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GEOGRAPHY THE FIVE THEMES OF GEOGRAPHY • Geography is the study of the world, its people, and the landscapes they create. • To a geographer, a place’s landscape is all the human and physical features that make it unique. • Geographers ask questions like: how does the world work, what causes mountains to form, what causes tornadoes, where are things located and why are they there? • Geographers are scientist that gather and use data about places. • GEOGRAPHERS AS SOCIAL SCIENTIST • Some geographers study people and their lives. • They may ask why countries change their governments or why people in a place speak a certain language. • Geography is sometimes called “social science,” a field that studies people and the relationships among them. 5 WAYS TO LOOK AT EARTH • The 5 themes of geography can help organize information about the Earth and its people. • Always remember MR.LIP! • Movement • Region • Location • Interaction • Place LOCATION • Geographers begin to study a place by finding where it is, or its location. • Cardinal directions (north, south, east and west) and intermediate directions (southeast, northwest) are used to describe location. • Latitude and Longitude are special measurements of the earth to describe location. • Latitude is the distance north and south of the Equator, measured in units called degrees. • Longitude is the distance east or west of the Prime Meridian, measured in degrees. Location (2) • The Equator and the Prime Meridian both divide Earth in two. Each half of Earth is called a hemisphere. • The Equator divides Earth into Northern and Southern hemispheres • The Prime Meridian divides Earth into Eastern and Western hemispheres. Two Types of Location • Absolute Location- a specific description. • Example: The White House is located at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue in the city of Washington D.C. • Relative Location- a general description of where a place lies. • Example: Canada is north of the United States. PLACE • Place includes the human and physical features at a specific location. The area’s landscape, the features that define the area and make it different from other places • Such features could include: land, climate and people. • How people live? What religions do they practice or what languages do they speak? MOVEMENT • Movement explains how people, goods and ideas get from one place to another. • Geographers want to know how and why people move. • If people are moving to find work or live in a more pleasant area. • When people move they bring traditional foods and culture that enriches our way of life. • Radios and computers have helped music from the United States to spread and become popular around the world. Human-Environment Interaction • Human environment Interaction (HEI) explores how people affect their environment or their natural surroundings and how their environment affects them. • An area’s environment includes: land, water, climate, plants and animals. • Examples: They have cut trails into the mountainside or they may have learned how to survive with little water. REGION • Regions are used to group places that have something in common. • Creating regions makes it easier to compare places. • A region has unifying human or physical features such as: population, history, climate or landforms. • Example: a country is a region with a common national government, a city is a region with a common local government. • Land areas can be divided by regions that share physical features such as a dry climate or mountains.