Identify:
What are tools that geographers use?
Identify:
region
Examples: Formal Regions, Functional Regions, Perceptual Regions
Identify:
formal region
Well-defined boundaries and are characterized by specific, measurable traits like climate, language, or economic activity.
Examples: countries, states, and climate zones.
Identify:
functional region
Defined by interactions and connections centered around a central point or node.
Examples: transportation networks, market areas, and metropolitan areas.
Identify:
perceptual region
Examples: the American South, the Middle East.
Identify:
relative location
Identify:
absolute location
Identify:
Physical characteristics of place.
Identify:
Human characteristics of place.
Identify:
scale
Refers to the relationship between a distance on a map and the corresponding distance on Earth’s surface.
Large-Scale Maps: Show smaller areas in greater detail.
Small-Scale Maps: Show larger areas with less detail.
Identify:
2 data sources used by geographers to discover patterns in geography.
Explain:
How do geographers use Census Bureau data?
Explain:
How do geographers use remote sensing data?
Explain:
Significance of GPS in geography.
Global Positioning System
Explain:
Significance of GIS in geography.
Geographic Information System
Example: urban planners can use GIS to optimize land use, emergency responders can use it to allocate resources efficiently, and environmental scientists can use it to monitor climate change.
Explain:
What does a world region map show?
Identify:
7 geographical regions.
Define:
map projection
Method of representing the ellipsoidal Earth surface on a flat surface.
The characteristics of map projection are area, shape, distance, and direction.
Identify:
Types of map projections.
Identify:
When to use Mercator Projection.
Identify:
When to use Robinson Projection.
Identify:
When to use Goode’s Homolosine Projection.
Identify:
When to use Azimuthal Projection.
Identify:
When to use Mollweide Projection.