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Place, Location, Region, Movement, Human/Environmental Interaction

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Presentation on theme: "Place, Location, Region, Movement, Human/Environmental Interaction"— Presentation transcript:

1 Place, Location, Region, Movement, Human/Environmental Interaction
5 themes of Geography Place, Location, Region, Movement, Human/Environmental Interaction

2 Mind Map of Your Neighborhood
Create a visual map of your neighborhood. How do you see it in your mind? Incorporate paths, edges, districts, nodes and landmarks. Written Portion: accompanying your mental map is a brief description of your neighborhood. This should be about 2 full paragraphs.

3 PLACE All places have attributes that give them meaning and character and distinguish them from other places on earth. Geographers describe place by two specific definitions: Physical Characteristics make up its natural environment and include land forms, bodies of water, climate, soils, natural vegetation, and animal life. Human Characteristics: of a place come from human ideas and actions. They include bridges, houses, parks, land use, density of population, language patterns, religion, architecture, and political systems.

4 PLACE Physical Characteristics
Those physical features about a place that make it unique

5 PLACE Physical Characteristics Where are these places??

6 PLACE Physical Characteristics Where would you find these animals??

7 PLACE Physical Characteristics What are some of the physical
characteristics that make Leland unique

8 PLACE Human Characteristics

9 PLACE Human Characteristics political systems.

10 PLACE Human Characteristics Architecture

11 PLACE Human Characteristics

12 PLACE Human Characteristics

13 LOCATION Location is the second theme of Geography. Location describes where something is, and is broken into two areas: Absolute Location: answers the questions: Where is it? Absolute location is nothing more than a simple dot--often identified as a grid coordinate on the surface of the earth. Latitude and Longitude can be used to pinpoint a location. Finding absolute location is the starting point for geographic research.

14 LOCATION Location is the second theme of Geography. Location describes where something is, and is broken into two areas: Relative Location: answers the question of where a place is located in relation to other places. Your home has a relative location. Where is it located in relation to schools, stores, and convenient transportation?

15 LOCATION Absolute Location in practice

16 LOCATION Absolute Location in practice Not very accurate
in the beginning

17 LOCATION Absolute Location in practice Satellite and Global
Positioning Systems

18 LOCATION Relative Location in practice Near what city??

19 REGION It is defined as an area that has unifying characteristics.
A region has certain characteristics that give it a measure of cohesiveness and distinctiveness that set it apart from other regions.

20 REGION Functional Region:
It is organized around a node or focal point with the surrounding areas linked to that node by transportation systems, communication systems, or other economic association involving such activities as manufacturing and retail trading. A typical functional region is Silicon Valley.

21 REGION Formal Region : (See next slide for example)
It is characterized by a common human property, such as the presence of people who share a particular language, religion, nationality, political identity or culture, or by a common physical property, such as the presence of a particular type of climate, landform, or vegetation. Political entities such as counties, states, countries, and provinces are formal regions because they are defined by a common political identity. (See next slide for example)

22 Formal Regions within a Formal Region

23 REGION Perceptual : The third type of region is the perceptual region. It is a construct that reflects human feelings and attitudes about areas and is therefore defined by people’s shared subjective images of those areas. Southern California, Dixie, and the upper Midwest are perceptual regions that are thought of as being spatial units, although they do not have precise borders or even commonly accepted regional characteristics and names.

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26 MOVEMENT The theme movement addresses this question: How and why are places connected with one another? Relationships between people in different places are shaped by the constant movement of people, ideas, materials, and physical systems such as wind, plate tectonics and volcanoes.

27 MOVEMENT Movement of People:
Immigration/Emigration, Urbanization, and Population. The movement of people from one place to another is also addressed, and the movement of people from farms to cities, and back again (urban sprawl) will be covered. Movement of Land: Plate tectonics, earthquakes, and volcanoes

28 MOVEMENT Movement of People:
Understanding the patterns of human movement, the causes, and outcomes of that movement, and the process of that movement

29 MOVEMENT Movement of Land:

30 Human/Environmental Interaction
Humans have settled in virtually every corner of the world by successfully adapting to various natural settings. For example, people who live in the Midwest United States use heating units to keep their homes warm in winter People in the southern part of the country use air conditioning much of the year to stay cool in the heat. The ways people choose to adapt to their settings reflect their economic and political circumstances and their technological abilities.

31 Human/Environmental Interaction
The earth’s Vegetation Zones, Natural Resources, & Energy Development play a significant factor in that development.

32 Human/Environmental Interaction
Desert Savanna Tropical

33 Human/Environmental Interaction
Desert

34 Human/Environmental Interaction
Prairie

35 Human/Environmental Interaction
The earth’s Vegetation Zones, Natural Resources, & Energy Development play a significant factor in that development.

36 Human/Environmental Interaction
The earth’s Vegetation Zones, Natural Resources, & Energy Development play a significant factor in that development.


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