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Cultural Geography GEOG 101 Dr. Scott S. Brown.

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Presentation on theme: "Cultural Geography GEOG 101 Dr. Scott S. Brown."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cultural Geography GEOG 101 Dr. Scott S. Brown

2 Textbook

3 Human Geography Chapter 1 Introduction Insert figure CO1 3
© Thinkstock/Masterfile 3 Human Geography 12e

4 What Is Geography? “Description of the Earth” Spatial Science
Study of Spatial Variation The fundamental inspiration for geographical thought probably originated with the recognition of “areal differentiation”—that one place is different than another 4

5 What Is Geography? Although space is central to geography, time is important, too. How do places change over time, how do structures and processes change location over time, and how do patterns of interaction change over time? Geography is about both static and dynamic aspects of space and place 5

6 3 Characteristics of Geography
Science of Place Multidisciplinary field Human – Environment Relationship

7 5 Themes in Cultural Geography
Cultural Landscape Cultural Region Cultural Ecology Cultural Integration Cultural Diffusion Culture = Learned, collective human behavior

8 Human Geography Subfields: Behavioral Political Economic Cultural
Social Urban Medical Population Geomorphology Biogeography 8

9 Core Geographic Concepts
The Geographer’s Questions Where is it? What is it? How it came to be and where it is? Where is it in relation to other things? How is it changing? Space and Place Absolute and relative space Sense of place and “placelessness” Spatial Behavior, Relationships, and Processes Fundamental Characteristics of Places 9

10 Core Geographic Concepts
Space and Place Absolute About fixed coordinate systems, like latitude and longitude, and measurement units, like miles or kilometers Remains the same in all contexts Relative space Comparative and varies with context More flexible in recognizing that different ways of “measuring” space are more relevant for particular domains of human activity 10

11 Core Geographic Concepts
Space and Place Sense of place The attachment we have to specific locations Placelessness Uniformity; elimination of uniqueness 11

12 Fundamental Characteristics of Places
Location, Direction, and Distance Size and Scale Physical & Cultural Attributes The Rational Structure of Place Density Dispersion Pattern Place Similarity & Regions The Characteristics of Regions Types of Regions 12

13 Location Absolute Location Relative Location Site vs. Situation 13

14 Absolute Location Relative Location Site Situation
Identification of place by some precise and accepted system of coordinates Relative Location The position of a place in relation to that of other places or activities Site Physical and cultural attributes of a place Situation Expression of relative location with particular reference to items of significance to the place in question 14

15 Absolute Location: Latitude and Longitude

16 Location Site vs. Situation 16

17 Site: Lower Manhattan Island
FIGURE 1-10a

18 Site & Situation: Singapore
FIGURE 1-11 S. Brown

19 FIGURE 1-11a

20 FIGURE 1-11b

21 Site & Situation: Hong Kong

22 Direction Absolute Direction Relative Direction
Based on the global or macroscopic features such as cardinal points of north, south, east, and west, or on the directions to prominent stars Relative Direction Culturally based locational reference, as the Far West, the Old South, or the Middle East Include body-centered terms like "left," "right," "in front of" and "behind" 22

23 Distance Absolute Distance Relative Distance
The physical separation between two points on the earth’s surface measured by some accepted standard unit such as miles or kilometers for widely separated locales, feet or meters for more closely spaced points Relative Distance Transforms those linear measurements into other units that could be more meaningful for the spatial relationship in question 23

24 Physical & Cultural Attributes
Natural Landscape Climate, soil, water resources, minerals and terrain features Provides the setting within which human actions occurs Cultural Landscape Visible expression of human activity Insert figure 1.10 © Doug Sherman/Geofile 24

25 Cultural Landscapes: Political Boundaries U.S./Mexico Border

26 Cultural Landscapes between Mexico and California, USA
Figure 1.11 Cultural Landscapes between Mexico and California, USA

27 Places The Rational Structure of Place Density Dispersion Pattern
Usually thought of as a measure of the number or quantity of some feature within a defined unit of area Does not apply only to areas Dispersion A statement of how much features within a distribution are spread out (dispersed or scattered) from each other, or clustered (agglomerated) together Pattern The geometric arrangement of features in space Spatial Association 27

28 Figure 1.17 Spatial Association

29 Place Similarity & Regions
Types of Regions: Administrative Created by law, treaty, or regulation It includes political regions such as countries and states, bureaucratic regions such as school and voting districts, and cadastral (real estate) regions Thematic Sometimes called formal or uniform regions in other texts, are based on one or more objectively measurable themes or properties 29

30 Place Similarity & Regions
Types of Regions: Functional Emerge from patterns of interaction over space and time that connect places Have a point-like core from which interaction originates, and are thus sometimes called nodal regions, but they do not have to Perceptual Informal subjective regions defined by people's beliefs, feelings, and images 30

31 Thematic & Functional Regions

32 Perceptual Regions Insert figure 1.17 32

33 Maps Map Scale Remote Sensing Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
The Globe Grid Earth-Sun Relationship 33

34 Figure 1.21 Map Scale

35 G.I.S. 3 Main Components Data storage Computer graphics
Figure 1.27 G.I.S. 3 Main Components Data storage Computer graphics Statistical packages

36 Global Grid: Latitude and Longitude
Figure 1.22 Global Grid: Latitude and Longitude

37 Latitude and Longitude
Location of any place can be described precisely by meridians and parallels Meridians (lines of longitude) Prime meridian – 0° Lon International Date Line – 180° Lon Parallels (lines of latitude) The equator – 0° Lat Tropic of Cancer – 23.5° Lat N Tropic of Capricorn – 23.5° Lat S Arctic Circle – 66.5° Lat N Antarctic Circle – 66.5° Lat S North & South Poles - 90° Lat N/S

38 FIGURE 1-12

39 FIGURE 1-13 Longitude – Time

40 Latitude – Climate FIGURE 1-19

41 Earth – Sun Relationship

42 (Wiltshire, England, UK)
Calendars and Seasons Stonehenge (Wiltshire, England, UK) Pueblo Bonito (Chaco Canyon N.P., NM, USA)

43 Mayan Calendar Dzibichaltún (Yucatan, Mexico) Chichén Itza (Yucatan,


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