Geography Intro
Why was the southwest attractive?
-Air conditioning - Imported water
What are the location factors of manufacturing?
-Location of raw materials -Labor availability -Energy availability -Location of market -Transportation -Economies of scale
What are the economic focuses of Maritime Northeast?
-Primary activities -Recreation -Tourism
Name 4 characteristics of North America
-Two continental-sized countries -English language dominant -Predominantly Christian faiths -Predominantly European norms: Government, architecture, diet, arts -Highly urbanized -Mobile populations -High incomes -Manufacturing output -Federal states with plural societies
What are the 4 major realms of population?
1) East Asia 2) South Asia 3) Europe 4) Eastern North America
-Immigration to North America, beginning in _______ -Ongoing migration, especially to ________
1600's; sunbelt
(def) Voted to remain in Canada by a narrow margin
1995 referendum of Canada
-Stronger provincial language laws -More bilingual Anglophones (English-speakers) -More immigrants, who settled in various language neighborhoods -Defeat of separatist Parti Québécois in 2003, 2007
Aftermath of 1995 referendum in Canada
All Regions Have:
Area, Boundaries, and Location
Only C climates on west coast - Southern __________ has similar climates to northern U.S.
Canada; weather patterns
the making of maps
Cartography
-Center of conterminous U.S. and southern Canada -Tremendous agricultural productivity -Ethanol production -Depopulation, especially in the Great Plains
Continental Interior
-The composite of human imprints on the earth's surface -Carl Sauer's definition: "the forms superimposed on the physical landscape by the activities of man"
Cultural Landscape
farms into which seigneuries were divided customarily took the form of narrow strips of land so that each would have its own river frontage and own woodlot in the back.
Customary Strip farms
-The southern portion of Quebec and neighboring New Brunswick and northern New Hampshire -Long lots land division system -Impact of Quebec's separatist movement
French Canada
-A spatial system focused on a central core -A region formed by a set of places and their functional integration; Also called a "nodal" region -marked less by its sameness than its dynamic internal structure
Functional region
-An astonishing upsurge in human population began about 1500 and the result was an exponential pattern of growth; this pattern is often called a J curve -today, the human population is growing in virtually all regions of the world, but more rapidly in some places than in others
Global Patterns of Population Growth
________________________ affect and are affected by business and work organization, economics , socio-cultural resources, and the natural environment.
Globalizing processes
-means "country behind"; A term that applies to a surrounding area served by an urban center
Hinterland
What is the warm phase that we live in today?
Holocene
In making a map and analyzing it, you have engaged in which several aspects of geography?
Landscape observation - Description of Earth's surface and natural environment - Spatial analysis - use of different scales of analysis - Cartography
-If the more than 7 billion people on Earth today were evenly distributed across the land surface, they would produce an average population density of about 117 people per square mile -People are not evenly distributed; nearly 90% of all people live north of the equator, and most of them live between 20° N and 60° N latitude -People are concentrated on about 20% of the available land
Local Variations in Population Density and Growth
-The rate of natural increase (RNI) is the relationship in a given population between the number of people being born (the birth rate) and the number dying (the death rate) without regard to the effects of migration -The rate of natural increase is expressed as a percentage per year
Local Variations in Population Density and Growth
Upper New England and the Atlantic provinces
Maritime Northeast
center of service and post- industrial activity in Canada
Montreal
-Synonymous with the manufacturing belt -Contains largest city and capital of both countries -Extensive transportation networks and facilities -Growing impact of postindustrial development and globalization
North American Core
Western rain shadow—Western arid climates Eastern humid climates
North American weather patterns
active volcanoes and earthquake epicenters surrounding the pacific ocean
Pacific ring of fire
first epoch of the Quaternary period, between the Pliocene and Holocene epochs.
Pleistocene
-Proximity to a major research university -Large pool of well-educated people -Proximity to a major metropolitan area -Abundant venture capital -Entrepreneurial culture supportive of risk-taking and forgiving of failure -Network of global business linkages -High-amenity region
Postindustrial Location Factors
extraction of raw materials directly from the earth
Primary
collection, processing, and manipulation of information
Quaternary
managerial decision making in large organizations
Quinary
-North American Core -Maritime Northeast -French Canada -Continental Interior -South -Southwest -Western Frontier -Northern Frontier -Pacific Hinge
Regions of the Realm
manufacturing; turning raw materials into useful items
Secondary
-Southeast corner of the realm -Most dynamic region in terms of change -Poverty and income disparity -Changing demographics -Booming economy
South
-U.S.-Mexican borderland -A tricultural region
Southwest
Realms are based on ________ Criteria
Spatial
the study of how people, objects, or ideas are related to one another across space
Spatial analysis
Observing variations in geographic phenomena across space.
Spatial perspective
-Underlying causes, Debt relief, Globalization
Specter of Debt
services
Tertiary
The world regional framework is organized around nine __________________________: - Population - Gender - Development - Food - Urbanization - Globalization - Democratization - Water - Climate Change
Thematic Concepts
time that great ice sheets covered most of the midwest and there was a zenith of glaciation that has lasted 100,000 years
Wisconsinan Glaciation
latitudinal and longitudinal extent of the region with respect to earths grid coordinates
absolute location
What is the criteria for regions?
area, boundaries, location, homogeneity, and regions as systems
aggregate total record of weather conditions at a place or in a region over a period that records have been kept
climate
the gradual movement of the continents across the earth's surface through geological time.
continental drift
distinctive attributes of a society imprinted on its portion of the world's physical stage
cultural landscape
Shared patterns of learned behavior; Components: Beliefs, Institutions, & Technology
culture
scattered lines of houses along the riverbank near customary strip farms.
côtes
The largest geographical unit into which the inhabited world can be _________
divided
-Marked by a certain degree of homogeneity in one or more phenomena -Also called a uniform or homogeneous region
formal region
regions that display a measurable and often visible internal homogeneity
formal regions
-result of the interaction between human societies and natural environments -Revealed by farms, mines, fishing ports, transport routes, dams, bridges, villages, and other features on the landscape
functional interaction
a structured, urban centered system of interaction
functional region
realms that possess environmental, cultural, and organizational properties
geographic realms
-the study of our planet's surface and the processes that shape it -unique in that it links the physical sciences with the social sciences
geography
surges of cold in which glaciers expand and living spaces shrink, separated by warm phases when the ice recedes and life spreads again
glaciations
natural warming phase that has been accelerated by anthropogenic (human source) causes.
global climate change
geographical process in which spatial relations, economic, cultural, political, shift to ever broader scales -is the process of international integration arising from the interchange of world views, products, ideas, and other aspects of culture. -Advances in transportation and telecommunication infrastructure, including the rise of the telegraph and its posterity the Internet, are major factors in globalization, generating further interdependence of economic and cultural activities. -Trade and transactions, Capital and investment movements, Migration and movement of people, and the Dissemination of knowledge.
globalization
suns radiation becomes trapped in the earths atmosphere
greenhouse affect
surrounding zone of a city's interaction
hinterland
study of the various aspects of human life that create the distinctive landscapes and regions of the world
human geography
lasting tens of millions of years chills the planet and causes massive ecological change
ice age
warm phases when the ice recedes poleward and mountain glaciers melt back
interglacials
groups of languages with a shared but usually distant origin
language families
common second language
lingua franca
-Change of residence, intended to be permanent
migration
What are the 2 types of realms?
monocentric and polycentric
realms that are dominated by a single major political entity in terms of territory and/or population.
monocentric realms
What are the intermontane areas?
nevada and arizona
Where did manufacturing start?
on the east coast
scale at which social or natural processes operate or play out.
operational scale
a supercontinent that existed hundreds of millions years ago
pangaea
-Concept of development, Economic conditions (World Bank's groupings): High-Income, Upper-middle-income, Lower-middle-income, Low-income
patterns of development
What are the 3 main sets of criteria for geographic realms?
physical an human, functional, and historical
have generally focused on how Earth's physical processes work and tightly linked with human geography
physical geographers
appearance, functioning, and organization of the realm are dispersed among a number of more or less equally influential regions or countries
polycentric realm
to study the growth and decline of numbers of people on Earth, their distribution across Earth's surface, age and sex distributions, migration patterns and what makes people move
population
Attractive features of proposed new home
pull factors
What are the two factors when migrating?
push and pull factors
Negative factors of present home
push factors
perception of local or distant space as well as our mental image of the region we are describing.
regional concept
-Areas of the earth's surface marked by certain properties -Scientific devices that enable us to make spatial generalizations -Based on criteria we establish -Criteria can be: Human (cultural) properties, Physical (natural) characteristics, or a combination of both of the above
regions
location with reference to other regions
relative location
when a map is created, it represents all or part of the earths surface at a certain level of detail
scale
ration between map distance and real world distance; expressed as a fraction.
small scale
-where peripheries of two adjacent realms or regions join -Marked by a gradual shift (rather than a sharp break) in the characteristics that distinguish neighboring realms
spatial change
regions marked by their functional integration
spatial systems
-A politically organized territory administered by a sovereign government -Recognized by a significant portion of the international community. -Must contain: a permanent resident population, an organized economy, & a functioning internal circulation system
state
continents of light rock that rests on slabs of heavier rock
tectonic plates
Geographic realms change over ______.
time
Where geographic realms meet __________ mark their contacts
transition zones
where 2 geographic realms meet
transition zones