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The 5 Themes of Geography Theme 1: Location 2 Types -Absolute Location: A specific place on the earth’s surface. An address or latitude and longitude coordinate. Example: North Carolina 36˚ N Latitude 79˚ W Longitude Latitude and Longitude ►The earth is divided into lots of lines called latitude and longitude. longitude. -Relative Location: Where a place is in relation to another place. When describing the relative location of a place, you would use directional words such as near, close to, north/south/east/west of, about 2 blocks away from, etc. Example: North Carolina is bordered by South Carolina to the south, Virginia to the north, Tennessee to the west. My house is a 2 blocks away from Baptist Hospital. Theme 2: Place A. Physical characteristics that make a place different or unique. Land features Hills, plateaus Climate Bodies of water Example: North Carolina has mountains, beaches, lakes, hot summers, Moderate winter temperatures. B. Human characteristics that are associated with that place. People Culture Religion Language Cities Landmarks Example: The RJR building is a landmark associated with the Winston Salem skyline. Old Salem is a museum that preserves the Moravian traditions and culture, because the early Moravian people played an important part in establishing Winston Salem. Tanglewood Park has a yearly tradition of putting on a huge Christmas light display. They also have a chilli cook-off, because chilli is a food that many people in the area enjoy. Thousands of people go to the Tanglewood Festival of Lights every year because Winston Salem is largely made up of Christians who celebrate Christmas as part of their religious faith. Theme 3: Human Environment Interaction How people interact with their environment Adapting to the environment Modifying the environment (in positive and negative ways) Depending on the environment Example: Many people in the coastal region of NC interact with the environment in the following ways… Opening businesses such as hotels, theme parks, fishing piers, putt-putt courses, which rely on tourists who come for the warm, sunny summer climate, beaches and ocean. Fishermen, who fish the waters for shrimp, fish, etc. Sea turtle preservation groups patrol the beaches to make sure no one uses flashlights at night, because they can lead the baby sea turtles toward the dunes instead of the ocean. They are protecting sea turtles, which are an endangered species, and are part of their environment. Theme 4: Movement Movement of people, goods and ideas Example: People move in many ways… Walking, driving, flying, boats, bicycles, mopeds, etc. People move goods in many of the same ways, but sometimes on a larger scale… Transfer trucks move goods to grocery stores, hardware stores, etc. The cartons that transfer trucks move along the highways are often moved across the country by trains. Ideas are moved in many different ways… At TJMS we use Alert Now to move our information from school to homes…”Hello this is Brad Royal..” In Winston Salem many ideas are moved by the Winston Salem Journal and The Chronicle When it snows, the school system uses WXII to move that information into your home so that you can go back to bed Theme 5: Regions Political Physical Agricultural Cultural Regions are created by people to more easily define places that share similar characteristics. Example: Political Regions Countries, states, cities, counties, towns are political regions. They are similar because they have a shared government Physical Regions The Appalachian Mountains are a mountain region The Sahara Desert is a desert region The Pacific Coast is a coastal region Agricultural Regions Soybeans: Arkansas, Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, Illinois, Ohio, Indiana, Minnesota, South Dakota, Louisiana and Nebraska Dairy: California, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, New York, Pennsylvania, and Vermont Corn and Wheat: Midwestern states Cultural Regions Cultural regions are a result of mixed cultures, languages, accents, attitudes, music, traditions o We live in the southern cultural region, which is often characterized by things such as Music: jazz, blues, country Rural communities Love of storytelling and oral tradition Conservative political beliefs and values *When describing cultural regions, we have to be conscious of whether the associations are real or just the result of stereotypes that are commonly believed to exist, but are really just a result of narrow thinking.