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Page 1: Geography Basics

Geography BasicsChapter One

Page 2: Geography Basics

Pre Test• Fill out the 50 states without

help from your neighbor.

Page 3: Geography Basics

Bellringer• Why is Geography important to

you?

• Do you think it is relevant?

Page 4: Geography Basics

Atlas• Take a look at the various atlas’

in the front of the book.

Maps: http://video.about.com/geography/How-to-Read-a-Map.htm

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Geography Basics

• Defined as: The study of Earth and

its people

• This is studied in “themes”– Five in total

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Place• Refers to where things are and what makes it distinctive

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LocationRefers to the position of a place

This can be broken into two kinds:

1. Absolute: Exact spot on Earth you are

2. Relative: An approximate area

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Human Environment Interaction

• Studies the natural surroundings and its affects

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Movement• Why goods, ideas, and people move from place to place

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Regions• Refers to the areas of the world that have common things like people, resources, population, food, etc

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Take 5• Share one example of each

theme with a partner

• Be ready to share your answers with the class

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Five Themes Game

• Be the first group to identify the word as the correct theme and win!

• I will say each word. When you know the answer raise your hand.

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Time• Time is broken into blocks:• Year: 365 days• Decade: 10 yrs• Century: 100 yrs• Millenium: 1000 yrs

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GPS and GIS• GPS: Global Positioning System –

uses radio signals to determine an exact location

• GIS: Global Information System – gathers, stores, and analyzes geographical information

Page 16: Geography Basics

Map Projections

• Page 23 in your book:

• Goodes Interrupted Knuckle Map• Robinsons Projection – Flat top

and bottom• Mercator Projection – Flat Map• Winkel Triple Projection – Short

Circle Map

Page 17: Geography Basics

Types of Maps• Physical: Shows landforms and water

features

• Political: Names and boundaries of countries

• Historical: Show events over time

• Contour: Has lines for change in elevation

• Vegetation: Shows types of plants in a region

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Latitude• Imaginary Circles that run East to West

around the globe• AKA – parallels

• The Equator is the center line

• The letter N or S that follows the degree of latitude tells you if it is N or S of the equator

• Example 60 N, 35 S

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Longitude• Run from the S. Pole to the N. Pole

• Known as Meridians

• The Prime Meridian is ) degrees longitude and runs through Greenwich, England

• The Letter E or W follows if it is East or West of the Prime Meridian

Page 21: Geography Basics

Lines of the World

• Equator: The center parallel of the earth

• Tropic of Cancer: The most Northern point the suns is centered on the earth: Summer solstice is that date: June 21st

• Tropic of Capricorn: The most Southern point the suns is centered on the earth: Winter solstice is that date: Dec. 21st

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Both the tropic of cancer and Capricorn are at 23.5 °

The Circles are at 66.5 °

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Hemispheres• There are four hemispheres in

the world

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International Date Line

• Is the 180 degree mark of longitude• It is half way around the world from

the Prime Meridian

Finding Location:To mark a spot on the earth you use both the latitude and longitudeExample: Tokyo, Japan is 36 N 140 E

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Map Drawing• Using all the information about

the Earth we have learned so far lets draw them out on a map and see where they are.

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Where am I?• Follow the instructions on the

sheet provided for Longitude and Latitude lines

Page 27: Geography Basics

Continents• There are seven continents in

the world:– Africa– Antarctica– Asia– Australia– Europe–North America– South America

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Africa

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Antarctica

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Australia

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Europe

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Asia

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South America

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North America

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US Time Zones

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Reading Time Zones

• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=widWLhIIbzs

• See Time Zone Activity – 24 hrs a day = 24 time zones– 360 degrees/24 = 15 – Therefore

every 15 degrees is a new time zone!

– Lets practice

Page 37: Geography Basics

Major Oceans of the World

• Pacific: The largest• Atlantic: Between Europe and N.

America• Indian: Below India to Australia• Southern: North of Antarctica• Arctic: The Smallest

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Wind• Wind is caused by air pressure

colliding with each other

• When high and low pressure hit each other wind is felt here on earth

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Weather• Made from differences in air

pressure• Air pressure is made from air

molecules.–High Pressure: More weight– Low Pressure: Less weight

• On high pressure days there are less clouds because the weight keeps them from forming

Page 41: Geography Basics

Precipitation• Rain, Snow, Hail, and Sleet are all

precipitation

• They are formed in clouds• When dust particles meet water vapor in a

cloud they are to big for the cloud to hold and they fall

• Snow: Frozen particles• Sleet: Freeze on the way down to Earth• Hail: Rain droplets wont fall and keep

freezing to each other then drop

Page 42: Geography Basics

Tornados• Caused by colliding winds and an

unstable atmosphere

• In the Great Plains dry air from the Rockies and Moist from the Gulf of Mexico collide

Page 43: Geography Basics

Hurricanes• Also called Typhoons or Cyclones.

Only Atlantic storms are Hurricanes• If it is above the equator they spin

counterclockwise, opposite for Southern storms

• Moist air rises leaving low air at the surface. This rises and spins and its feeds itself.

• More moist hot air means more storms and bigger storms

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Hurricanes

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Test Tomorrow• Be prepared on all material since

the beginning of school– Five themes – Weather

– Fill in the Blank–Matching–Multiple Choice– Short Answer– 100 Points


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