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The Five Themes of Geography Location Place Human/Environmental Interaction Movement Region 1. LOCATION Location is the answer to the question “Where are we?” 2 types of location: relative & absolute Relative Location Describes where something or someone is based on things that can be found nearby Example: Kernersville Middle is on Piney Grove Road near the Quality Mart “I live on Chinchilla Ave.” Absolute Location This is the exact location on the surface of the Earth where something can be found Uses latitude and longitude or a street address to pinpoint where a site is located Example: KMS is at 110 Brown Road, Kernersville, North Carolina Using latitude and longitude, you can pinpoint an exact spot on the Earth’s surface. More commonly, we use our street address for our absolute location. 2. PLACE This includes the physical and human features of a location. Physical Features: includes information about climate and land forms (hills, mountains, etc…) Human Features: buildings, roads, clothing, food habits, etc… Physical Features Things like mountains, beaches, cliffs, plains and forests could be used to describe a place. Human Features: Buildings Does your neighborhood look like this one??? Human Features: Clothing These ladies are all ready for a special event… can you tell who is headed to the prom?? Human Features: Food Habits Is this what you would expect to be served for dinner tonight?? HUMAN-ENVIRONMENT INTERACTION Three main questions: How do humans adapt to their environment? How do humans affect/modify their environment? How do humans depend on their environment? How do humans adapt to their environment? People wear clothing that is appropriate for the climate where they live. Houses are built to meet the needs of people -- igloos, houses on stilts in flood prone areas, etc… Many SE Asian countries terrace farm due to mountainous terrain. Humans Adapt How do humans affect/modify their environment? People heat and cool buildings for their comfort. Often farmers build dams or irrigation canals to water their crops. Pollution has caused acid rain problems and changes in climate. Humans Modify The Hoover Dam was built to provide electricity to millions of Americans. The dam stops the flow of the Colorado River and creates Lake Mead. When the doors of the dam are opened, the water rushes through and produces electric power. How do humans depend on their environment? People depend on the Mississippi River for transportation of goods. People depend on the rainy season to water their crops. Ancient Egyptians depended on the flooding of the Nile River to fertilize the soil for farming. Humans Depend Each year, Egyptian farmers await the flooding of the Nile to bring fertile silt to the land to fertilize their crops. MOVEMENT This explains how people, goods and ideas get from one place to another. Today, we live in a global community where information travels much more freely than in the past. Inventions/improvements in technology and transportation have made our world one with many connections to each other. Ideas, such as fashion trends, move from place to place just as goods do. Ways things move … REGION This is an area that has something in common. This could be a type of government, a language, religion, a landform situation, history, or climate. The South is a region- people share common culture traits such as food choices and language. Three Types of Regions Formal Regions: areas defined by government boundaries (Ex. North Carolina, Forsyth County, Brazil, etc…) Functional Regions: areas defined by a function (Ex. Newspaper route, area controlled by phone or cable company, American Airlines service area, etc…) Vernacular Regions: areas loosely defined by people’s perception of something in common (Ex. the South, the Middle East, the MidWest) Formal Regions Functional Regions Pop Warner Football Regions Map Vernacular Regions