Top Banner
Australia and Oceania
52

Australia and Oceania

Feb 25, 2016

Download

Documents

bluma

Australia and Oceania. Micronesia. Polynesia. Melanesia. Australia. New Zealand.  Interplay between European and indigenous culture European dominance  Indigenous dominance. Introduction. Isolated physical setting Exotic plants and animals Late arrival of human occupations - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Australia and Oceania

Australia and Oceania

Page 2: Australia and Oceania

AustraliaAustralia

New ZealandNew Zealand

PolynesiaPolynesiaMelanesiaMelanesia

MicronesiaMicronesia

Interplay between European and indigenous culture

European dominance Indigenous dominance

Page 3: Australia and Oceania

IntroductionIntroduction

Isolated physical setting• Exotic plants and animals• Late arrival of human occupations

Interplay between indigenous peoples and European cultures

• Cultural adaptation, assimilation, and conflicts Youthful political geography

• Fluid geopolitical identity

Page 4: Australia and Oceania

Environmental GeographyEnvironmental GeographyVaried Natural and Human Habitat

Page 5: Australia and Oceania

AustraliaAustralia

New ZealandNew Zealand

OceaniaOceania

Arid interior (outback), highly urbanized coast

Rugged mountain

Landform

Volcanic islands

Page 6: Australia and Oceania

AustraliaAustralia

Western Plateau• Ancient shield landmass

Interior Lowlands• Flat, and featureless

lowland Eastern Highlands

• Barrier between western interior and eastern coastal plain

PlateauPlateauBasinBasin

HighlandsHighlands

Great Artesian BasinGreat Artesian Basin

Landform

Page 7: Australia and Oceania

Artesian wellArtesian well

Interior basin lacks water supply, but the Great Artesian Basin possesses a rich supply of underground water

Landform

Page 8: Australia and Oceania

New ZealandNew Zealand

Rugged mountain range featured by volcanic peaks Pacific Rim of Fire

Fjord-like western coast in the South Island Glacial forces

Landform

Page 9: Australia and Oceania

Landform

PolynesiaPolynesiaMelanesiaMelanesia

MicronesiaMicronesia

OceaniaOceania

Seismic hazards (Pacific Rim)Seismic hazards (Pacific Rim)

Volcanic islandsVolcanic islands

Bora Bora

Page 10: Australia and Oceania

Landform

Bora Bora, French Polynesia

Volcanic IslandsVolcanic Islands

Page 11: Australia and Oceania

Evolution of Volcanic IslandsEvolution of Volcanic Islands

Hot spot

High islandsHigh islands

Low islandsLow islands

Landform

Geologic time

1. Active volcanism

2. Volcanism dwindles & erosion intervenes

3. Islands subside below sea level

Page 12: Australia and Oceania

Climate

B. Arid OutbackB. Arid Outback

C. Temperate Australian and New Zealand C. Temperate Australian and New Zealand coastal plaincoastal plain

A. Tropical OceaniaA. Tropical Oceania

Page 13: Australia and Oceania

Environmental issues

DroughtDrought

Natural HazardsNatural Hazards

Seismic hazards Seismic hazards (Pacific Rim of Fire)(Pacific Rim of Fire)

Page 14: Australia and Oceania

Environmental issues

Global Resource PressuresGlobal Resource Pressures

LoggingLogging

MiningMining

Page 15: Australia and Oceania

Environmental issues

Mining in Papua New GuineaMining in Papua New Guinea

Mining, while providing incomes, causes immense environmental damage to the region

Page 16: Australia and Oceania

Nuclear TestingNuclear Testing

Environmental issues

1946 - 19581946 - 1958

1990s1990s

Tuamotu ArchipelagoTuamotu Archipelago

Marshall IslandsMarshall Islands

Page 17: Australia and Oceania

Population and SettlementPopulation and SettlementA Diverse Cultural Landscape

Page 18: Australia and Oceania

Indigenous settlement• Aborigines in Australia, Maori in New Zealand• New Guinea Highlands, Society Islands

European migrations• Sydney, Melbourne…

Asian laborers and immigrants • Indian in Fiji, Japanese in Hawaii• Recent Asian immigrants in Australia

Page 19: Australia and Oceania

Australia and New Zealand are highly urbanized and Westernized Most of pacific islands are rural (eg. Papua New Guinea)

Page 20: Australia and Oceania

Population distributionPopulation distribution

Page 21: Australia and Oceania

Sydney, AustraliaSydney, Australia

Most Australians (85%) live in cities

Page 22: Australia and Oceania

Peopling the PacificPeopling the Pacific

Page 23: Australia and Oceania

European ColonizationEuropean Colonization

Australia• Served as a penal colony (1788)• Decimation of Aborigines

New Zealand• Wars with Maori chiefdoms (1845 ~ 1870)

Hawaii• U.S. annexed Hawaiian kingdom (1898)

Page 24: Australia and Oceania

Australian agricultureAustralian agriculture

Commercial farming in the coastal plains

Too dry for farming extensive ranching

Hunting, gathering by Aborigines

• Viniculture in Mediterranean climate region• Sugarcane in subtropical climate region• Dairy farming in well-watered area

Page 25: Australia and Oceania

Oceanic agricultureOceanic agriculture

Village-centered shifting cultivation• Papua New Guinea highlands

Plantation agriculture in coastal plains• Sugarcane fields in Fiji and Hawaii

Page 26: Australia and Oceania

Current population issuesCurrent population issues

Australia and New Zealand• Influx of Asian immigrants

Less-developed island nations• Growing population given limited land

Page 27: Australia and Oceania

Cultural Coherence and DiversityCultural Coherence and DiversityA Global Crossroads

Page 28: Australia and Oceania

Process of Cultural ChangeProcess of Cultural Change

Cultural differentiation geographical isolation

Cultural accommodation/assimilation European colonialism

Cultural homogenization or preservation globalization

Page 29: Australia and Oceania

Multicultural AustraliaMulticultural Australia

Dominance of colonial European roots• 70% of population is British or Irish• White Australia Policy (~1973)• Remaining links with the British Crown

But increasingly multicultural due to• Political movement of native inhabitants• Inflows of Asian immigrants with a skill• “Asianization” policy• Two-way globalization

Page 30: Australia and Oceania

Multicultural New ZealandMulticultural New Zealand

Parallel the story of Australia with a slightly different cultural mix

Unique Polynesian roots• Maori (15%)• Pacific islanders (5%)

Page 31: Australia and Oceania

The Mosaic of Pacific Cultures (1)The Mosaic of Pacific Cultures (1)

Traditional culture worlds• The division of Oceania into Melanesia,

Micronesia, and Polynesia is based on racial and cultural distinctions by 19c anthropologists

Melanesia Micronesia PolynesiaMelanesia Micronesia PolynesiaSkin color:Skin color: darkdark brownbrownSocial system: village Social system: village chiefdom chiefdom kingdomkingdomBut the actual distinction is rather subtle

• Revolves around village lifeHighlanders in Papua New Guinea

Page 32: Australia and Oceania

The Mosaic of Pacific Cultures (2)The Mosaic of Pacific Cultures (2)

External cultural influences• Colonial plantation brought contact laborers

Japanese/Chinese in Hawaii, Indian in Fiji• Creole cultures

Multicultural HawaiiansFrench New Caledonia

• Pidgin English & Christianity• International tourism transforms their livelihoods

Fiji, French Polynesia, The Hawaiian Islands, Samoa

Page 33: Australia and Oceania

Language of Australia and OceaniaLanguage of Australia and Oceania

Page 34: Australia and Oceania

Geopolitical FrameworkGeopolitical FrameworkA Land of Fluid Boundaries

Page 35: Australia and Oceania

Colonial legacy• Ever-changing political map

Over the last two centuries• Persisting colonial ties

French PolynesiaU.S. territory

Youthful states • Oldest political states are the 20th century creation

Australia, New Zealand (1907)

Page 36: Australia and Oceania

Indigenous PatternsIndigenous Patterns

Prior to European contact, the political geography was mosaic of indigenous territories

• Melanesia based on kinship• Polynesia based on chiefdom• Some large volcanic islands of Polynesia formed k

ingdom (eg. Hawaii)

Page 37: Australia and Oceania

An Imposed Colonial FrameworkAn Imposed Colonial Framework(circa 1900)(circa 1900)

BritainBritainFranceFrance

GermanyGermany

U.S.U.S.

Page 38: Australia and Oceania

AustraliaAustralia FranceFrance

U.S.U.S.

New ZealandNew Zealand

JapanJapan

An Imposed Colonial FrameworkAn Imposed Colonial Framework(After WWI)(After WWI)

BritainBritain

Page 39: Australia and Oceania

AustraliaAustralia FranceFrance

U.S.U.S.

New ZealandNew Zealand

An Imposed Colonial FrameworkAn Imposed Colonial Framework(After WWII)(After WWII)

BritainBritain

Page 40: Australia and Oceania

An Imposed Colonial FrameworkAn Imposed Colonial Framework(present day)(present day)

FranceFrance

U.S.U.S.

New ZealandNew Zealand

Page 41: Australia and Oceania

Marshall IslandsMarshall Islands

Political control of Micronesia has shifted numerous times during the last two centuries

Spanish (1526~1885)

Germany

(1885~1914)

Japanese

(1914~1944)

U.S.

(1947~1979)

WWI WWII

Independence (1990s)

Page 42: Australia and Oceania

Native Rights in Australia and Native Rights in Australia and New ZealandNew Zealand

General trends are to acknowledge the land rights of indigenous people

• Establishment of Aboriginal reserves• Native Title Bill (1993)

Geopolitical tensions

Page 43: Australia and Oceania

Ethnic tension in FijiEthnic tension in Fiji

The populations of indigenous Fijians and South Asian immigrants are roughly equal

The violation of democratic process by the Fijians (eg. military coup in the late 1980s and 2000)

Geopolitical tensions

Page 44: Australia and Oceania

Rebellion in Papua New GuineaRebellion in Papua New Guinea

Resource-rich Bougainville’s indigenous inhabitants demand local control

Suppressed by military force

Geopolitical tensions

Page 45: Australia and Oceania

Geopolitical tensions

Page 46: Australia and Oceania

Economic and Social DevelopmentEconomic and Social DevelopmentA Hard Path to Paradise

Page 47: Australia and Oceania

Wealthy Australia, New Zealand, French territoriesWealthy Australia, New Zealand, French territories Impoverished remaindersImpoverished remainders

Page 48: Australia and Oceania

Economy of Australia and New Economy of Australia and New ZealandZealand

Economic assets• Highly educated population• Diverse base of natural resources• Modern urban and industrial infrastructure

Challenges• Dependence on extraction of raw materials• Small domestic markets• Lack of high-tech and IT industries

Efforts to diversify economic bases

Page 49: Australia and Oceania

Economy of Australia and New Economy of Australia and New Zealand – economic diversificationZealand – economic diversification Moving away from the traditional extractive econo

mies (eg. tourism) Promoting economic integration within the region

• CER (Closer Economic Relationship) Agreement Shifting away from Europe and North America in

favor of closer links with Asia• Recent immigration policy• ARF (ASEAN Regional Forum)• APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation Group)

Page 50: Australia and Oceania

Global trade in Australia and New Zealand

Page 51: Australia and Oceania

Oceania’s Economic DiversityOceania’s Economic Diversity

Subsistence-based economies• Shifting cultivation, fishing

Commercial extractive economy• Plantation, mining, logging

Global tourism Subsidies from the present/former colonial

powers

Page 52: Australia and Oceania

Relatively fared well regardless of varied level of economic

development with the exception of Papua New Guinea