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Introduction to Geography Chapter 1: Introduction to Geography.

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Geography Chapter 1: Introduction to Geography."— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Geography Chapter 1: Introduction to Geography

2 What is your perspective?

3 Geography The study of the interaction of all physical and human phenomena at individual places and of how interactions among places form patterns and organize space.

4 What Is Geography? ► Physical ► Human  Cultural ► Cartography  Making maps ► Remote Sensing  Mapping Earth from satellites & aircraft ► Geographic Information Systems ► A way of thinking about problems, with interacting factors in a place

5 5 Themes of Geography ► Location  Where is it? ► Place  What is it like? ► Human-environment interaction  How do people relate to the physical world? ► Region  How are places similar or different? ► Movement  How do people, goods, ideas, etc. get from one place to another? LocationPlace Region Movement Human – Environment Interaction

6 The Science of Geography ► Location  Absolute location  Relative location  Answers the question “where?”

7 The Science of Geography ► Region  Area with uniform characteristics ► For example, topography, climate

8 The Science of Geography ► Human-environment interaction  How humans interact with the natural environment  Effects humans have on the environment  Effects the environment has on humans

9 The Science of Geography ► Movement  Across the earth’s surface  Includes: ► Communications ► Transportation ► Circulation ► Diffusion

10 The Science of Geography ► Place  Characteristics make each place unique  No place is exactly the same as another

11 Development of Geography ► Classical Western World  Erastosthenes  Hipparchus ► Non-European World  The Tribute of Yu  Phei Hsiu  Kangnido

12 Ptolemy 150 A.D.

13 Since the 1400’s… ► General geography  Bernhard Varen ► Special geography  Regional ► General geography  Topical or systematic ► Human- environment tradition  Alexander von Humboldt ► Cosmos

14 Contemporary Geography ► 3 approaches  Area analysis  Spatial or locational analysis  Geographic systems analysis “The information that any citizen needs in order to make an informed decision on an important question of the day is largely geographic.”

15 Area Analysis ► Site  Exact location of a place ► Situation or relative location  Location of a place relative to other places  Accessibility  Constant change  Scale ► Globalization Internal Asian Trade Routes in 1400

16 Regions ► Formal regions  Essential uniformity in one or more physical or cultural features

17 ► Functional regions  Defined by interactions among places  I.e. trade or communications Regions Television station viewing areas within Iowa

18 ► Vernacular regions  Widespread popular perception of existence Regions

19 Spatial Analysis ► Distribution ► 3 properties of distribution  Density  Concentration  Pattern

20 Movement ► Distance  Measurements ► Absolute ► Time ► Cost  Friction of distance ► Distance decay  As distance increases, importance of a particular phenomena decreases

21 Diffusion ► Hearth  Place where idea begins ► Relocation diffusion ► Contiguous or contagious diffusion ► Hierarchical diffusion ► Barriers to diffusion  Distance & time  Physical barriers  Cultural barriers

22 4 Physical Systems ► Atmosphere (air) ► Lithosphere (Earth’s solid rocks) ► Hydrosphere (water) ► Biosphere (living organisms)

23 Human-Environmental Interaction ► Reciprocal interaction ► Culture  Everything about the way people live  Language, food, religion, social ceremonies ► Natural landscapes  Without evidence of human activity ► Cultural landscapes  How humans modify local environment

24 The Geographic Grid ► Latitude  Location on Earth’s surface between equator & N Pole or S Pole  0-90 ° N or S  Parallels ► Longitude  Measures distance E & W around globe  Prime Meridian  International Date Line  0-180 ° E or W

25 Prime Meridian and Standard Time Prime Meridian and Standard Time ► Prime Meridian in 1884 & GMT established ► Time zones – 1 hour for each time zone  360 deg / 24 hr = 15 deg / hr (rotation of earth)

26 International Dateline ► 180 th meridian ► One day later west of this line ► Each day officially begins here at 12:01 am International Dateline

27 Map Making ► Cartography ► Scale  Fraction1/24,000  Ratio1:24,000  Written statement “1 inch equals 1 mile”  Bar style ► Detail and area  Small scale map = less detail, large denominator (1:1,000,000)  Large scale map = more detail, small denominator (1:100,000) 0 1243

28

29 Seattle, WA at different scales

30 Globe vs. Flat Map Globe vs. Flat Map ► Globe  Scale model of Earth ► Best model representing Earth – 3D ► Not practical  Not easy to carry  Only see ½ at a time  Only “small scale” ► Maps are 2D  Distortion ► Projections try to minimize distortion

31 Projection ► Scientific method of transferring locations on Earth’s surface to a flat map ► 4 types of distortion  Shape  Size

32 Conformal and Equal Area Projections

33 Interrupted Projection

34 Robinson Projection ► One of the most popular compromises between equivalent and conformal projections

35 Automated Cartography ► Manual techniques expensive ► Computer-aided Drawing (CAD) ► Application to map making  Sophisticated, specialized digital cartography systems  Drawing & editing on video monitor before printing  Fast, inexpensive, easy editing & updating

36 Remote sensing ► Acquiring data from high-flying aircraft or satellites orbiting Earth

37 Satellites ► Landsat  First: 1972  Most recent (Landsat 7): 1999  Next: 2012  Sensors measure radiation of colors of visible light ► Pixel  Size of area sensed  Measure of resolution ► Weather satellites  Very large pixels

38 Aerial Photo of Banda Aceh Coast Before Tsunami

39 Aerial Photo of Banda Aceh Coast After Tsunami

40 Remotely Sensed Data ► Weather ► History & archaeology ► Environmental impacts ► Farmland quality ► Stream flow ► Urban expansion ► Military intelligence ► Commercial information Landsat images of Shenzen, China showing dramatic urban development in 8 years

41 Global Positioning Systems (GPS) ► Developed for military use ► Now available to civilians ► Works via satellite signals ► Device must be outdoors, unobstructed by trees ► Uses:  Transportation  Land surveying  Environmental assessment  Automobile travel  Hiking

42 GIS ► Database software that includes spatial information  Boundaries or coordinates  Identifying locator (i.e. address) ► Locates item in space ► Layers  Information with specific characteristics  Can be combined for analysis

43 Digital Geographic Information ► Raster  Grid cells of data  Pixels ► Vector  Point, line, polygon data  X & Y coordinates ► Different uses & spatial accuracies

44 Digital Data ► Conversion of paper to digital formats  Digitizing  Scanning ► Available types of data  Topographic maps ► Digital Raster Graphic (DRG) ► Digital Line Graph (DLG)  US Fish and Wildlife Service National Wetlands Inventory  Census Bureau maps of streets with addresses

45 GIS Spatial Analysis ► Calculating densities and distribution of population ► Monitoring environmental changes ► 911 emergency response  Links landlines to physical addresses  Links cellular phones to transmission towers ► Relational databases ► Online address mapping & directions ► Disparities in availability of information  Lack of resources  Government secrecy

46 GIS Examples ► http://www.esri.com/ http://www.esri.com/ ► www.maps.google.com www.maps.google.com ► http://www.dcassessor.org/gis-mapping http://www.dcassessor.org/gis-mapping ► http://maps.sarpy.com/sims20/ http://maps.sarpy.com/sims20/ ► Remote sensing and GIS by NASA Connect Remote sensing and GIS Remote sensing and GIS

47 End of Chapter 1


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