humans and the physical environment

22
Environment Environment Chapter Chapter 14, 14, Section Section 2 2 Europe Europe and and Russia Russia

Upload: zohar

Post on 07-Jan-2016

39 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Europe and Russia. Humans and the Physical Environment. Chapter 14, Section 2. Learning Targets: Review. I can explain how climate and location affect the shipping industry of both Europe and Russia. Setting the Scene. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Humans and the Physical Environment

Humans and the Physical Humans and the Physical EnvironmentEnvironment

Chapter Chapter 14, 14,

Section 2Section 2

Europe Europe and and

RussiaRussia

Page 2: Humans and the Physical Environment

Learning Targets:Review

I can explain how climate and location affect the shipping industry of both Europe and Russia.

Page 3: Humans and the Physical Environment

• It’s February in Barcelona, Spain. Isabella wakes up to a warm, sunny Saturday morning - it’s 65 degrees.

• Meanwhile in Siberia it is late afternoon in Irkutsk. The day is clear and cold – it’s -15 degrees. Alexy is skiing home after visiting his grandma.

Setting the Scene

Page 4: Humans and the Physical Environment

• Barcelona is located on the Mediterranean Sea, where winters are mild and rainy and summers are hot and dry.

• In Siberia, winters are severe; temperatures fall to -50 degrees. Summers are cool and short.

Setting the Scene

Page 5: Humans and the Physical Environment

• Much of northwestern Europe, including Norway and Iceland has a marine climate all year.

Humans Adapt to the Environment

Page 6: Humans and the Physical Environment

Humans Adapt to the Environment

• The countries that ring the Mediterranean Sea lie in a rain shadow from the Alpine Mountain System. There is little rain.

Page 7: Humans and the Physical Environment

• Most of Eastern Europe is in the humid continental region. People here are prepared for long cold winters and very hot summers.

Humans Adapt to the Environment

Page 8: Humans and the Physical Environment

• Few people live in the climate regions of the subarctic and tundra areas of Europe and Russia because even in the summer the temperatures barely get above freezing.

Humans Adapt to the Environment

Moscow’s Winter PalaceMoscow’s City Palace Tower

Page 9: Humans and the Physical Environment

• Temperature, rainfall, altitude and latitude are factors that determine the natural vegetation of an area.–Explain how each of these affects

vegetation.

Modifying the Physical Environment

Page 10: Humans and the Physical Environment

• Deciduous forests (made up of trees that lose their leaves) once covered most of Europe.

• Over many years, people cleared the forests to create farmland and build cities.

Forests and Grasslands

Page 11: Humans and the Physical Environment

• In Northern Europe and Russia there are large coniferous forests, which have trees with cones.

• The central and southern parts of the North European Plain were once covered with prairies. They have also been turned into farmland.

Forests and Grasslands

Page 12: Humans and the Physical Environment

• The three great vegetation zones of Russia are:–The Tundra: a treeless plain where only

grasses and mosses grow.–The Taiga: a forested region that covers

4 million square miles. The soil is not good for farming

–The Steppes: Russian grasslands with fertile black soil for farming.

Russia’s Vegetation

Page 13: Humans and the Physical Environment

The Natural Resources of

Europe

Chapter 14,

Section 3

Page 14: Humans and the Physical Environment

• Europe is a wealthy region and a world leader in economic development. Much of this success comes from it’s rich natural resources.

• Russia has many resources, but its size, frosty climate and frozen rivers make it difficult to turn these resources into wealth.

European Success

Page 15: Humans and the Physical Environment

Natural Resources• The most important natural resources of

Europe are its fertile soil, water and fossil fuels.

Page 16: Humans and the Physical Environment

• Fossil fuels like oil, natural gas and coal, provide energy for industries.

• These fuels are nonrenewable resources – once they are used up, they are gone.

• Millions of years ago, tiny sea plants, called plankton, died and settled on the sea floor. The plankton was covered by mud and sand.

Fossil Fuels

Page 17: Humans and the Physical Environment

• The weight of the sand and mud slowly changed the plankton into oil.

• Now, Europeans and Russians drill for oil below the sea floor using platforms.

• Most of the region’s oil is in the North Sea and Siberia – Siberian oil must be transported by pipeline.

Fossil Fuels

Page 18: Humans and the Physical Environment

Coal• Coal is made from ancient

plants and animals that also changed after millions of years of pressure.– The plants and animals first

become peat, then brown coal, and then soft coal.

• Coal is mined in Great Britain, The Ruhr Valley of Germany, the Ukraine and the region of Silesia.

• Russia has 1/3 of the world’s coal reserves.

Page 19: Humans and the Physical Environment

Russia also has great reserves of iron ore near the Ural Mountains. This iron is used to make steel.

Page 20: Humans and the Physical Environment

• In Western Europe, water is an important resource for irrigating crops, transporting goods and supplying cities.

• People there also use their rivers to turn turbines, which generates hydroelectric power.

• Norway gets almost all of its power from water, and factories in Sweden, Switzerland, Austria, Spain and Portugal all run on water power.

Geographic Processes

Page 21: Humans and the Physical Environment

• Except in the southwestern part of the country, the frozen rivers in Russia cannot be used to generate hydroelectric power.

• Also, many rivers there are polluted with industrial waste.

• These rivers will need to be cleaned before they can be developed as natural resources.

Geographic Processes

Page 22: Humans and the Physical Environment

• Over thousands of years, winds have left fertile, dust-like soil called loess across the North European Plain.

• This soil, combined with plenty of rainfall and long growing seasons, allows Europeans farmers to grow a large amount of crops.

• In the Ukraine, a black soil called chernozem is very fertile.

Geographic Processes