notes 09/02 class 01: introduction geo105: world regional geography

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Notes 09/02 Class 01: Introduction GEO105: World Regional Geography. Michael T. Wheeler Syracuse University, Geography. Lecture slide 02. Introduction. Class Introduction Quick Instructor Bio Dissertation on the development of 3d, historical maps Today’s class: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Michael T. WheelerSyracuse University, Geography

Notes 09/02

Class 01: IntroductionGEO105: World Regional Geography

2

Introduction

• Class Introduction• Quick Instructor Bio

– Dissertation on the development of 3d, historical maps• Today’s class:

– How do geographers look at the world?– Some simple examples from North America– Administration: syllabus, assignments, tests, etc.

• Textbook:– Marston, Knox, and Liverman. World Regions in Global Context.

2nd Edition. 2005.

Lecture slide 02

3

What is World Regional Geography?

• Geography (from World Regions: In Global Context, p. 2)– Geography: study of natural and human features on Earth

Human Geography: Spatial organization of human activity

– Regional geography: individuality and interdependence of regions

• World Regional (WR, p. 36)– Informed regional geography understands places as

components of a constantly changing global system– In this sense, “all regional geography is historical

geography” [my emphasis]

Lecture slide 03

4

This Course

• My approach1. Show how physical environment has historically shaped

human activities2. Describe how, when, and why places have been integrated

into global systema) European empiresb) neighbors

3. Describe regions today a) Environmentb) Historical legaciesc) Relationship to global system (economics / trade)d) Individuality (primarily culture)

Lecture slide 04

5

Where are the city locations?Lecture slide 05

6

City Location Factors

• Military Defense• Physical Geography

– Waterfalls • Limits of navigation• Water power [WR, 305]

– Biogeography• Disease• Crops

• Economic Geography (Trade and Transportation)– Intra-empire (tobacco: WR, 302-3)

• Navigable waterways– Interior (wheat)– Importance of Water Transportation

Lecture slide 06

7

Population Maps, British North America(future U.S.)

Lecture slide 07

8

Greater Trade Picture

• Early Chesapeake– Tobacco to U.K.– Slaves from Africa (or

Caribbean)• Later Chesapeake

– Sugar from West Indies to U.K.

– Wheat to West Indies– Settlement of interior– Development of towns

• Location adjusted to terms of trade

Lecture slide 08

9

What were the ‘Natural’ Transportation Routes?

WR, Figure 7.4: Physiographic regions of the United States and Canada (p. 295)

Lecture slide 09

10

French Empire in North America

France in North America, ca. 1750

Lecture slide 10

11

Comparing European Empires

• British colonies– Coastal– Primarily commercial crop production (agriculture)– Constrained by the Appalachians

• French colonies– Primarily fur trading and fishing– Great fluvial systems

• St. Lawrence River• Mississippi / Missouri / Ohio System

Lecture slide 11

12

NE North America Topography, 1800Lecture slide 12

13

New York State Transportation Geography

See: WR, p. 332

Lecture slide 13

14

Responses to Erie Canal (RRs)Lecture slide 14

15

American Core

• Transportation– Erie Canal– Big Four Trunk Line Railroads

• New York Central• New York and Erie• Pennsylvania• Baltimore and Ohio

• Seaborne Commerce– New York City– Philadelphia, Boston, and Baltimore

• American Core– Industrializing Northeast– Rapidly-growing Midwest

Lecture slide 15

16

U.S.-Canadian Core

Figure 7.33: Megalopolis and Main Street (p. 330)

Lecture slide 16

17

Break

Population Density Map of North America

Lecture slide 17

18

New France, 1750Lecture slide 18

19

New France, 1750Lecture slide 19

20

Canadian Shield

Figure 7.4: Physiographic regions of the United States and Canada (p. 295)

Lecture slide 20

21

St. Lawrence SettlementLecture slide 21

22

Loyalist Exodus

• Loyalists– Reward with land for loyalty– Defensive buffer against future U.S. invasion– Understandably, strongly anti-U.S.

• Native Americans– Iroquois scattered throughout southwestern Ontario

Lecture slide 22

23

Military FrontierLecture slide 23

24

Canadian Population, 1800Lecture slide 24

25

Binding the Nation TogetherLecture slide 25

26

Trans-Continental RailroadLecture slide 26

27

Canadian Trade FlowsLecture slide 27

28

Binding the ProvincesLecture slide 28

29

Canadian Proximity to U.S.Lecture slide 29

30

Québec problem, 1981Lecture slide 30

31

Québec Separatist Movement

1995 Vote for an independentQuébec

Lecture slide 31

32

Cold War DefenseLecture slide 32

33

Review

• General Themes– Physical Geography (Rivers, mountains, soil)– Trade – Transportation

• Specific Lessons– Imperial Legacies

• U.S.: British, relationship to West Indies• Canada: French, British

– Interdependence of northern U.S. / Canada– Canada

• Québec problem• Binding the Dominion together• Develop strong identity as not U.S.

Lecture slide 33

34

Break

Population Density Map of North America

Lecture slide 34

35

Rest of Class [1]

• Syllabus• Web Site

– http://classes.maxwell.syr.edu/geo105_f04• Textbook

– Historical Approach – some jumping around– Regional Approach – modern regions

• Tests– Mid-term, Final– Class Discussion Questions

Lecture slide 35

36

Rest of Class [2]

• Calendar• Assignments

– Topic1. Multi-Country Analysis2. Large Ethnic Minority within a country

– Geographic Examples• U.S. / Canada• India / Pakistan• Israel and Palestine• Belgium: ½ Walloon (French), ½ Flemish (Dutch)• Indonesia and East Timor

Lecture slide 36

37

Rest of Class [3]Lecture slide 37

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