1 / 18

The 5 Themes of Geography

The 5 Themes of Geography. How we look at the world, both past and present. Geography. Geography : the study of the earth’s physical and human characteristics. Geographers use 5 themes to explain and understand these characteristics. Location . “Where is it?” Every place has:

santa
Télécharger la présentation

The 5 Themes of Geography

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. The 5 Themes of Geography How we look at the world, both past and present

  2. Geography • Geography: the study of the earth’s physical and human characteristics. • Geographers use 5 themes to explain and understand these characteristics

  3. Location • “Where is it?” • Every place has: • Absolute Location: the exact spot of a place on the earth’s surface. • Latitude and Longitude • Relative Location: tells where a place is by comparing what is around it. • Bismarck is east of Dickinson

  4. Place • “What is it like?” • Describes all of the characteristics that give an area its own special quality. • Physical: mountains, waterways, climate, plant and animals • Human: language, religion or architecture

  5. Examples of Place • Concrete/Physical: • Landforms • Buildings • Bridges • Trees • Statues • Abstract/Human: • Climate -- Language • Culture- the way of life of a group of people who share similar beliefs and customs

  6. Movement • “How do people, goods, and ideas get from one place to another?” • Has brought the world’s people closer together. • Transportation and communication

  7. Movement of People • Population- total number of people in a given area • Migration- moving from one place to another • Immigrants- people who leave one country to move to another

  8. Why do people move? • “push-pull” theory- people migrate because something “pushes” them from where they currently live and “pulls” them to the new place.

  9. Push-Pull Example • Push: • Economic • Government • Religious persecution • Pull • Better life • Similar people • Climate

  10. Population Growth • The world’s population has increased dramatically. • Growth rate has never been seen before. • Many people move from rural areas (villages in the countryside) to urban areas (cities and towns). • Causes overcrowding in areas and over use of natural resources.

  11. Movement of Products • Import- goods bought from a foreign country. • Export- goods sold to a foreign country. • Economy- having to do with the exchanging of money for goods and services

  12. Region • “What common features bring geographical areas together?” • Can be defined by • Physical features (mts) • Religion (Islamic) • Language (French) • Livelihood (agriculture)

  13. Examples of Regions • North Dakota is in the plains, a flat land region. • North Dakota has regions within the state (Red River Valley). • North Dakota is a part of a region (the Midwest).

  14. Human-Environment Interaction • “What is the relationship between people and their surroundings?” • Landforms, waterways, climate and natural resources have either helped and harmed people and their activities.

  15. Natural Resources • Natural Resource- any useful material found in the environment. • Usually soil, water, minerals and vegetation

  16. 3 Types of Resources • Recyclable: recourses that cycle through the natural process in the environment. • Water Cycle • Renewable: a natural resource that the environment continues to supply or is replaced as used. • Wind and trees

  17. Non-renewable Resources • Non-renewable: natural resources that cannot be replaced once they are used up. • Coal, oil, fossil fuels

  18. Why is Geography Important to History • Geography is a key factor in shaping historical events. • It helps explain why and how things happened.

More Related