1 / 48

Geography Themes, Skills, Landforms, & Earth's Atmosphere

Geography Themes, Skills, Landforms, & Earth's Atmosphere. Coach McFarland. I. Themes of Geography. Location Place Human-Environmental Interaction Movement Region. Location. Where is it? 2 Types of location Absolute Location – a precise place.

janetwest
Télécharger la présentation

Geography Themes, Skills, Landforms, & Earth's Atmosphere

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 Themes, Skills, Landforms, & Earth's Atmosphere Coach McFarland

  2. I. Themes of Geography • Location • Place • Human-Environmental Interaction • Movement • Region

  3. Location • Where is it? • 2 Types of location • Absolute Location – a precise place. • Relative Location – relation to other places.

  4. Place • Physical surroundings.

  5. Human-Environment Interaction • How people and the environment interact with each other.

  6. Movement • Transportaion of people, goods and ideas.

  7. Region • An area with common characteristics.

  8. II. The Wide World of Geography • Branches of Geography • Geography as a Profession

  9. Branches of Geography • Human Geography • The study of how people and their activities vary from place to place. • Includes political, economic, and cultural factors. • Physical Geography • The study of how the Earth’s natural features vary from place to place. • The study of plains & mountains, weather & climates, & plants, animals, & humans.

  10. Geography as a Profession • Cartography • The study of maps and map making. • Because of the movement of people, maps are constantly changing. • For example, in the past 40 years, 41,000 miles of interstate highways have been constructed across the U.S. and therefore, have been added to various road maps. • During WWI, photographs of battle fields were taken from airplanes. After the war, cartographers started using aerial photographs to make detailed maps of the Earth’s surface

  11. 5 Features of Every Good Map • Grid – pattern of lines running horizontally (across) and vertically (up and down). • Direction – shows relative location. • Scale – How large the maps territory really is. • Key – Tells what the map’s symbols mean. • Title – Names the map.

  12. Geography as a Profession • Meteorology • Specializes in weather and weather forecasting.

  13. Geography as a Profession • Applied Geography • Help to research, map, and analyze environmental data. • Investigate land usage.

  14. Geography as a Profession • Teaching Geography • Necessary for good citizenship. • Help to develop an informed public.

  15. III. Planet EarthThe only planet that supports life as we know it. • The Earth System • 4 Physical Systems

  16. The Earth System • The interaction of objects on and around the Earth.

  17. 4 Physical Systems • Atmosphere • The layer of gas that surrounds the Earth. • Lithosphere • The rocky surface that forms the continents and the ocean floor. • Hydrosphere • All the planet’s water in the oceans, on the land, and in the atmosphere. • Biosphere • All of the planet’s plant and animal life.

  18. IV. Global Energy Systems • Temperature • Air Pressure • Wind • Global Wind Belts • Ocean Circulation

  19. TemperatureThe measurement of heat in the Earth’s atmosphere. • The process by which heat energy is trapped by the atmosphere thus keeping Earth warm is called the Greenhouse Effect. • Earth maintains its energy balance because most heat is lost to space at night and during the winter season.

  20. Air PressureThe force exerted by air; creates the winds and ocean currents. • When air is warmed, it expands, becomes lighter, and rises, thus creating a low pressure area. • Low-pressure areas tend to bring unstable weather conditions. • Cold air is dense, heavy, and tends to sink causing high-pressure areas. • High-pressure areas generally cause clear, calm weather.

  21. Wind • The horizontal motion of air between areas of different pressure.

  22. Global Wind Belts • Prevailing winds that usually blow from areas of high-pressure to areas of low pressure • Fronts • Jet Streams

  23. Global Wind Belts • Fronts • Occur when two air masses with very different temperatures and amounts of moisture meet. • Fronts usually cause stormy weather.

  24. Global Wind Belts • Jet Streams • Prevailing winds that blow in the upper atmosphere. • These winds are not directly felt on Earth’s surface. • The Jet Stream moves energy, storms, and major weather patterns.

  25. Ocean Circulation • Currents are set in motion by prevailing winds blowing across the surface of the ocean.

  26. V. Atmospheric Effects • Water vapor • Storms • Elevation

  27. Water Vapor • An important gas; most is evaporated from the oceans. • The remainder comes from lakes, plants, and the soil. • Without water vapor, there would be no clouds, rain, or storms.

  28. Water Vapor • Humidity • The amount of water vapor in the air. • Condensation • The process by which water vapor changes from a gas into liquid droplets. • Condensation can be seen in the formation of clouds, fog, and dew. • If condensation droplets become large enough, they fall as precipitation

  29. Water Vapor • 4 types of precipitation • Rain • Sleet • Snow • Hail

  30. Storms • Occur when energy stored in the atmospheric water vapor is released

  31. Storms • 3 Kinds of Storms • Hurricanes • Form over warm ocean waters and carry violent winds, torrential rain, and dangerously high seas. • Tornadoes • The smallest, but most violent of storms; twisting spirals of air that can destroy anything in their path. • Thunder Storms • The most common type; contains lightning and thunder.

  32. Elevation • Affects temperature. • An increase in elevation, or height above sea level, causes lowering of the temperature. • Eventhough the equator passes through Kenya, the country’s tallest mountain, Mt. Kenya, is snowcapped year-round because it is over 17,000 feet above sea level.

  33. VI. Global Climates • Factors Affecting Climates • Types of Climates

  34. Factors Affecting Climate • Temperature and Precipitation Differences • Continental or Maritime Location • Elevation

  35. Types of Climates • Humid-Tropical • Located near the equator with ideal conditions for plant growth. (Heavy rain fall & continuous warm temps.) (Low Latitude) • Tropical-Savanna • Located just to the N and S of the Humid-Tropical climate. Wet and dry climate with more of a season change. (Low Latitude)

  36. Types of Climates • Arid Desert • Located 30 degrees N and S of the equator with very little rain and few plants surviving. The largest desert is the Sahara. • Semiarid Steppe • Transition area between arid deserts and more humid climates; an area of short-grass vegetation that generally support grasslands; trees are rare except along riverbanks.

  37. Types of Climates • Mediterranean • Located between 30 and 40 degrees latitude; confined to the coastal areas of southern Europe and the west coasts of continents with cool ocean currents. (Middle Latitude) • Humid-Subtropical • Found on the eastern side of continents with warm ocean currents; hot, humid summers and mild winters. (Middle Latitude)

  38. Types of Climates • Marine West-Coast • Found on the west coast of continents in the upper-middle latitudes with mild temperatures all year. (Middle Latitude) • Humid-Continental • Found in latitudes subject to both warm and cold air changeable weather and four distinct seasons. (Middle Latitude)

  39. Types of Climates • Subarctic • Located in high latitudes with long, dark, and cold winters, with temperatures staying well below freezing for half of the year; short summers that can have very warm temperatures; has the greatest annual temperature ranges in the world and supports vast evergreen forests.

  40. Types of Climates • Tundra • Has long winters and temperatures above freezing only during short summers; vegetation is made up of small plants, such as mosses, herbs, and shrubs; water below the surface remains frozen all year., called permafrost. • Polar Ice-Cap • Has cold temperatures and snowfall year-round

  41. VII. The Geography of Water • One of Our Most Important Resources • Not Evenly Distributed on Earth • Water Resources

  42. Water is one our most important resources for 3 reasons. • Water is essential for agriculture. • Water is necessary for industries to function. • Water is a valuable power source.

  43. Water is not evenly distributed on Earth. • The oceans contain 97% of Earth’s water. • More the 2% of Earth’s water is frozen in the polar ice-caps. • Less than 1% of Earth’s water is a available as a freshwater resource, found in lakes, rivers, and streams.

  44. Water Resources • Headwaters • The first and smallest streams to form from runoff. • Tributaries • Small streams or rivers that flow into larger streams or rivers • Watershed • An area of land that is drained by a river and its tributaries • Rivers • A valuable water resource, providing water for agriculture, electricity, transportation, and cities

  45. Water Resources • Estuary • Where rivers meet an arm of the sea. • Lakes • When water fills a depression on the land surface; mostly freshwater; different from seas in that they are totally surrounded by land, are usually not at sea level, and do not exchange water with oceans. The 5 Great Lakes are actually one body of water, making up the largest body of freshwater on the Earth.

  46. Water Resources • Wetlands • Become flooded for at least part of the year. Florida’s Everglades is one of the best-known wetlands in the United States. • Ground Water • A large freshwater resource beneath the surface of the land with the major source being precipitation.

  47. Water Resources • Oceans • Cover about 71% of the Earth’s surface; they are actually one continuous global body of water divided into 4 oceans • Pacific – the largest geographic feature on Earth. • Atlantic • Indian • Arctic

  48. Water Resources • Oceans (Cont.) • There are smaller bodies of salt water. • Seas • Gulfs • Bays • The depth of the oceans vary greatly. The greatest ocean depth is in the Mariana Trench, located in the N Pacific Ocean. The shallowest part is the continental shelf, which slopes gently downward from the continents.

More Related