1 / 11

Geography Basics

Geography Basics. What is Geography? Core Geographic Concepts. Geography. Geography: The study of how and why things differ from place to place on earth. The study of how observable spatial patterns evolved over time.

Télécharger la présentation

Geography Basics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Geography Basics What is Geography? Core Geographic Concepts

  2. Geography • Geography: • The study of how and why things differ from place to place on earth. • The study of how observable spatial patterns evolved over time. • Began in Ancient Greece, focused on both physical and human characteristics of places. • Modern geography began in 17th century; was fully established by 19th century.

  3. Human Geography • Human Geography: • Focuses on people: where they are, what they are like, how they interact over space, and what kinds of imprints they leave on the natural landscape. • Draws from the other social sciences: economics, political science, sociology, history. • Helps us understand the world and appreciate the circumstances affecting people, both in our country and beyond. • Can help make us better informed citizens by enabling us to understand important issues facing people today.

  4. Important Geographic Concepts • Geography is mainly concerned with the concepts of space and place. • Space: territorial extent. • Absolute space: measurable extent with definable boundaries. • Relative space: perceptual, variable; reflects activities and interrelationships between them. • Place: the attributes and values we individually associate with a location. • Ex: hometown, neighborhood, high school. • Has size, location, physical structure and cultural content. • Develops and changes over time.

  5. Sense of Place • Sense of place: • The attachments we have to specific locations and their complex of attributes (our feelings toward them). • Individual and unique to each of us, though people may share similar regard for specific places. • Our sense of place shapes the lives and outlooks of people who inhabit them. • Reinforced by a place’s distinctiveness and diminished or lost by a place’s placelessness.

  6. Location, Distance • Location – where a place is • Absolute: identified by coordinates. • Relative: location in relation to a reference point. • Direction • Absolute – based on cardinal points • Relative (relational) – uses cardinal points from point of reference, ex. “Out West” or “Down South” • Distance – combines location/direction • Absolute – spatial separation between two points on earth, measured by an acceptable unit. Ex. “10 miles away” • Relative – changes absolute distance into a more meaningful unit. Ex. “15 minutes away”

  7. Landscape • Natural Landscape: • Physical characteristics of a place. • Examples: climate, resources. • Can play a major role in human activity: • Trade flows, population distribution, settlement patterns. • Cultural Landscape: • Visible evidence of human activity, i.e. characteristics created by man. The Natural & Cultural landscape are interconnected. We must understand both to study human activity.

  8. Discussion:How do places change over time?

  9. Interrelations between places • Spatial interaction: • We can study the way in which places interact with each other: • Friction of distance: a measure of slowing or restricting the effect of distance on spatial interaction. • The greater the distance, the greater the “friction” • Can be overcome through greater accessibility • Accessibility: How easy/difficult is it to overcome barriers for interaction, such as time, space, and the landscape? • Connectivity: All the ways, visible or not, in which places are connected: • Physical • Cultural • Technological

  10. Discussion: What role has globalization played in accessibility and/or connectivity?

  11. Spatial Diffusion • Ideas, people or items disperse (spread) from a center of origin (node) to more distant points in which it is connected. • The rate & extent of diffusion are affected by distance, technology, population density, means of communication, etc.

More Related