counter-hegemonic maps had the ability to strengthen forest users' resource claims. There are numerous expressions closely related to counter-mapping: ethnocartography, alternative cartography, mapping-back, counter-hegemonic mapping, and public participatory mapping. Moreover, the terms: critical cartography, subversive cartography, bioregional mapping, and remapping are sometimes used synonymously with counter-mapping, but in practice encompass much more.Whilst counter-mapping still primarily refers to indigenous cartographic efforts, it is increasingly being applied to non-indigenous mapping initiatives in economically developed countries. Such counter-mapping efforts have been facilitated by processes of neoliberalism, and technological democratisation. Examples of counter-mapping include attempts to demarcate and protect traditional territories, community mapping, Public Participatory Geographical Information Systems, and mapping by a relatively weak state to counter the resource claims of a stronger state. The power of counter-maps to advocate policy change in a bottom-up manner led commentators to affirm that counter-mapping should be viewed as a tool of governance.Despite its emancipatory potential, counter-mapping has not gone without criticism. There is a tendency for counter-mapping efforts to overlook the knowledge of women, minorities, and other vulnerable, disenfranchised groups. From this perspective, counter-mapping is only empowering for a small subset of society, whilst others become further marginalised.
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