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APHG Copeland Unit 1 Five Themes of Geography

APHG Copeland Unit 1 Five Themes of Geography. Five Themes from Four Traditions.

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APHG Copeland Unit 1 Five Themes of Geography

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  1. APHG CopelandUnit 1Five Themes of Geography

  2. Five Themes from Four Traditions • The five themes of geography help us in answering the “where”, “how” and “why” dealing with occurrences that take place in our world. By using these themes as a basis for understanding geographic information, we can gain a better appreciation of cultural and environmental changes around the world. • Add: These five themes have been taken from Pattison’s Four Traditions (See Board)

  3. Location 1. Location . position on the earth’s surface. Ways to indicate location: Maps -Absolute Location-Latitude and Longitude (Parallels and Meridians), determine exact location. Ex. Atlanta, GA-33°N, 84°W Observe Map (next slide) -Relative Location-location of a place relative to other places (situational) Why use relative location? Unfamiliar place, centrality

  4. Absolute Location (Using Latitude and Longitude)

  5. Human Environment Interaction 2. Human/Environment Interaction . relations between cultures and environment (cultural ecology). A) Cultural Landscape-human-induced changes that involve the surface and biosphere-Carl Sauer B) Environmental Determinism-physical environment causes certain human behaviors (UT Football Game) C) Possibilism-natural environment limits the range of choices available to a culture (Limited Food Diet of Inuits)

  6. What I expected to see at UT football game…and did.

  7. Region 3. Region. area of unique characteristics, way of organizing people. Types of Regions • Formal-distinctive characteristics that can be proven (uniform, homogeneous) Ex. Wheat Belt, Republican state-GA • Functional-product of interactions, organized around a node or core Ex. Newspapers, radio stations, “The Perimeter” • Perceptual-vernacular (exists only in the mind) Ex. South

  8. Place 4. Place . associations of phenomena in an area. Culture-people’s lifestyles, values, beliefs and traits What people care about: language, religion, ethnicity What people take care of: daily necessities, leisure activities Components of Culture: Culture Region-the area in which a particular cultural system prevails Ex. Building styles, farms Culture Trait-a single attribute of culture Ex. Food, clothing Culture Complex-a discrete combination of traits Ex. Nationalism/Patriotism Culture System-a grouping of certain complexes, usually based on ethnicity, language, religion Ex. Spanish-speaking, Catholic Mexicans Culture Realm-an assemblage of culture (highly generalized/ster) Ex. Sub-Saharan Africa (assuming that all of Africa south of the Sahara is virtually the same) Physical Processes-environmental processes, which explain the distribution of human activities Climate-long-term average weather condition Koppen’s Five Main Climate Regions Tropical Dry Warm Mid-Latitude Cold Mid-Latitude Polar Vegetation-plant life Biomes-plant communities (4-forest, savanna, grassland, desert) Soil-(12,000 soil types in the U.S. alone) Landforms-earth’s surface features

  9. Movement 5. Movement . interconnection between areas. • Culture Hearths-source of idea, innovation or ideology • Cultural Diffusion-spread of idea, innovation or ideology from hearth to another culture Types of Diffusion Expansion Diffusion-idea, innovation or ideology develops in a source area and remains strong there while also spreading outward Ex. Computers, Television, Cell phones • Relocation Diffusion (Transculturation)-spread of idea, innovation or ideology through physical movement of individuals Ex. Italian immigrants to NYC taught Irish-Americans how to make pizza

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