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Chapter 1: Basic Concepts The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Defining Geography • Word coined by Eratosthenes – Geo = Earth – Graphia = writing • Geography thus means “earth writing” © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Contemporary Geography • Geographers ask where and why – Location and distribution are important terms • Geographers are concerned with the tension between globalization and local diversity • A division: physical geography and human geography © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Geography’s Vocabulary • Place: unique location or position on Earth • Region: combination of cultural/ physical features • Scale: portion of the Earth compare to the whole • Space: gap between two objects • Connections: relationship btw people/objects © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Maps • Two purposes – As reference tools • To find locations, to find one’s way – As communications tools • To show the distribution of human and physical features © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Early Map Making • Above: oldest map (Turkey) 7th century BC • Below: Babylon (Iraq) 6th Century BC Figure 1-2 © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Maps: Scale • Types of map scale – Ratio or fraction: numerical ration btw distances on Earth’s surface 1:100 – Written: written word form of ratio – Graphic: bar line to show distance • Projection – Distortion: 4 types • • • • Shape: appears more elongated Distance: distance, more or less Relative size: altered size © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Direction: distorted • Map Scale • 1) Washington State 1:10,000,000 (1 in = 10,000,000 inches or 158 miles) • 2) Western Washington 1:1,000,000 • 3) Seattle 1:100,000 • 4) Downtown Seattle 1:10,000 • As the area covered gets smaller, the maps get more 1 in represents smaller Figuredetailed. 1-4 © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. distances 2 Types of Uninterrupted Maps Robinson Map: shape distortion/ more ocean Mercator Map: accurate shape/ distorted poles © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. U.S. Land Ordinance of 1785 • Township and range system – Township = 6 sq. miles on each side • North–south lines = principal meridians • East–west lines = base lines – Township: T1 (distance north or south on a particular baseline – Range: R1 (distance east or west on a particular meridian line – Sections: each township is divided into 36 sections, each of which is 1 mile by 1 mile. © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Township and Range System • TL: north-south lines = meridian lines (red lines). East-west lines = base lines (green lines). • TR: West 6x6 miles/ East 6x6 (then divided into 36 1x1 mile subsections • BL: scale of 1:24,000 or 1 inch = 24,000 inches (2,000 ft) Figure 1-5 © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Contemporary Tools • Geographic Information Science (GIScience) – Global Positioning Systems (GPS) – Remote sensing – Geographic information systems (GIS) fig 1-7 © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 1-7 A Mash-up Figure 1-8 https://developers.google.com/maps/ © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. END of Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Describe Where Things Are? © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Key Issue 2 Why is Each Point on Earth Unique? pg13 - 28 © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Place: Unique Location of a Feature • Location: 4 ways to identify – Place names • Toponym: – Site: the physical characteristics of a place – Situation: location of a place relative to other places (helps locate a location) – Mathematical location: © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Place: Mathematical Location • Location of any place can be described precisely by a numbering system – Meridians (lines of longitude) 74W • Prime meridian (Greenwich, England) – Parallels (lines of latitude) 41N • The equator © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. The Cultural Landscape • A unique combination of social relationships and physical processes • Each region = a distinctive landscape • People/Culture = the most important agents of change to Earth’s surface © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Types of Regions • Region can apply to any area larger than a point but smaller than the planet. • Regional Studies: approach to geography that emphasizes the relationship among social and physical phenomena in a particular study. © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Types of Regions • Formal (uniform) regions – Example: Florida or Red vs Blue state. • Functional (nodal or focal point) regions – Example: the circulation area of a newspaper • Vernacular (cultural) regions rather than a scientific model – Example: the American South © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Vernacular Region by Mental Mapping • • • • • American South Middle East South America Miami Florida State University • Hawaii • Weston © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Spatial Association • Spatial distribution of a region can be constructed to encompass an area of widely varying scale. • i.e. – cancer rates vary according to cultural, economic, and environmental © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. factors Culture • Origin from the Latin cultus, meaning “to care for”. Body of customary beliefs, material traits, and social forms that distinguish a group. • Two aspects: – What people care about • Beliefs, values, and customs • Three identifying factors of culture derive from: Language, Religion, & Ethnicity. – What people take care of © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. • Earning a living; obtaining food, clothing, and shelter Cultural Ecology • The geographic study of • Determined by a human–environment group’s values relationships • Crop selection • Two perspectives: determine by – Environmental determinism: environment – Possibilism • Vegetarian vs Non• Modern geographers generally reject environmental vegetarian determinism in favor of • Cremation versus possibilism because humans burial have the ability to adjust to their environment/ resources © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Physical Processes determined by human activity/ 4 types • Climate: Tropics, Dry, Warm, Cold, Polar • Vegetation: Forest, Savanna, Grassland Desert • Soil: 12,000 soil types • Landforms: flat to mountainous © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Modifying the Environment • Examples – The Netherlands • Polders: creating land by drainage – The Florida Everglades – Not so sensitive environmental modification/ unintended environmental/social consequences Figure 1-21 © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Key Issue 2 Why Is Each Point on Earth Unique? Pg 13 - 28 © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Scale • Globalization – Economic globalization • Transnational corporations – Cultural globalization • A global culture? © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Space: Distribution of Features • Distribution—three features – Density • Arithmetic • Physiological • Agricultural – Concentration – Pattern © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Space–Time Compression Figure 1-29 © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Spatial Interaction • Transportation networks • Electronic communications and the “death” of geography? • Distance decay Figure 1-30 © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Diffusion • The process by which a characteristic spreads across space and over time • Hearth = source area for innovations • Two types of diffusion – Relocation – Expansion • Three types: hierarchical, contagious, stimulus © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Relocation Diffusion: Example Figure 1-31 © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. The End. Up next: Population © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.