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Explore the era of Natural Texas and its people through an in-depth analysis of Texas history eras, geographical questions, human-environment interaction, and human systems. Learn about and analyze the physical and human characteristics that shape Texas and how they influence the state's development and culture.
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UNIT 1:Texas Geography (topic) How do physical and human characteristics shape our state? (Essential Question)
Era of Natural Texas and Its People • What is an era? A fixedperiod of time characterized by particular events, features, developments, orpeople. • Why do historians divide history into eras?Historians divide history into eras in order to create blocks of time that have similar characteristicsin order toorganizeandpresent information about the past.
Era of Natural Texas and Its People • TEKS 1A • Identify the major eras in Texas history, describe their defining characteristics, and explain why historians divide the past into eras, including Natural Texas and its People; Age of Contact; Spanish Colonial; Mexican National; Revolution and Republic; Early Statehood; Texas in the Civil War and Reconstruction; Cotton, Cattle, and Railroads; Age of Oil; Texas in the Great Depression and World War II; Civil Rights and Conservatism; and Contemporary Texas
6 Geographical Questions • Location – Where is it? • Place – What is it like? • Regions – How does it compare to other places? • Human-Environment Interaction – How do humans react to their environment and how does it affect them? • Human Systems • Physical Systems
Location– Where is it? • Absolute Location – The exactlocation of a place on the earth’s surface • Relative Location – The location of a place in relation to other places • The Absolute location and Relative location of Texas affect it in many ways – How has Texas’ relative location to Mexico affected it? (Left Column) *Turn and talk to a partner
Place– What is it like? • Place refers to the physical and humancharacteristics of a location • Physical Characteristics include: • Landforms, Climate, plants, animals • Human Characteristics include: • Language, Religion, Architecture, Music, Politics, ways of life
Regions –How does it compare to other places? • Geographers divide areas into regions in order to better study them. • Regions are places that are united based on common characteristics • Regions can be based on physical, human, business and other characteristics
Human-Environment Interaction How do humans react to their environment and how does it affect them? Use, adapt to or change. • Ex: Pollution Deforestation Hurricanes/Tornadoes Farming Damming Rivers to make lakes
Texans have adapted and modified the environment by: • building dams on rivers to harness power for electricity. • irrigating the farms in the Great Plains region to yield sufficient crops such as cotton, wheat, rice, corn, etc.
Human Systems • Movement - How people move through the environment • Cultural Diffusion - new ideas brought by migrating people become widely accepted. Examples? • People bring ideas and goods with them when they move from one place to another.
Physical Systems • Geographers analyze physical systems such as mountains, volcanoes, hurricanes, glaciers to see how they interact with and shape places and regions. • They also study plant and animal ecosystemsthat depend on each other and their surroundings in places and regions for their survival.
Roy Bedichek He was an author and speaker; considered a “Naturalist” whotraveled and documented the Texas landscape for over 30 years. Died in 1959.
TEXAS GEOGRAPHY NOTES PART 2
CLIMATE Texas has the most varied climate of any other state in the U.S. It even varies greatly from one area of the state to the next.
Absolute Location • Texas lies in what are called the middle latitudes, the region about midway between the equator and the north pole. • Because of this absolute location of Texas being not very far north of the equator, it has mild winters, and because it is not very far south of the north pole is has mild summers. TEXAS EQUATOR
Northers • Sudden, icy blasts of cold air, called northers, extend south from Canada and sweep across the plains of Texas. • Despite its overall warmth, Texas is subject to periods of cold weather.
Storms • Violent storms form when cool air from the north collides with moist warm air from the Gulf of Mexico. • Because Texas is on the Gulf, destructive storms such as hurricanes sometimes sweep across the state.
Relative Location • Because Texas is on the gulf coast, breezes from the Gulf of Mexico cool Texas in the summer and warm it in the winter. • Moisture from the Gulf gives Texas a lot of its rainfall. However, some parts of Texas are so far from The Gulf it has little effect on climate there. In the hot, dry areas, water is a precious, natural resource.
Elevation • Elevation also affects the Texas climate. The temperature cools by 3 degrees every 1000-foot rise in elevation. • The temperature rises as elevation decreases