300 likes | 680 Views
THE AUSTRAL REALM (FOCUS ON AUSTRALIA). (CHAPTER 11). MAJOR GEOGRAPHIC QUALITIES.
E N D
THE AUSTRAL REALM(FOCUS ON AUSTRALIA) (CHAPTER 11)
MAJOR GEOGRAPHIC QUALITIES • RELATIVE LOCATION AND ISOLATION – developed during the breakup of Gondwanaland (Pangaea). Led to development of some of the most unique animals and plants on the planet – Kangaroos, Koalas, ant eaters, eucalyptus, etc. • PERIPHERAL DEVELOPMENT/ HIGHLY CLUSTERED URBAN POPULATIONS – around the sea. • CHANGING HUMAN GEOGRAPHY – through Asian immigration & Aboriginal activism • EXPORTERS OF LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS
BIOGEOGRAPHY • A SUB-FIELD OF GEOGRAPHY- THE SPATIAL ARRANGEMENT OF FLORA AND FAUNA • EVOLVED FROM THE OVERLAP BETWEEN GEOGRAPHY AND BIOLOGY • ALEXANDER VON HUMBOLDT (1769-1859) IS RECOGNIZED AS THE FOUNDER • SUBDIVIDED INTO 2 MAIN BRANCHES: • ZOOGEOGRAPHY – study of animal life • PHYTOGEOGRAPHY – study of plant life
AUSTRALIA’S PHYSIOGRAPHIC REGIONS It’s ten times the size of Texas!
AUSTRALIA • A FEDERAL STATE SINCE 1901 • POPULATION OF 20.3 MILLION • ABORIGINAL POPULATION OF 400,000 (2%) • ARITHMETIC DENSITY OF 6.8/SQ MI • PHYSIOLOGIC DENSITY OF 113/SQ MI • GNI OF $28,290 • 91% URBANIZED • MAJOR URBAN CENTERS • SYDNEY (4.5 MILLION) • MELBOURNE (3.7 MILLION) • CANBERRA (345,000)- CAPITAL
POLITICAL DIVISIONS
THE OUTBACK • EXTENSIVE GRASSLAND PASTURES • SUPPORT ONE OF THE WORLD’S LARGEST SHEEP AND CATTLE INDUSTRIES • A FRAGILE ENVIRONMENT
AUSTRALIA’S ECONOMY • PRINCIPAL PATTERNS: • EXPORTS RAW MATERIALS • BASED HEAVILY ON THE PRIMARY SECTOR ACTIVITIES • DEPENDS ON WORLD MARKETS • IMPORT-SUBSTITUTION INDUSTRIES • SMALL DOMESTIC MARKET • TRADE LINKS WITH ASIAN TIGERS
AGRICULTURE & MINERAL RESOURCES
ABORIGINAL ISSUES • POPULATION DATES FROM 50,000-60,000 YEARS AGO, pg 584. • 1980s - CAMPAIGN AGAINST MINING AND EXPLORATION OF TRADITIONAL LANDS • 1992: ABORIGINES CAN CLAIM TITLE TO TRADITIONAL LAND • 1993: NATIVE TITLE BILL – Natives could now obtain titles to their “vacant” land • 1996: LEGAL REVIEW OF PASTORAL LEASES • CURRENT LAND ISSUES
ABORIGINAL CLAIMS
E.J. PALKA BEACH ALONG AUSTRALIA’S EAST COAST
NORTH QUEENSLAND SUGARCANE FIELD E.J. PALKA TEA PLANTATION E.J. PALKA
NEW ZEALAND • TWO MAJOR ISLANDS (NORTH AND SOUTH) AND MANY SMALLER • MOUNTAINOUS ENVIRONMENTS • POPULATION OF 4.2 MILLION, OF WHICH 75% ARE EUROPEAN • MAORI HERITAGE (POLYNESIAN ROOTS), BUT A MINORITY TODAY OF LESS THAN 600,000 • ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES - herding
NEW ZEALAND’S RELATIVE LOCATION (ASTRIDE PLATE BOUNDARIES)
POPULATION OVERVIEW • 4.2 MILLION PEOPLE • MAORI MINORITY OF ABOUT 14% • ARITHEMETIC DENSITY: 39.8/SQ MI • LIFE EXPECTANCY: MALE (76); FEMALE (81) • 78% URBANIZED • GNI: $21,120 • AUCKLAND: 1.2 MILLION
LAND-USE PATTERNS
COMMONALITIES(AUSTRALIA & NEW ZEALAND) • BRITISH HERITAGE • PASTORAL ECONOMIES • SMALL INTERNAL MARKETS • CHALLENGES OF DISTANCE AND REMOTE LOCATION • HIGH % URBANIZATION • PERIPHERAL DEVELOPMENT • CONCERNS WITH INDIGENOUS PEOPLES • EXCELLENT QUALITY OF LIFE FOR MOST
AUCKLAND, NORTH ISLAND HIGHLY URBANIZED ON COASTAL MARGINS
THE MAORI FACTOR/COMPLAINTS • TREATY OF WAITANGI, 1840 • LAND AND FISHING RIGHTS • LACK OF INTEGRATION INTO REST OF SOCIETY • HISTORICAL LAND CLAIMS (SOUTH ISLAND)