Transcript Slide 1
5 Themes of Geography
Location, Place, Human-Environment
Interaction, Movement, Regions
Location
describes where a place lies
• Absolute Location: a specific description of where a place lies.
An address (2101 Davis Drive) or
Coordinates on a map (17° N, 35° W)
• Relative Location: a general description of where a place lies
(Where is Georgia in relation to Florida? NORTH)
Place
describes the features or landscapes
that make an area unique
Physical Characteristics: defined by nature
(plants, animals, climate, soil, etc.)
Human Characteristics: defined by culture; human ideas and
actions (language, clothing, architecture, religion, political
systems, etc.)
Human-Environment Interaction
how people and their
environment affect each other
Environment: an area’s land, water, climate, plants, and animals
People can have a positive or negative impact on the environment…
Positive – picking up trash, planting seeds
Negative – chopping down trees, littering
Our environment controls the types of crops we can grow,
the kinds of clothes we wear, etc.
Human-Environment Interaction
Continued…
•
Humans depend on/use the environment for their basic needs: food, shelter, and
clothing.
•
Humans modify the environment to meet their needs. For example, they build
dams, plow and irrigate fields, and dig mines. They build houses, schools, and
shopping centers on land.
•
Humans adapt to the environment: Humans have settled in virtually every corner
of the world by successfully adapting to various natural settings. For example,
people who live in the northeastern United States use heating units to keep their
homes warm in winter. People in the southern part of the country use air
conditioning much of the year to stay cool in the heat. The ways people choose to
adapt to their settings reflect their economic and political circumstances and their
technological abilities
Movement
how and why people and things move
Both tangible and intangible things move!
• Tangible: capable of being touched (food, clothes, resources)
• Intangible: incapable of being touched (thoughts, ideas,
information)
• Imports: things shipped INTO the United States
• Exports: things shipped OUT from the United States
Regions
areas of the world purposely divided by
geographers so that comparisons can be made
A region is a part of the world that has one or more common features that
make it different from its surrounding areas
Some regions are defined by physical characteristics (climates, mountain
ranges), while some regions are defined by human characteristics
(religion, language)