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Chapter 1 basic concepts

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1 Chapter 1 basic concepts

2 What is Human Geography?
Key Question: What is Human Geography?

3 Human Geography The study of how people make places, how we organize space and society, how we interact with each other in places and across space, and how we make sense of others and ourselves in our locality, region, nation, and world.

4 Why do Kenyans grow tea and coffee instead of cash crops?
Geographers use fieldwork to understand linkages among places and to see the complexities of issues Why do Kenyans grow tea and coffee instead of cash crops?

5 Globalization A set of processes that are: increasing interactions
deepening relationships heightening interdependence without regard to country borders. A set of outcomes that are: unevenly distributed varying across scales differently manifested throughout the world.

6 Imagine and describe the most remote place on Earth you can think of 100 years ago. Now, describe how globalization has changed this place and how the people there continue to shape the place – to make it the place it is today.

7 Place Game You must use site and situation clues to have the class guess the toponym. Site-physical characteristics climate, water sources Situation- landmarks (relative to other places)

8 Perception of Place Where Pennsylvanian students prefer to live
Where Californian students prefer to live

9 Meridians/Parallels Spy Tracker Time Zones

10 Why do Geographers use Maps, and What do Maps Tell Us?
Key Question: Why do Geographers use Maps, and What do Maps Tell Us?

11 All Maps Lie.... Because the world is a sphere and maps are flat, there will always be some degree of distortion. The next several slides will display some of the more popular distortions.

12 Shape little distortion, direction consistent, rectangular, distortion around poles

13 Longitudinal distortion

14 Latitudinal distortion

15 Landmasses smaller- info on oceans

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18 Systematic methods of transferring a spherical surface to a flat map
Sample Map Projections Systematic methods of transferring a spherical surface to a flat map Distortion must occur in either size, shape, distance, or direction – all projections are compromises Mercator DISCUSSION: * How are these two map projections different? * Which do you prefer? Which one is more popular? Robinson Polar

19 Two Types of Maps: Reference Maps
Show locations of places and geographic features Absolute locations What are reference maps used for? Thematic Maps Tell a story about the degree of an attribute, the pattern of its distribution, or its movement. Relative locations What are thematic maps used for?

20 Reference Map

21 Thematic Map What story about median income in the Washington, DC area is this map telling?

22 Types of Thematic Maps

23 Dot Maps

24 Isoline Maps

25 Choropleth maps

26 Proportional Symbol maps

27 the places we travel to routinely in our rounds of daily activity.
Mental Maps: maps we carry in our minds of places we have been and places we have heard of. can see: terra incognita, landmarks, paths, and accessibility Activity Spaces: the places we travel to routinely in our rounds of daily activity. How are activity spaces and mental maps related?

28 Geographic Information System: a collection of computer hardware
and software that permits storage and analysis of layers of spatial data.

29 Layers of a GIS Fig. 1-5: A geographic information system (GIS) stores information about a location in several layers. Each layer represents a different category of information.

30 Township & Range System in the US
Fig. 1-4: Principal meridians & east-west baselines of the township system. Townships in northwest Mississippi & topographic map of the area.

31 Tallahatchie River, Mississippi in Township Sections
The Tallahatchie River is located in the southeast and southwest quarter-sections of Section 32, T23N R1E.

32 Remote Sensing: a method of collecting data by instruments that are physically distant from the area of study.

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34 Give a friend or family member a blank piece of paper
Give a friend or family member a blank piece of paper. Ask the person to draw a detailed map of how he or she gets from home to the place where most of his or her weekdays are spent (work, school). Note the age of the person and the length of time he or she has lived in the place and traveled the route. Analyze the map for terra incognita, landmarks, paths, and accessibility. What does the map reveal about the person’s lifestyle and activity space?

35 Why are Geographers Concerned with Scale and Connectedness?
Key Question: Why are Geographers Concerned with Scale and Connectedness?

36 Scale Scale is the territorial extent of something.
The observations we make and the context we see vary across scales, such as: - local - regional - national - global

37 Scale

38 Scale is a powerful concept because:
Processes operating at different scales influence one another. What is occurring across scales provides context for us to understand a phenomenon. People can use scale politically to change who is involved or how an issue is perceived. e.g. Bachelor degrees

39 Manipulating Data Data may also distort desired results. The following slides show how population of a particular cohort may be misleading.

40 Note what information is lost at higher levels of aggregation
Percent of pop age 25+ with bachelor's degree (1990) Note what information is lost at higher levels of aggregation Aggregated by State (northeast close-up) Aggregated by County (WV, MA) DISCUSSION: * What can you learn about educational levels within West Virginia and Massachusetts on the local map that you can't see on the national map?

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43 Regions Formal region: defined by a commonality, typically a cultural linkage or a physical characteristic. e.g. German speaking region of Europe Functional region: defined by a set of social, political, or economic activities or the interactions that occur within it. e.g. an urban area

44 Louisville KY 2010 http://www. flickr
Red is White, Blue is Black, Green is Asian, Orange is Hispanic, Yellow is Other, and each dot is 25 residents.

45 Formal and Functional Regions
Formal: State of Iowa Functional- grid/watching TV Fig. 1-11: The state of Iowa is an example of a formal region; the areas of influence of various television stations are examples of functional regions.

46 Regions Vernacular/Perceptual Region: ideas in our minds, based on accumulated knowledge of places and regions, that define an area of “sameness” or “connectedness.” e.g. the South the Mid-Atlantic the Middle East

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48 Perception of Place Where Pennsylvanian students prefer to live
Where Californian students prefer to live

49 Vernacular Regions Cultural identity- mental map Fig. 1-12: A number of features are often used to define the South as a vernacular region, each of which identifies somewhat different boundaries.

50 The meanings of regions are often contested
The meanings of regions are often contested. In Montgomery, Alabama, streets named after Confederate President Jefferson Davis and Civil Rights leader Rosa Parks intersect. [Toponym] Photo credit: Jonathan Leib

51 Iraq Ethnic Groups Turkey
Knowledge of cultural regions, boundaries, and transitions is necessary for understanding conflicts Syria Iran Jordan Iraq Ethnic Groups Saudi Arabia Kuwait Iraq’s population is 29 million: sixty percent are Shi’a Arab, mostly in the south. Sunni Arabs are concentrated in the center (western Iraq is sparsely populated). Over 4 million Iraqis in northern Iraq are Kurdish. Baghdad is a transition zone.

52 Culture Culture is an all-encompassing term that identifies not only the whole tangible lifestyle of peoples, but also their prevailing values and beliefs. - cultural trait - cultural complex - cultural hearth

53 Connectedness Diffusion: the process of dissemination, the spread of an idea or innovation from its hearth to other areas. What slows/prevents diffusion? - time-distance decay - cultural barriers

54 Types of Diffusion Expansion Diffusion – idea or innovation spreads outward from the hearth Contagious – spreads adjacently Hierarchical – spreads to most linked people or places first. Stimulus – idea promotes a local experiment or change in the way people do things.

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56 Stimulus Diffusion Because Hindus believe cows are holy, cows often roam the streets in villages and towns. The McDonalds restaurants in India feature veggie burgers.

57 Human-Environment Questions:
Old Approaches to Human-Environment Questions: Environmental Determinism (has been rejected by almost all geographers) Possibilism (less accepted today) New Approaches to Cultural ecology Political ecology Ecology is the scientific study of interactions Possibilism- physical environment limit human actions- ability to choose crops/adjust environment/population control Vocab Clarifications

58 (Phil Gersmehl, Research in Geographic Education, 2006)
Spatial Thinking (Phil Gersmehl, Research in Geographic Education, 2006)

59 Pattern Analysis: Density vs. Dispersion
Which square mile has the higher density, (a) or (b)?

60 Various Pattern Arrangements
What phenomena could explain the patterns shown in A, B, and C?

61 How does this map illustrate the aura or zone of influence for Denver?
Denver metro area How does this map illustrate the aura or zone of influence for Denver? How are hierarchies symbolized on this map? For which kinds of services does Denver’s aura extend beyond this map? Aura- nearby areas hierarchies

62 Where could you define a region of “Elvis-lovers”?
Where are the exceptions? Where are the outliers?

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