Intro to world geography skills

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Introduction to Geography Skills for 9th grade World Geography class. Covers the five themes of geography.

Transcript of Intro to world geography skills

INTRO TO WORLD GEOGRAPHY: GEOGRAPHY SKILLSMrs. Minks Social Studies

WARM-UP 8.12.14On an index card, answer the following questions:

1. Name the seven continents.

2. Name the four oceans.

3. What is the highest mountain in the world?

4. What is the largest desert in Africa?

5. What is the longest river in the world?

6. What is the largest river in the United States?

FIVE THEMES OF GEOGRAPHY• Location – describes where something is• Absolute• Relative

• Place – describes physical and human characteristics that make a location unique

• Regions – areas that share common characteristics

• Movement – explains how and why people and things move and are connected

• Human-Environment Interaction – describes relationship between people and their environment

WHAT TOOLS DO GEOGRAPHY SKILLS PROVIDE?• Methods for us to understand relationships between people,

places, and environments

• Helps in community decisions• Where to build a new school• How to solve problems of air and water pollution

• Helps us make personal daily decisions • Where to buy a home• Where to get a job• How to get to the mall• Where to go on vacation

GLOBES AND MAPS• A globe is a scale model of the Earth (3D)

• A map is a symbolic representation of all or part of the planet (2D)• Who makes maps? • Cartographers

GREAT CIRCLEA Great Circle is an imaginary line that follows the curve of the Earth.

Great circle is one of the important differences between a map and a globe.

PROJECTIONS• To create maps, cartographers project the round Earth onto

a flat surface making a map projection.

• Distance, shape, direction, or size may be distorted by a projection.

• The purpose of the map usually dictates which projection is used. The three basic categories of map projections are: • Planar Projection• Cylindrical Projection• Conic Projection

PLANAR PROJECTION• A planar projection shows the Earth centered in such a

way that a straight line coming from the center to any other point represents the shortest distance. Also known as an azimuthal projection.

• It is the most accurate at its center and if often used for maps of the Poles.

CYLINDRICAL PROJECTION• A cylindrical projection is based on the projection of the

globe onto a cylinder. This projection is most accurate near the equator, but shapes and distances are distorted near the poles.

CONIC PROJECTION• A conic projection comes from placing a cone over part of

a globe. Conic projections are best for showing limited east-west areas that are not too far from the equator. For these uses, a conic projection can indicate distances and directions fairly accurately.

THE ORANGE ACTIVITY

On the back of y

our warm

-up

index card describe th

e

problems that a

rise when th

e

curves of a

globe become

straight li

nes on a m

ap.

WARM-UP 8.13.14On an index card answer the following:

How many hemispheres are there and what are they?

Of latitude and longitude, which one’s lines are parallel?

DETERMINING LOCATION• Grid system

• Hemisphere

• Latitude: circle the Earth parallel to the Equator and measure the distance north or south

• Longitude: meridians that circle the Earth from Pole to Pole and measure distance east or west of the Prime Meridian at 0° longitude.

THE GLOBAL GRID

Tokyo, Japan36°N 140°E

HEMISPHERES• Northern hemisphere – everything north of Equator

• Southern hemisphere – everything south of Equator

• Eastern hemisphere – everything east of Prime Meridian

• Western hemisphere – everything west of Prime Meridian

READING A MAP• Title

• Key

• Scale bar

• Compass Rose

• Cities

• Capitals

• Boundary Lines

PHYSICAL MAPS• Water features• Landforms• Relief and elevation• Boundary lines

POLITICAL MAPS• Human-made features (boundaries, capitals, cities, roads, etc.)• Physical features (mountains, rivers, etc.)• Non-subject area – for context

THEMATIC MAPS• Single idea

• Particular kind of information

• Each serve different need (climate, vegetation, etc.)

GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS • GIS designed to accept data from different sources

• Converts data to digital code, arranges in database

• GIS can process data and produce maps