1 / 70

World Geography Europe & Russia Notes

World Geography Europe & Russia Notes. Physical. Peninsulas and Islands . Europe is a large peninsula of Asia also has its own smaller peninsulas: a “peninsula of peninsulas” most places are within 300 miles of the ocean or a sea . Northern Peninsulas .

dympna
Download Presentation

World Geography Europe & Russia Notes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. World Geography Europe & Russia Notes

  2. Physical

  3. Peninsulas and Islands • Europe is a large peninsula of Asia • also has its own smaller peninsulas: a “peninsula of peninsulas” • most places are within 300 miles of the ocean or a sea

  4. Northern Peninsulas • The Scandinavian Peninsula includes Norway and Sweden - bounded by Norwegian, North, and Baltic Seas • Glaciers created fjords - steep U-shaped valleys connected to sea & filled with seawater (provides harbors for fishing boats) • Jutland Peninsula forms large part of Denmark, small part of Germany

  5. Norway Glaciers

  6. Southern Peninsulas • Iberian Peninsula - Spain & Portugal • Italian Peninsula - Italy • Balkan Peninsula - bordered by Adriatic, Mediterranean, Aegean seas

  7. Islands • Large - Great Britain, Ireland, Iceland, & Greenland • Smaller - Corsica, Sardinia Sicily, & Crete

  8. Mountain Chains • The Alps - Europe’s most famous mountain chain - crosses France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, & Balkans - cuts Italy off from rest of Europe

  9. Mountain Chains • Ural Mountains - separate Northern European & West Siberian Plains - some see them as dividing line between Europe and Asia - some consider Europe and Asia as single continent—Eurasia

  10. Rivers • Network of rivers encourage trade and travel - allows goods inland from coastal harbors, aids economic growth • Rhine - flows north 820 miles from interior to North Sea • Danube - flows east 1,771 miles, through 9 countries, to Black Sea

  11. Polders: Land from the Sea • dikes—earthen banks that hold back the sea • polder—land reclaimed by diking and draining • Seaworks—structures like dikes that control sea’s destructive force

  12. Polders: Land from the Sea • terpen—high earthen platforms that provide safe ground during floods • Zuider Zee—arm of North sea the Dutch turned into a fresh-water lake - saltwater eventually replaced by fresh water - lake is now called Ijsselmeer

  13. The Northern European Plain • One of the most fertile agricultural regions in world • Stretches over 1,000 miles from the western border to the Urals • Flat agricultural land produces vast quantities of food - chernozem—world’s most fertile soil is abundant in area

  14. Natural Resources • Fueling Industrialization - Coal and iron ore are needed to create steel for industrialization • Energy - Oil, & natural gas found in North Sea in 1959 • Agricultural Land - 33% of Europe is suitable for agriculture ( world average only 11%) • Irish burn peat for fuel- partially decayed plant matter from bogs

  15. Natural Resources • Many of Russia’s resources are in Siberia - frigid, arctic Russian area of Asia • Hard to get at & move resources due to climates, terrain & distances • taiga—largest forest on earth located in Russia - Produces 1/5 of the world’s timber

  16. Westerly Winds Warm Europe • Marine west coast climate - : warm summers & cool winters - Spain, France, Poland, British Isles & coastal Scandinavia • North Atlantic Drift - warm-water tropical current flows by west coast of Europe • prevailing westerlies carry current’s warmth, moisture inland • Enables France to be a major agricultural producer

  17. Harsher Conditions Inland • Not Reached by Westerly Winds • Continentality - Distance from sea decreases precipitation -moisture from Atlantic Ocean is lost further inland • Humid continental climate: cold, snowy winters; warm or hot summers

  18. Special Winds • Mediterranean coast of France is not protected by mountains • mistral—a cold, dry winter wind from north • Sirocco—hot North African wind carries sea moisture or desert dust

  19. Land of the Midnight Sun • Tundra climate in far northern Scandinavia, along Arctic Circle - permafrost with no trees, only mosses & lichens • South of tundra is subarctic climate - cool with cold, harsh winters - little growth except stunted trees • Region’s sunlight varies sharply: long winter nights & summer days - area north of Arctic Circle the Land of the Midnight Sun - some winter days have no sun, some summer days have no night

  20. Culture & Economy

  21. Modern Life in Europe • Strong economies allow a high standard of living in western Europe • Most Western Europeans live in cities - good public transportation, cultural attractions, & low crime rates • Most homes are small, so socializing is done in public cafés, parks

  22. Modern Life in Europe • Eastern Europe has less Urban Development - only 40% in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 37% in Albania live in cities

  23. Industry • Coal, iron made France, Germany, Netherlands industrial leaders • Sweden has timber, Iceland has fishing, & Norway has North Sea oil • Computer production is major part of Ireland’s economy • Scotland has Silicon Glen—area with many high-tech companies - produces at least a third of Europe’s personal, notebook computers

  24. Tourism and Luxury • Tourism is major part of French, Swiss, Austrian economies • Switzerland’s neutrality makes it a banking center • Germany has the autobahn highway

  25. European Union • Following WWII - Some people believed the best way to rebuild & avoid conflicts was to unify Europe • 1951, France Germany, Italy & Benelux move toward unification by forming the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) • 1957 - European Economic Community (EEC) or Common Market formed - removed trade barriers & sets common economic goals - people could live and work in any member countries

  26. European Union • 1967 - EEC merged with ECSC to form European Community (EC) • 1993 - Maastricht Treaty replaced EC with European Union (EU) • Mixed feelings about European Union and euro—common currency -Some concerned about use of common euro currency &shifting populations as workers move to areas with higher wages • Others feel euro increases business efficiency & international trade

  27. Pollution Problems

  28. Deforestation • Wood was used for fuel, building material for ships & houses • industry needed wood charcoal for blast furnaces • eventually coal replaces wood, but damage to forests is done

More Related