Chapter 19 Living in North Africa, Southwest Asia, Central Asia Today.

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Chapter 19 Living in North Africa, Southwest Asia, Central Asia Today

Transcript of Chapter 19 Living in North Africa, Southwest Asia, Central Asia Today.

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Chapter 19

Living in North Africa, Southwest Asia, Central Asia Today

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Chapter 19:1 Objectives

• 1. Discuss how physical geography affects farming and fishing in North Africa, Southwest Asia and Central Asia.

• 2. List the region’s important industries.• 3. Explain how improvements in

transportation and communications are changing life in the region.

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Terms to Know

• arable• commodity• petrochemical

• gross domestic product (GDP)

• hajj• embargo

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Drawing from Experience

• Would you say that your lifestyle depends on the use of oil and oil products?

• Why or why not?• Most of the world’s oil is found in North

Africa, Southwest Asia and Central Asia.• This section focuses on the economic

activities, transportation, communications, and interdependence of the region.

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Introduction

• North Africa, Southwest Asia, Central Asia hold great oil reserves. The oil industry is important in the region’s economy.

• The regions improved transportation and communications link it with the world.

• What industry is important in the region?

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Meeting Food Needs• The challenge is producing food for a

rapidly growing population.• Poor soil and unreliable rain produce small

amounts of food.• Rich oil-producing countries can import

food while,• other countries like Afghanistan must grow

their own.• Sometimes irrigation can be used.

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• Not much land is suitable for farming but,• a large part of the population is engaged in

agriculture.• Citrus fruits, grapes and olives are major

crops in the Mediterranean climates.• Grains, cotton and livestock grow on farms

in Central Asia.• Fish are an important food source in

coastal areas of the region.

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Industrial Growth

• The region has about 70% of the world’s oil supply and 33% of the world’s natural gas reserves.

• Petroleum and oil products are the main export commodities, or economic goods in the region.

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• Other industries use petrochemicals – products made from petroleum or natural gas – to make fertilizers, medicines, plastics, and paints.

• Copper and coal are mined in Central Asia.

• In North Africa, Morocco is the world’s largest exporter of phosphate used in agricultural fertilizers.

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Two Major Service Industries

• financial• tourism• Banking, real estate, and insurance

account for most of Bahrain’s gross domestic produce (GDP).

• GDP is the value of goods and services produced in a country in a year.

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• Tourism is popular in North Africa and Southwest Asia because of their historical importance.

• Millions of visitors tour religious sites each year.

• Christians and Jews tour Israel, Jordan and other countries in the region.

• Muslims make a hajj, or yearly pilgrimage, to Makkah (Mecca).

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Petra, Jordan – tourist destination

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Petra Treasury

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Royal Tombs

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• AIRLINES connect countries within the region and with the rest of the world.

• WATERWAYS and ports on the Black and Mediterranean Seas allow ships to load and unload cargo.

• Channels such as the Strait of Hormuz are used by oil tankers to transport oil from the region.

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Transportation

• ROAD systems in Iran, Turkey and Egypt connect major cities with oil fields and seaports.

• RAILROADS connect cities with rural areas.

• Mass transit systems have been built in urban areas to ease traffic jams.

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• The Suez Canal, a major human-made waterway lying between the Sinai Peninsula and the rest of Egypt, enables ships to pass from the Mediterranean to the Red Sea.

• PIPELINES transport oil and natural gas overland to ports on the Mediterranean and Red Seas and the Persian Gulf.

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Why is the Suez Canal Important?

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Suez Canal

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Red Sea

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Communications

• a. Television & radio• b. satellite technology• c. telephone• d. computer and internet• e. telecommunications cable was laid

along the Silk Road.• This cable provides 20 countries with

communications services.

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Interdependence

• Interdependence has increased as the more developed countries help the less developed.

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OPEC

• Eight of the region’s countries:• Algeria• Libya• Iran• Iraq• Kuwait• Saudi Arabia and • UAE (United Arab Emirates)

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• belong to the 11 member OPEC organization,

• Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.

• Because other countries depend heavily on the region’s oil, OPEC countries have considerable influence in the world.

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Embargo

• Sometimes OPEC places an embargo, or restriction, on oil shipped to industrialized countries, causing oil prices to rise.

• In 1999 OPEC forced oil prices to rise by decreasing oil production. (supply & demand)

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Key Points

• Although North Africa, Southwest Asia and Central Asia have limited arable land, a relatively large percentage of the region’s people work in agriculture.

• The oil-producing countries in the region have experienced greater economic growth than other countries in the region.

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• Expanded and more advanced transportation and communications systems are helping connect the region’s urban and economic centers with one another and with the world.

• Interdependence is increasing among the countries of the region, especially in controlling oil production and prices.

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Chapter 19:2 Objectives

• 1. Describe how the peoples in North Africa, Southwest Asia and Central Asia have dealt with scarce water resources.

• 2. Discuss the causes and effects of environmental problems in the region.

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Terms to Know

• aquifer • desalination

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Drawing From Experience

• Is freshwater in your area scarce?• Why or why not?• In the last section, you read about

economic activity in North Africa, Southwest Asia and Central Asia.

• This section focuses on the environmental challenges facing the region.

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Introduction

• Human actions in North Africa, Southwest Asia and Central Asia threaten the environment.

• These actions include oil spills, urbanization, and overuse of water supplies.

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The Need for Water

• Freshwater is scarce in the region.• About 97% of the world’s water is

saltwater.• 2% of the earth’s freshwater is frozen.• That leaves 1% of the freshwater available

for human use.• This region gets its water from rivers,

oases and underground aquifers.

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Desalination

• a way to remove salt from seawater and make it fresh

• Many countries depend on desalination for their freshwater supply.

• It’s very expensive.

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Libya’s Great Man-Made Lake• While drilling for oil they discovered water!• This underground aquifer was huge.• Libya created a lake with the water that is

being pulled out.• Some scientists are afraid these pipelines

will drain the aquifer.• Some are afraid that pumping water from

the aquifers will draw in saltwater from the sea and ruin the freshwater.

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Libya’s Great Man-Made Lake

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Gadhafi (former Libyan ruler) & Obama

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Question

• What are some solutions to the freshwater scarcity in the region?

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Environmental Concerns

• Environmental concerns have grown in the region in recent decades because of new technologies and destructive wars.

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Aswan High Dam in Egypt

• In 1970 the Aswan High Dam was completed.

• It controls the Nile River’s flood, irrigates 3 million acres of land and supplies almost 50% of Egypt’s electrical power.

• The dam has also created an artificial lake to help the fishing industry.

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• However, because of the dam the river no longer deposits fertile soil along the riverbanks.

• Instead, the dam traps the soil.• To grow crops, farmers must now use

expensive fertilizers.• Parasite-related diseases have increased

near the dam.

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Aswan High Dam

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New dam/old dam

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Persian Gulf War (1990)• The war had disastrous effects on the

environment.• Iraqi troops set fire to oil wells, causing

smoke to pollute the area.• The effects of the oil fires threatened

millions of birds.• They also dumped millions of gallons of oil

into the Persia Gulf.• This killed fish and other marine life.

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1990 Bush vs. Hussein – Kuwait oil fires

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Old Soviet Era Problems• Central Asia• The Soviet regime polluted these

countries.• They tested nuclear, chemical and

biological weapons in Kazakhstan.• Severe radiation leaks occurred. • Heavy industry in Kazakhstan and

Kyrgyzstan polluted the air.• Infant mortality has increased.

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The Caspian Sea

• face severe pollution problems• Pollution and overfishing in the Caspian

Sea are killing off sturgeon, an important export in this region.

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Caspian Sea

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Sturgeon

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Caviar

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The Dead Sea -- Israel

• water level has dropped• desalination is one cause• used for irrigation• lowest spot on earth• 1388 feet below sea level.

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Dead Sea Salt Balls

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The Aral Sea

• severe water level drop• water has been drawn away from the

rivers that feed the Aral for irrigation• fishing has been almost destroyed• However, they are working hard to restore

the Aral.

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Sec. 2 Key Points

• Countries in the region have modified their environments to meet people’s needs for water for drinking and irrigation.

• New technologies and destructive wars have subjected the region’s environment to stress.

• People are working to revive areas damaged by past events.

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Question

• What environmental problems does this region face today?

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End of Slide Show