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The Five Themes of Geography What is Geography What are the five themes How are the five themes used How will I use this in class What is Geography? • Comes from the Greek word “geographia”—meaning “to describe the earth” • Geographers view the world by looking at how space is used on earth and the interactions that take place • Geography is the study of the distribution and interaction of physical and human features on the earth The Five Themes of Geography • Tools used in Geography— Maps, Charts, Graphs, tables, observations and the five themes • The themes organize information to make it easier to study—geography is very broad Theme: Location • Where is it? • Location can be described either relatively or absolutely Absolute Location • The exact location of a place on the globe or map • To find exact location you use the grid system on the globe or map • The grid system is made up of Longitude and Latitude lines Relative Location • Describing location of one place in terms or relation to another place • McDonalds is one block down from the Kroger • Cairo, Egypt is located near the mouth of the Nile River in Africa • For relative location to be useful, you must already have some grasp of where certain things are located. Theme: Place • What is it like? • Can be described physically or culturally • Physically– mountains, rivers, lakes, climate, vegetation • Culturally– religion, population, language, ethnic background Theme: Region • • How are areas similar or different? A region is an area of earth’s surface with similar characteristics—physical, cultural, economic, or political • There are Three types of regions 1. Formal 2. Functional 3. Perceptual Formal Regions • Defined by a limited number of related characteristics • Example: The Sahel region in Africa is a desert area characterized by specific climate, vegetation, and land use patterns • Political regions– continents, countries, or states • Economic regions—The Breadbasket of the U.S. • Cultural regions– The Middle East Functional Regions • Two or more places connected by interactions or connections usually through movement. • Example: a city and its suburbs connected by highways, railroads, subways, and bus lines Perceptual Regions • A place in which people perceive, or see, the characteristics of the region in the same way Example: The South Theme: Human-Environment Interaction • How do people relate to the physical world? • Adapting- Humans changing themselves to meet the • Altering– Humans surrounding changing the environment environment to meet Example: using their personal needs air conditioning in a Example: Building hot climate a dam to control flooding or cutting down trees to create farm land Theme: Movement • How do people, ideas, and products move from one location to another? • Geographers analyze movement by looking at three types of distance: linear distance, time distance, and psychological distance Theme: Movement • Linear Distance: how far a person, idea, or product moves across the earth Example: geographers look at how physical geography can prevent linear movement (mountains, oceans) • Time Distance: amount of time it takes for a person, idea, or product to reach a place Example: how long did it take for Christianity to spread, trade of products Theme: Movement • Psychological Distance: the way people view distance. The more familiar you are with a place the closer it seems to be to you.