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Explore the world of geography and mapping with this comprehensive guide. Learn about the continents, oceans, hemispheres, equator, prime meridian, and more. Discover the five themes of geography and how they shape our understanding of the world. Dive into the world of maps and globes, understanding their strengths and limitations. Perfect for students, educators, and geography enthusiasts.
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Mapping & Geography“Writing the World” geo = world or earth graph = to write or to chart Part I Themes of Geography
Geography Basics Geography: the study or charting of the Earth Continent: one of several large landmasses on earth which usually include: Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Antarctica, Europe, and Australia 4 oceans: Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic Hemisphere: Any half of the earth The world has 4 hemispheres: Eastern, Western, Northern, Southern
The World “divided” • What are the 7 continents, 4 oceans, Hemispheres, Equator, Prime Meridian, North/South Pole. What is a compass rose?
Geography Basics Equator: is a latitude line that circles the Earth exactly halfway between the North + South Poles, or zero degrees Prime Meridian: Is a longitude line that runs through Greenwich, England, and is 0 degrees longitude. All longitude lines begin and end at the North and South poles compass rose, a figure on a map used to display the cardinal directions
Label the continents and oceans. Color each continent a different color Compass rose
5 Themes of Geography 5 themes: (MR LIP) movement, regions, location, interaction between man & environment, and place.
MOVEMENT How are people, goods, and ideas moved? • Transportation (railroads, ships, planes) • Communications (Twitter, telephones, computers, TV) • Mass Migration
REGIONS How are areas linked together? (Unifying Common Characteristics) • Political (Palestine, Middle East) • Physical Features (climate zones, deserts) • Cultural features (languages, religions)
LOCATION • two types of location: absolute and relative. • Absolute location .latitude and longitude .or exact, location. • Relative location shows where a place is in relation to other places
INTERACTION (Human & Environment) How do people relate to their environment? • How do people depend on their environment (farming, fishing, mining) • How do people adapt to their environment? (igloos, irrigation, clothing) • How do people change the environment? (roads, canals, harbors)
PLACE What is it like? • Climate (humid, tropical) • Physical features (mountains Mt. Everest, rivers Nile River, vegetation. • Man-made features (buildings, dams, bridges) Hoover Dam • Human characteristics (food, clothing, language) Navajo Code Talkers
5 themes rap A. Location B. Place C. Movement D. Region E. Interaction (human/Environment 1.____ Great Plains used to be a wide open area with no settlements or farms. Today towns and cities dot the Great Plains, and much of the land is used for farming 2. ____ Areas that receive very little rainfall are called deserts. 3._____ Texas is south of Oklahoma. 4._____ Hawaii is made up of islands and it offers a variety of tourist attractions 5. _____ Goods are shipped in large tractor-trailer trucks across interstate highways. 6. _____ Maine has many different economic areas including heavy forests and tourist areas. _____ The country of Guam is at 13 degrees N. Latitude, 145 degrees E. longitude 8. ____ One way to communicate information is to write letters to our friends And relatives. 9. ____ The building of new houses on areas that had always been forests frequently makes it difficult for animals to find homes 10.____ Swiss Chalets and high mountains called the Alps are two of the ways we can identify the country of Switzerland 1. E 2. D 3. A 4. B 5. C 6. D 7. A 8. C 9. E10. B
Mapping & Geography“Writing the World” • geo = world or earth • graph = to write or to chart • Part 2 Mapping and Location
Globes and Maps globe- round,3-d model of the earth….Most accurate, not practical Map-2-dimensional view of the world. It is more detailed but is distorted(shapeschange) flat maps are forced to exaggerate some sense of scale, or size Cartography or mapping is the study or practice of making maps. Cartographers or mapmakers are the people who do this
Mercator’s Projection Map • Mercator projection (method of putting a map of the Earth onto a flat piece of paper) • still used by sailors today • expanded the area between longitudes • distorts size, for example, on Mercator’s map, Greenland looks bigger than South Americawhen it is only one eighth the size.
Robinson’s Projection Map • shows the size and shape of the land quite accurately. • Some Geographers think it is one of the best World map’s available • Some distortions(in areas around the edges of the map).
Effects of Latitude • lines of latitude, are imaginaryeast-west circles around the globe. • Also called parallels, because they are parallel to one another RUN East and WEST MEASURE North to South • Equator is a latitude line that circles the Earth exactly halfway between the North and South Poles, or zero degrees • low latitudes, or the tropics Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn are at 23.5 degrees N. and S. • direct sunlight throughout the year, it is almost always hot. - High latitudes or polar zones * no direct sunlight * far north- arctic * far south Antarctic Circle
Middle Latitudes • In between is called Middle Latitudes of the northern and southern hemispheres, or temperate zones • seasons: spring, summer, fall, and winter. • receive fairly direct sunlight and at other times of year, they receive fairly indirect sunlight.
Longitudes • Lines of longitude (imaginary lines that circle the globe from north to south) are also called meridians. • All longitude lines begin and end at the North and South poles. • Prime Meridian, which runs through Greenwich, England, is 0 degrees longitude. • International Date Line (IDL) passes through the middle of the pacific 180 degrees longitude • RUNS north to South MEASURES east to West
Parts of a Map • compass rose, a figure on a map or nautical chart used to display the cardinal directions • cardinal directions: north, south, east, and west • scale - tells what a certain distance on the map stands for • symbols are explained in the key, or legend. • grid. uses lines to make rows and columns on a mapSome maps use a grid of latitude and longitude lines
Types of Maps • Political maps: No physical features. Includes state and national boundaries or countries boundaries. • Road maps: show major—some minor highways—and roads, airports, railroad tracks, cities and other points of interest in an area. • Topographic: includes shape and elevation of an area. steep or flat terrain.