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June 20, 2022 S. Mathews 1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

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Page 1: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 1

Human Geography

By James RubensteinChapter 1Key Issue 1

How Do Geographers Address Where Things

Are?

Page 2: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 2

Before travel began,

a map existed.

Page 3: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 3

Earth is a Map

Page 4: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 4

Cartography

The science of map-making.

Page 5: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 5

MapsA two-dimensional or flat-scale model of Earth's surface, or a portion of it.

Page 6: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 6

Two purposes of Maps

Store reference material

Communicate geographic information

Page 7: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 7

Geographers Think about the arrangements of people and activities found in space.

Try to understand why those people and activities are distributed across space as they are.

Page 8: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 8

Geographers use maps

as a method of depicting the distribution of features

as a tool for explaining observed patterns.

Page 9: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 9

Early Mapmaking The earliest surviving maps were drawn by Babylonians on clay tablets about 2300 B.C.

Polynesian peoples navigated for thousands of years with three dimensional maps.

Mediterranean sailors and traders made maps as 800 B.C.

Page 10: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 10

Page 11: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 11

Aristotle (384-322 B.C.)

The first to demonstrate the earth was spherical. He observed the curved shadow of the earth on the moon during an eclipse and the fact that the visible groups of stars change as one travels north or south.

Page 12: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 12

Eratosthenes (2767-1947 B.C.)

the first person on record to use the word geography calculated the circumference of the earth made one of the earliest maps of the known world, correctly dividing Earth into five climatic regions.

Page 13: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 13

Ptolemy (A.D. 1007-1707)

wrote an eight-volume Guide to Geography, taking advantage of information collected

by merchants and soldiers who traveled throughout the Roman

Empire.

Page 14: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 14

Non-European Phei Hsiu, the "father of Chinese

cartography," produced an elaborate map of China in A.D. 267.

The Muslim geographer al-Idrisi (1100-1165?) prepared a world map and geography text in 1154.

lbn- Battutah (1305-13687) wrote Rihlah (Travels) based on three decades of joumeys.

Page 15: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 15

Age of Exploration and DiscoveryGeography and

mapmaking enjoyed a revival.

By the 17th century, maps accurately displayed the

outline of most continents and the position of oceans.

Page 16: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 16

Map ScaleThe relationship

of a feature’s size on a map to its actual size on

Earth.

Page 17: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 17

Map Scale Represented in three ways: - a fraction (1/24,000) or ratio (1 :24,000)- a written statement (" 1 inch equals 1 mile")

- a graphic bar scale.

Page 18: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 18

Map Scale Usually consists of a bar line marked to show distances on Earth's surface.

The appropriate scale for a map depends on the information being portrayed.

Page 19: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 19

Map Scale

The level of detail and the amount of area covered on a map

depends on its scale.

Page 20: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 20

Page 21: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 21

Page 22: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 22

Page 23: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 23

ProjectionThe scientific method

of transferring locations on the

Earth’s surface to a flat map.

Page 24: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 24

Projection To communicate

geographic concepts effectively through

maps, cartographers must design them

properly and assure that users know how to

read them.

Page 25: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 25

From Sphere to Flat

Page 26: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 26

Map Distortion

The Earth's spherical shape poses a

challenge because drawing the Earth on a

flat piece of paper unavoidably produces

some distortion.

Page 27: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 27

Four types of distortion

shape can be distorted distance may be increased or decreased

relative size may be altered

direction between points can be distorted

Page 28: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 28

In addition to the global system of

latitude and longitude, other mathematical

indicators of locations are used in different parts of the world.

Page 29: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 29

U.S. Land Ordinance of 1785

In the United States, the Land Ordinance of 1785 divided much of the country into a system of townships and

ranges to facilitate the sale of land to settlers in the

West.

Page 30: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 30

Townships and Ranges

A township is a square 6 miles on each side.

Each township has a number corresponding to its distance north or south of a particular base line.

Each township has a second number, known as the range, corresponding to its location east or west of a principal meridian.

Page 31: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 31

Quarter-Section A township is divided into 36

sections, each of which is 1 mile by 1 mile.

Each section is divided into four quarter-sections.

A quarter-section, which is 0.5 mile by 0.5 mile, or 160 acres, was the amount of land many western pioneers bought as a homestead.

Page 32: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 32

A Townsh

ip equals

36 Section

s

Section

Township

Page 33: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 33

Principal MeridiansSome of the north-

south lines separating townships are called principal

meridians.

Page 34: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 34

Principal Meridians

Page 35: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

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Base Lines

Some east-west lines are designated base

lines.

Page 36: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 36

Bas

e Li

ne

Page 37: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 37

Page 38: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 38

Contemporary Tools

Two important technologies that developed during the past quarter century are

geographic information systems (computer programs for manipulating geographic data).

remote sensing from satellites (to collect data).

Page 39: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 39

Geographic Information System

(GIS)A high-performance

computer system that processes

geographic data.

Page 40: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 40

GIS Information such as topography, political boundaries, population density, manufacturing, soil type, earthquake faults, and so on is stored as an information layer.

GIS is most powerful when it is used to combine several layers, to show relations.

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Page 42: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

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Remote SensingThe acquisition of data

about Earth's surface from a satellite orbiting

Earth or from other long-distance methods.

Page 43: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 43

Remote SensingSatellites scan the Earth’s surface

and record reflected radiation.The scanned images are

transmitted to receiving stations in digital form.

Some can show an object 1 meter across.

Weather satellites take a broader view, looking at several

kilometers at a time.

Page 44: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 44

Global Positioning System (GPS)

A system, using 24 satellites, that

determines accurately the precise position of something on Earth

Page 45: September 12, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 1 Key Issue 1 How Do Geographers Address Where Things Are?

April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 45

GPS Commonly used in navigation of aircraft, ships, and autos.

Detecting the vehicle’s current location, device can provide directions to a desired location.

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April 21, 2023 S. Mathews 46