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Geography is the science of place, encompassing the study of physical and cultural features and their interaction with humankind. It helps us understand how people, places, and environments came to be, and how they affect each other. By providing knowledge about our surroundings, geography enables us to make better choices, avoid cultural mistakes, promote sustainable development, and improve conflicts. This article explores the academic division of geography, the five themes of geography, and the significance of understanding physical and cultural geography.
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Geography What is it?
Geography • “Geography is the science of place. Its vision is grand, its view panoramic. It sweeps the surface of the earth, charting the physical, organic and cultural terrain, their aerial differentiation, and their ecological dynamics with humankind. Its foremost tool is the map.” Leonard Krishtalka, Carnegie Museam of Natural History, 20th Century AD
Which basically mean . . . • Geography helps us understand how people, places, and environments came to be • And how people, places, and environments affect each other
“Geo” is also Latin for earth. • “Graphy” is Greek for graph or map. • So…Geography is also the mapping of the earth.
Why do we need to know that? • Explains how we got where we are • Explains what is going on around us • Let’s us make better choices • cultural mistakes • provide for sustainable development • improve current conflicts and avoid others
Academic Division of Geography • Physical Geography • Cultural Geography
Physical Geography • Natural features on the surface of the earth and the physical environment • Climate • Ecosystems – vegetation and animals • Landforms
Cultural Geography • The study of people • Beliefs • Traditions • Way of life • Economic activities • Government systems • Religion • Language • Gender roles
5 Themes of Geography • Location • Place • Region • Movement • Human Environmental Interaction
Location • Position on the earth’s surface. • Absolute: use of a network of horizontal and vertical lines on globes and maps to find exact points • Relative: The use of cardinal and intermediate directions in giving location
Place • Character of a place • Physical Characteristics: land, water, weather, soil, and plant and animal life. • Cultural Characteristics: anything that describes the people DESCRIBE is the key word in place.
Regions • Regions make the study of geography more manageable. The world is often divided into regions or areas based on physical or human characteristics • 3 Types of Regions • Formal • Functional • perceptual
Formal Regions • A region defined by a common characteristic • Examples: Texas, United States, Corn Belt
Functional Regions • A central point and the surrounding territory linked to it • Example: Houston
Perceptual Regions • A region defined by popular feeling rather than objective data • Example: Dirty South, Bible Belt
Movement • People, goods and ideas move between regions • The earth is constantly moving – water (oceans), landforms, wind, etc.
Human/Environment Interaction The interaction of humans with the environment. This interaction can have both good and bad outcomes. This is one of the most important factors in geography.
The five themes ask these questions: Location – Where is it? Place – What is it like there? (both physical and human) HEI – What is the relationship between people and their environment? Movement – How are people and places connected? Region – How is a place similar to and different from other places?
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Let’s Review • What is geography? • Why is it important? • What are the themes of geography? • What are examples of physical and cultural geography?