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Geography Social Studies 8 Mr. Bausback Class Notes & Activities 2015 Geography: Defining the Subject What is geography? What topics do geographers study? What makes geography different from other subjects? Geography: Defining the Discipline Geographia (Greek origins) Geo (earth) + graphein (to describe or write) To write or describe the surface of the earth The study of the spatial arrangement and association among elements on and/or in contact with the earth’s surface The study of the earth and all living and non-living things that inhabit it Reading and understanding maps, atlases, statistics, graphs and charts Making maps Identifying landform and water features; Using GPS, GIS, to locate information What is a map? A generalized view of an area, usually some portion of Earth’s surface, as seen from above at a greatly reduced size Any geographical image of the environment A two-dimensional representation of the spatial distribution of selected phenomena Why make maps? To represent a larger area than we can see To show a phenomenon or process we can’t see with our eyes To present information concisely To show spatial relationships 5 Themes of GeographyLocation: Location: the meaning of relative and absolute position on the earth's surface Sample terms: Latitude and longitude, site and situation, direction, distance, scale Skills: Map reading, identification Questions: Where is ____? Where is ____ relative to where I am? 5 Themes of Geography- Place: Place: the distinctive and distinguishing physical and human characteristics of locales Sample terms: Physical and cultural landscapes, sense of place Skills: Description, compare and contrast Questions: What does ____ look like? Why? How is it different from ____? 5 Themes of GeographyInteractions: Interactions: the development and consequences of human-environment relationships Sample terms: Ecosystems, natural resources, environmental pollution Skills: Evaluation, analysis Questions: What human-environment relationships are occurring? How do they affect the place and its inhabitants? 5 Themes of GeographyMovement: Movement: patterns and change in human spatial interaction on the earth Sample terms: Migration, diffusion, globalization Skills: Explanation, prediction Questions: How has this spatial pattern developed? Will it continue to change? What does it mean for the places involved? 5 Themes of GeographyRegions: Regions: how they form and change Sample terms: Formal vs. functional regions Skills: Synthesis, application Questions: How has this spatial pattern developed? Will it continue to change? What does it mean for the places involved? Map Types Pie Chart Used to show parts of a whole or percentages Bar graph 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 East West North 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Qtr Qtr Qtr Qtr Used to show items in relation to others Line Graph Used to show loss or gain or information over several time frames Population Pyramid Shows the population of a country or region. Allows you to break into male and female and by age groups Climatograph 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 J F M A M J J A S Shows precipitation and temperature averages over a one year period The World Political Political maps show how people have divided places on the Earth into countries, states, cities and other units for the purpose of governing them. The World Physical Physical maps show what the surface of the Earth looks like. Map Projections Three types of map projections • Mercator • Polar • Robinson All three types have distortion Map Projections cont. You can distort area, shape, distance and direction A Mercator projection is best used for ship navigation because of the nice straight lines Mercator projection Nice Straight lines Map Projections cont. A Polar projection is best used in airplane navigation. It is easy to plot the Great Circle Routes used to fly long distances A Robinson projection is best used for data representation. Most of the maps in textbooks are Robinson projections Robinson Projection Latitude lines are straight. Longitude lines are curved. Map projections Project a round globe onto a flat surface Options? Stretch out some areas Cut out some areas Shrink some areas Map projections Three properties to consider • Area (equal-area or equivalent) • Shape (conformal) • Distance (equidistant) • Choose two out of three How large an area? Purpose of the map Ulterior motives? Cylindrical projections Shapes are preserved But not area! Mercator projection • Deliberate distortion? – Cold War – Colonialism Cylindrical projections: Gall- Peters • Adjusting Mercator for a more “just” map Distorts shape differently Also preserves area Conic projections Area and shape only slightly distorted Best for hemispheres or small regions Planar projections Equidistant; good for navigation Only good for one hemisphere Distorts area, not shape Other projections Based on more complicated math Interrupted, oval, combination Robinson Goode Dymaxion Using an Atlas Map scale Ratio of the distance on the map to the distance on the ground Scale is a fraction Larger area covered means larger denominator Larger denominator means smaller fraction So a large-scale map covers a small area Large-scale Small-scale Map scale 1. Ratio of the distance on the map to the distance on the ground Graphic: Stays the same when photocopied Might not be right for the whole map Map scale 2. Verbal: 1 inch equals 10 miles Easy to understand Can change if photocopied Map scale 3. Representative fraction or ratio: 1:24,000 Units don’t matter Can change if photocopied Map symbolization Symbols are a code instead of text Three kinds: point, line, area Consider shape, size, orientation, pattern, color, value Oceans of the World The world has four major oceans: Atlantic Arctic Pacific ocean Arctic Indian Pacific ocean Atlantic ocean Indian ocean Global Climates Students generally associate Arctic and Antarctic with cold weather, so students could make the observation that the climate at the poles is cold. This map shows the general climate regions of the world. World Religions Religious beliefs help define a people’s culture, so to understand a people, it is important to consider what religions influence that group. Location (Latitude, longitude & grid references) Latitude and Longitude Latitude: how far north or south From 0° at equator to 90° at poles Each parallel of latitude is a different size Key latitudes: Equator, 23.5°N and S Latitude and Longitude Longitude: how far east or west East or west of what? 1884 agreement on prime meridian at Greenwich Each meridian of longitude is the same distance around Not parallel lines Key longitudes: Prime Meridian, International Date Line, 100th meridian Latitude and Longitude The earth is divided into lots of lines called latitude and longitude. Lines Longitude lines run north and south. Latitude lines run east and west. The lines measure distances in degrees. Latitude Longitude Lines of longitude only Equator added Other lines of latitude added Cross-section through line of longitude Crosssections through lines of latitude Orange cut through lines of longitude Orange cut through lines of latitude Draw a map of this world. There are 4 countries: Red, Light Green, Dark Green and Purple. The angle of elevation of the sun varies with latitude. The sun is higher in the sky at places closer to the equator (‘lower latitudes’). Latitude is angular measurement north or south of the equator Longitude is angular measurement east or west of the Prime Meridian Where is 0 degree? The equator is 0 degree latitude. It is an imaginary belt that runs halfway point between the North Pole and the South Pole. Equator Where is 0 degree? The prime meridian is 0 degrees longitude. This imaginary line runs through the United Kingdom, France, Spain, western Africa, and Antarctica. P M E R R I I D M I E A N Hemispheres By using the equator and prime meridian, we can divide the world into four hemispheres, north, south, east, and west. Compasses are used to show the direction of places on maps. This is very important so that we can know how to use the map to move from one place to another. There are 2 types of compass that you should use . . . . North West East Never South Wheat NW N NE E W SE SW S Eat Shredded Using Direction When people move from one place to another they will describe their movement by using the directions that allowed them to travel. To practice this there are a few exercises over the next pages to help you to practice your direction-finding skills. North Use Direction sheet 1 and answer the questions West East South Use the map below of the major towns in County Antrim to work out the directions between each town. The map and questions can be found on Direction Sheet 2 North West East South How do we use map symbols? Page 112 and 113 in Key Geography – New Foundations Why do we use symbols? When drawing a map to scale it is important to include as much detail as possible – however not all the detail will fit on the map so we have to use a key of different symbols, abbreviations and letters to represent the main items on the map Think about it this way . . . . Imagine that you have to draw a map that shows the route from your house to the school – but you are not allowed any words . . .this means that we need to use symbols to show what we would pass on the way . . . Do you know any map symbols? Draw a symbol on the board and then write below what it is! Quick Quiz – On a page at the back of your book - write down what you think of the following symbols means There are 10 of these to guess – if you don’t have an idea - have a go! But do remember that you are trying to think of things that might be shown on a map! 1. 3. 2. 5. 4. Quick Quiz – 6. 7. 9. So what do they all mean? 8. 10. CG The Answers ... Make sure that you are marking somebody else’s answers and then here they come . . . . 2. 1. Caravan Park 3. Information Office Golf club/course 5. 4. Telephone Battlefield site 6. 7. Lighthouse 8. Picnic site 9. Primary Road (A Road) How many did you get? CG Coastguard 10. Rail station 22 21 20 12 13 14 22 21 13 14 220 219 218 217 216 215 214 213 212 211 210 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 Finding Heights How can we measure relief on a map? On this map – how are the heights of different places shown? Layer Colouring Areas of the same height are shaded a different colour Spot Heights These give the exact height of a place on the map. They are shown as a black dot with a number alongside. The heights are given in metres 320 270 90 100 Contours These are lines that are drawn onto a map and they join up places that are the same height. The heights are given in metres 300 200 100 Measuring a straight line distance This is very simple to use. 1. Use your ruler to rule the distance between the 2 places 2. Then compare your answer to the scale of the map (This is usually in the bottom corner of the map and for most maps that you use this will be 1cm = 50,000cm (0.5Km) Measuring around a bend This is a bit more complicated. You need to use a piece of scrap paper to use to find out the distances. 1. Find the first straight edge and lay the paper down along side the road that you are measuring 2. Mark on the start and end point 3. Find the next straight edge and continue the measurement 4. Continue this until the road is fully measured and then use your ruler and scale to work out the final distance Hemispheres • By using the equator and prime meridian, we can divide the world into four hemispheres, north, south, east, and west. Time Zones • The Earth is divided into 24 time zones, corresponding to 24 hours in a day. • As the earth rotates, the sun shines in different areas, moving from east to west during the course of a day. • Places that have the same longitude will be in the same time zone. Class 2a: Landforms or What goes up must come down Valley • A valley is low land between hills or mountains. Forest • A forest is a large area of land where many trees grow. • Your responsibility! • Differences between igneous, sedimentary, metamorphic • Examples ofRock eachcycle Today’s class • "The summit of Mt. Everest is marine limestone." • Tectonic forces – Earthquakes, volcanoes – Diastrophism • Gradational processes – Weathering, mass wasting – Erosion/deposition: water, waves, wind • Examples from CA, SW Asia, Oceania • Theorized in 1912; proven after WWII • 12 large plates (lithosphere) float on liquid rock (asthenosphere) Plate tectonics • 200 million years ago, all one continent (Pangaea) • Your responsibility! • Differences between igneous, sedimentary, metamorphic • Examples ofRock eachcycle • Divergent boundaries – Generally mid-ocean – Underwater volcanoes, few quakes Plate tectonics • Convergent boundaries – Usually near continental edges – Violent volcanoes near ocean, strong quakes • Transform boundaries – No volcanoes, mild to strong quakes