28
A Geographers Best Friend

The 5 themes of geography

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

 

Citation preview

Page 1: The 5 themes of geography

A Geographers Best Friend

Page 2: The 5 themes of geography

Geography is the study of the distribution and interaction of physical

and human features on the earth.

Page 3: The 5 themes of geography

Geography involves the study of places: their locations, their characteristics, and how humans use and move around them.

Page 4: The 5 themes of geography

Geographers view the world in terms of space.

They use the 5 Themes of Geography to study the world.

Page 5: The 5 themes of geography

Historians look at events over time.

Geographers look at:- use of space on Earth- interactions that take place there- patterns and connections between people and land

Page 6: The 5 themes of geography

Geographers use a variety of tools to study the earth, including:- maps - photographs- charts, graphs, tables- scale models- five themes of geography

Page 7: The 5 themes of geography

Geographers study the world by looking at location, place,

region, movement, and human-environment

interaction.

Page 8: The 5 themes of geography

Discuss the question, “How do People, Goods, and Ideas get from one place to another?”

Geographers study 3 types of movement:-Linear Distance-Time Distance-Psychological Distance

Page 9: The 5 themes of geography

Refers to how far a person, idea, or product travels.

Measured in inches, feet, miles, etc. Jacksonville to Beverly Hills is 2,502

miles!

Page 10: The 5 themes of geography

Amount of time it takes a for a person, idea, or product to travel.

Measured in seconds, minutes, hours, etc.

It takes 14 hrs. and 45 minutes from NYC to JAX.

Page 11: The 5 themes of geography

Refers to the way people view travel.

The more familiar we are w/ an area, the distance seems to shrink.

Page 12: The 5 themes of geography
Page 13: The 5 themes of geography

Discusses question, “How are places similar or different?”

Geographers create regions to make comparisons

A region is an area of the earth’s surface with similar characteristics.

Characteristics include: physical, political, economic, or cultural things.

3 types of regions: formal, functional, and perceptual.

Page 14: The 5 themes of geography

Defined by a limited # of related characteristics.

Regions we will study this year:

-The U.S. and Canada-Europe-Asia-Africa-Latin America

What do these regions have in common?

Page 15: The 5 themes of geography

Organized around a set of interactions and connections between places.

Usually characterized by a hub, or central place, the various things that link to the hub.

Page 16: The 5 themes of geography

Regions in which people see the region the same way.

People can always have differences in their perceptual regions.

Page 17: The 5 themes of geography

Discusses question, “How do people relate to the physical world?”

Geographers study this to understand the relationships between humans and the environment in which they live.

People:-Change the environment to meet their needs and,-Learn to live with aspects of the environment they cannot control.

Can you think of any examples of these?

Page 18: The 5 themes of geography
Page 19: The 5 themes of geography
Page 20: The 5 themes of geography

Discusses the question, “What is it like?”

Contains physical, cultural, and human interaction characteristics of a location including: climate, landforms, vegetation, buildings, roads, housing, etc.

Page 21: The 5 themes of geography
Page 22: The 5 themes of geography
Page 23: The 5 themes of geography

Discusses the question, “Where is it?”

Absolute location is the exact place on earth where a geographic feature is found.

Relative location describes a place in comparison to the places around it.

Page 24: The 5 themes of geography

The earth is divided into 2 equal halves called hemispheres.

There are 4 hemispheres: North, South, East, and West.

The equator divides the north and south hemispheres.

The prime meridian divides the east and west hemispheres.

The prime meridian runs through Greenwich, England.

Page 25: The 5 themes of geography
Page 26: The 5 themes of geography
Page 27: The 5 themes of geography

Latitude is used to locate things north and south.

Latitude lines run parallel to the equator and are called parallels.

The equator is 0 degrees latitude. Lines north of the equator are north latitude and lines south of the equator are south latitude.

Page 28: The 5 themes of geography

Longitude lines run through the north and south poles and are called meridians.

They mark positions east and west of the prime meridian.

The prime meridian is 0 degrees longitude.

To find the absolute location of a place, you must find where the latitude and longitude lines intersect.