Southeast Asia Notes

Download Report

Transcript Southeast Asia Notes

Feb. 8, 2011
Good Morning
HOW DOES THE GEOGRAPHY
OF SE ASIA AFFECT THE
LIVES OF THE PEOPLE WHO
LIVE THERE?
Southeast Asia
Notes
Countries…











Brunei
Cambodia
East Timor
Indonesia
Laos
Malaysia
Myanmar
Philippines
Singapore
Thailand
Vietnam
Mainland & Island…
• Mainland SE Asia
– Myanmar, Thailand, Laos,
Vietnam, Cambodia
– To the east forms the
Indochina Peninsula
– To the south forms the Malay
Peninsula
• Island SE Asia
– Malaysia
– Brunei
– East Timor
– Singapore
– Indonesia
• Over 17,000 islands
– Philippines
• Over 7,000 islands
Peninsula & Island…
• Formed by the collision of the Eurasian, Philippine,
and Indo-Australian tectonic plates millions of years
ago
• Earthquake activity made a number of archipelagoes
- chains of islands
• Tectonic activity is one of the physical processes
that shaped island Southeast Asia
– 15,000 years ago, many of the islands were
connected because sea levels were lower
– With the melting of the last Ice Age, the seas rose
and separated the land into separate islands
Bodies of Water…
•
•
•
•
Gulf of Tonkin
Bay of Bengal
South China Sea
Tonle Sap
– SE Asia’s largest
freshwater lake
Rivers…
• Irrawaddy River
(Myanmar)
• Chao Praya River
(Thailand)
• Mekong River
(Indochina)
– 2600 miles long
– Deposits silt and
sediment along the
shore
• Hong (Red) River
(Vietnam)
Mekong River
• Region is one of
world’s most
tectonically active
areas
• Many mountains on
the islands are part
of the Ring of Fire the area of volcano
and earthquake
activity that rims
the Pacific Ocean
• Most famous
volcano of the
region is Krakatoa
– Erupted in 1883
– Blacked out the sky
for two days
Mountains…
Mountains…
• Mount Pinatubo
– Volcano in the Philippines
– Erupted in 1991
– Damage caused by lava
and volcanic ash
• Volcanoes are destructive
but also help the region
– Lahars – volcanic
mudflows
• Rush down steep volcanic
slopes
• Bury valleys and towns
– Volcanic ash
• Full of nutrients
• Enriches the soils
What are the benefits and
consequences of living in the
Ring of Fire?
Climate…
• Much of the region is located in tropical humid
climate
– Hot and damp year round
– Heavy rainfall most months
• Some of region experiences tropical wet & dry
climate
– Wet monsoon winds blow in from Pacific
– Dry monsoon winds blow in from Australia
• Typhoons sweep in from Pacific Ocean
– Bring heavy rains and powerful winds
– Strike between August & October when temperatures
are warmest
– Can raise sea levels to dangerous heights
Climate…
– Cyclone – storm with heavy rains and high
winds that blow in a circular pattern around an
area of low atmospheric pressure (like a
hurricane)
– Naming typhoons
• Asians do not name typhoons like we name
hurricanes in the United States
– In the US, we name hurricanes people’s names starting
with A and going to W, alternating between men and
women’s names
– In Asia, they use numbers
» Example- 0108 means the first storm in 2008, 0208
means the second storm in 2008
» Disadvantage of this is that numbers are harder to
remember than names
Natural Resources…
• Minerals and gems
–
–
–
–
Nickel
Iron
Copper
Tin (world’s largest
in deposits)
– Sapphires
– “Burma Rubies” are
very valuable and
found in Myanmar
– Pearls
• Largest pearl found
in Palawan,
Philippines and
weighed 14 pounds
Natural Resources…
• Forestry
– Important industry
– Many countries
have strict laws to
prevent
deforestation
(limits timber
exports)
• Oil
– Brunei – has
become very rich
from oil and natural
gas
– Indonesia –
member of OPEC,
largest producer
of petroleum in
Southeast Asia
• Flora (plants)
– Logging
•
•
•
•
Mahogany
Teak
Rubber
Many nations now have
restrictions due to
deforestation
• Forest provides
pharmaceuticals
– 10% of prescription drugs
are made from products in
tropical rain forests
• Fauna (animals)
• Endemic species – those
species native to a certain
area
–
–
–
–
–
Asian elephant
Komodo dragon
Tiger
Rhinoceros
Orangutan
Flora & Fauna…
What areas have the highest
population density in SE Asia?
Population…
• 543 million
people
• Brunei smallest
population 400,000
• Indonesia largest
population 220 million
• Population density
– Densely populated
regions
•
•
•
•
River valleys
Coastal plains
Fertile land
Urban areas
– Sparsely populated
regions
• Highlands
• Mountains
• Rural areas
– Population density
varies from country to
country
• Indonesia 283 people
per square mile
• Singapore 12,000
people per square
mile (very small land
area)
Population Density…
Population Growth…
– Cambodia
• Low population growth rate due to the Communist Khmer
Rouge government:
– Starvation due to food shortages
– Torture
– Executions
– Malaysia
• High population growth rate because the government wants
to increase the population
– Indonesia
• The government has tried to limit the size of families in
heavily populated areas
– Singapore
• Has a campaign to slow population growth rate
• Government has cut child care payments to parents with
more than three kids
Rural & Urban Populations…
– The Mainland has more arable
land than the islands
– 75% of the Mainland population
lives in rural areas
– Singapore – small island (almost
all urban)
– In almost every city in Southeast
Asia, the largest city is the
primate city – the capital city of
a country and also the largest
city and manufacturing center
for the country
– Kampongs – villages built on
stilts to keep houses safe from
floods
History…
• Many empires developed around strategic ports
• People migrated to region from China and
other areas in Asia
• 1500s – Europeans arrived in region
– Portuguese were first to arrive – looking for Spice
Islands
– Traders introduced Hinduism and Buddhism to
region
– Islam is brought by Arab traders
– Chinese set up maritime (sea) trade routes
• Countries outside the region wanted to control the
region for 2 reasons:
– Natural resources
– Useful location
History…
• Most of the region came
under control of European
colonial powers
• By the mid 1900s, areas
claimed by the West
– Great Britain – Brunei,
Myanmar, Malaysia,
Singapore
– France – Cambodia, Vietnam,
Laos (Indochina)
– Netherlands – Indonesia
– Spain – Philippines
• 1898 – U.S. took control of
Philippines after SpanishAmerican War
• Only Thailand was never
colonized by Europeans
History…
– Western Powers:
• Expanded mining
• Turned small farms into large plantations to
grow cash crops
• Built roads, plantations and schools
• Imported machinery
• Built transportation systems linking road and
railways to ports
• Boosted economic production in these regions
for their own benefit, not to help the Southeast
Asians
– During World
War II, Japan
forced the
Western
powers out of
Southeast Asia
– Japanese
wanted control of
natural
resources
– After Japan’s
defeat in 1945,
the Western
powers tried to
regain control
History…
History…
– By 1965, all
Southeast Asian
countries were
independent
• 1954 - French
Indochina was split
– Vietnam,
Cambodia, Laos
• 1989 – Burma
changes name to
Myanmar
• Independence did
not come easy
• 1975-1979 – Cambodia
fell under brutal rule of
Communist group, Khmer
Rouge
– Wanted to transform
Cambodia into a rural
peasant society
– Forced all citizens to work
as field laborers
– Executed intelligent &
skilled workers
• Vietnamese forces
invaded
• Millions of land mines left
throughout the country
History…
History…
• Vietnam – internal conflict led to civil war
involving U.S.
– U.S. wanted to stop spread of communism in Asia
– Domino theory – idea that if one country fell to
communism, neighboring countries would fall like
dominoes
– http://www.vietnamwar.com/
Feb. 10, 2011
Good Morning
How has the culture of SE Asia
influenced the types of
government that exist in the
countries today?
Government…
• 3 types of government in Southeast Asia
• Republic
– Type of government where people vote for officials to make
decisions and laws
• Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore,
• Constitutional Monarchy
– Type of government with a king or queen but their power is
restricted by a constitution
• Brunei, Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia
• Socialist Republic
– Type of government where people vote for officials to make
decisions and laws and the government provides a lot of
services
• Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar
Language…
• Hundreds of languages and dialects
–
–
–
–
Malay
Chinese
Pilipino
English
• Many languages are the result of migration and colonization
• Usually one of the languages spoken is that of the country
that colonized it
Malay
Written
Language
Religion…
• Many religions because
different groups of people
migrated to the region
– Indochina Peninsula – most
practice Buddhism
• Wats – Buddhist temples that
serve as monasteries
• Buddhism is most common
religion practiced in SE Asia
– Malay Peninsula and
Indonesia – most practice
Islam
• Indonesia is the world’s most
populous Islamic country
– Philippines – most practice
Catholicism
• Due to Spanish colonization
in the 1500s
– Many people with Chinese
ancestry – practice Daoism
and Confucianism
Economy…
• Agriculture
– 65% of people in Southeast Asia are farmers
– Rice is the main food crop grown
– 50% of the farmland is used for growing rice
– Rice grows well in Southeast Asia because the
region has:
• Fertile soil
• Abundant water supply
• Warm, wet climate
Economy…
– Most farmers do not use modern machinery
– Rice is planted at the beginning of the rainy season
in May and harvested in October
– 3 types of rice cultivation:
• Paddy cultivation
• Dry-rice cultivation
• Slash-and-burn agriculture
Economy…
– During the dry
season, other cash
crops are grown
– Cash crops:
• Sugar cane
• Rubber (Thailand is
the world’s leading
producer of natural
rubber)
• Pineapples
• Coconuts
• Coffee
• Opium
Industrialization…
• Many foreign companies
have built factories in
Southeast Asia because of
the large supply of
inexpensive labor
– Industrializing Countries
• “Asian Tigers”
• Malaysia, Singapore, South
Korea, Taiwan, Thailand
– Less Industrialized
Countries
• Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam
• Not many people work in
manufacturing due to:
Nike factory worker in Indonesia
– Wars and political change
– Communist governments
Industrialization…
• All countries of SE
Asia are members
of Association of
Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN)
– Promotes economic
development among
members
– Formed a free trade
region in the 1990s
Environment…
• Southeast Asia is
becoming more
urbanized (people
moving to cities) and
industrialized (factories)
• Problems caused by this:
– Air, water, noise pollution
– Lack of housing
– Increase in industrial
waste
• Volcanoes
– Most people live in Ring
of Fire
– Worry about threat of
volcanic activity
Quiz #5
• Formation of SE Asia
• Rivers of SE Asia
• Famous mountains and
volcanoes of region
• Identifying typhoons
• Burma Rubies
• SE Asia member of
OPEC
• Flora vs. fauna
• Countries of French
Indochina
• Only nation in SE Asia
never controlled by west
• Khmer Rouge
• Wats
• Country with highest
Muslim population
• Roman Catholicism in SE
Asia
• Religion of Malay
Peninsula
• Reasons rice grows well
in region
• Cash crops
• ASEAN