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World Geography

World Geography . An Introduction. Different Perspectives. Scientists are concerned with process. The focus is on causes and effects that occur regardless of time or place. Key questions often begin with “how.”

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World Geography

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  1. World Geography An Introduction

  2. Different Perspectives • Scientists are concerned with process. The focus is on causes and effects that occur regardless of time or place. Key questions often begin with “how.” • Historians are concerned with time. The focus is on time of events and what happens before and after them. Key questions often begin with “when.” • Geographers are concerned with space. The focus is on the locations of things, conditions in a particular place, and connections among places. Key questions usually begin with “where.” This is the geographic perspective.

  3. Geographic Perspective • Three Simple Ideas: • 1) There are reasons for things being where they are. • 2) There are advantages for things being in appropriate places. • 3) There are penalties for things being in the wrong places.

  4. Transportation Map Are bus stations in convenient places? Are there enough Bus routes in Kuwait? Where should new stations and routes be placed?

  5. Definition • Geography is the discipline that helps us understand why something we know here, in this location, may be better in another location.

  6. Where? • We make decisions about where to put or do things every day. These decisions have consequences that depend on where you are. • Think about where the bathroom is located in your house. If it’s in the center of the house, people can get to it easily. However, if it’s located at one end of the home, it might take a few seconds more. • A few seconds doesn’t seem like much, but in a city of 1 million, those few seconds can make a difference.

  7. “Spatial Knowledge” • Imagine you are alone and injured in a strange city where you can not speak the language. • Imagine you are about to take a long train ride. What should you carry with you? • It all depends on where you are going, and where you are right now. • These simple scenarios can become more complex: For example, a decision about where to deploy a United Nations peace-keeping envoy can mean the difference between war and peace. • This kind of thinking is called “Spatial Knowledge.”

  8. Benefits of Spatial Knowledge • efficiency, safety, fairness, and beauty. • Just like the location of rooms in a house, the locations of things in a city are important decisions. • Every decision is made based on where someone is.

  9. Types of Geography • Regional Geography • Looks at spatial patterns in one area (narrow perspective) • Topical Geography • Looks at spatial patterns from a broad perspective

  10. Regional Geography • The study of many geographical items in one area • Climate, soil, population, economy, politics, religious beliefs, historical events… • Focuses on what makes a place special or unique • Regional Geography uses reference maps.

  11. Reference Maps • Uses different colors and symbols to show the locations of things in a specific area. • Reference maps allow geographers to know what resources are available in a place, and how people use their land.

  12. Reference Map: What does it tell me?

  13. Reference Map: What does it tell me?

  14. Topical Geography • The study of spatial patterns from a broad perspective

  15. Thematic Maps • Topical geography uses thematic maps. • Thematic maps show where a specific thing occurs within a large area.

  16. Thematic Maps: What does it tell me?

  17. Thematic Map: What does it tell me?

  18. Geographical Scissors • Geographers use both regional and topical geography together. • They also use both reference and thematic maps at the same time. • Why? To answer questions about spatial patterns.

  19. Geographical Scissors • More specifically, geographic scissors allow us to see how global forces are influenced by local decisions. • Examples: • What happens when Kuwait produces less oil? • What if nuclear power plants are damaged in Japan?

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