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Map and Geographic Skills Unit 1 Unit 1 Vocabulary—Map and Graph Skills • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Absolute location atlas bar graph cardinal directions cartographer circle graphs climographs compass rose density distortion Equator Mercator Projection intermediate directions latitude legend (key) line graph longitude orientation Physical map Polar projection political map relief population maps scale primary resource map Prime Meridian globe relative location Robinson Projection Scale • Shows the ratio between a unit of length on a map and a unit of distance on the earth Lines of latitude • Imaginary lines that measure distance north and south of the equator Lines of Longitude • Imaginary lines that measure distance east and west of the Prime Meridian Relative Location • Describes a place in comparison to other places around it Orientation • Direction -- usually shown on a map using a compass rose or directional indicator Sources of geographic information • Geographic Information Systems (GIS), field work, satellite images, photographs, maps, globes, data bases, primary sources Mental Maps • Help people carry out daily activities (ex. Route to school or the store) • give directions to others • understand world events 4 ways mental maps can be developed and refined • Compare sketched maps to more formal maps such as those in an atlas or book • Describe the location of places in terms of reference points (the equator or Prime Meridian 4 ways mental maps can be developed and refined cont. • Can describe the location of places in terms of geographic features and land forms (ex. West of the Mississippi River, or north of the Gulf of Mexico) 4 ways mental maps can be developed and refined cont. • Describing the location of places in terms of the human characteristics of a place ( ex: languages, types of housing dress, recreation, customs or traditions What are the standard methods of showing information on a map • Symbols • Colors • Lines • Boundaries • Contours Thematic Maps • Thematic maps show a theme or a particular idea. There are many different types. Types of Thematic maps • Population density • population distribution • economic activity • resources • languages • ethnicity Types of Thematic maps cont. • Climate • precipitation • vegetation • physical • political Ways map can show change • Changes in Knowledge –Map of Columbus’s time –Satellite images • changes in Place Names –Formosa, Taiwan, Republic of China –Palestine, Israel, Occupied Ways map can show change cont. • changes in Boundaries –Africa in the 1910s and in the 1990s –Europe before WWII and after WWII and since 1990 Ways map can show change cont. • Changes in perspectives of place names--Arabian Gulf v. Persian Gulf –Sea of Japan v. East Sea –Middle East v. North Africa and Southwest Asia Ways map can show change cont. • Changes in Disputed areas-Korea –Western Sahara –Former Yugoslavia –Kashmir 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. Pie Chart • Used to show parts of a whole or percentages Bar graph • Used to show items East in relation to West North others 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Qtr Qtr Qtr Qtr 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 Climograph 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 Practical applications of Geography • Recycling programs • conversion of land • airport expansion • bicycle paths • water sources • air quality • mass transit