Geography is the study of Earth’s physical and human features. Geographers apply spatial perspective and organization to search for patterns and relationships between physical features and human activities on Earth.
\n Geographers study:
Over the past 3,000 years, geographers have created maps and globes to represent Earth.
The knowledge of the world imparted by maps and globes has led to advancements in trade, technology, and cultural innovations.
Geography’s Evolution
600 B.C.E.
Babylonians inscribe the oldest known world map on a clay tablet. It shows Babylon in the center of the world surrounded by a “bitter river” assumed to be the ocean.
247 B.C.E.
Eratosthenes calculates Earth's circumference by measuring the angle of the sun on the same day at two Egyptian cities, and then using the distance between the cities and basic geometry to suggest that the circumference was 46,250 kilometers (28,738 miles). He was only off by about 175 km (109 miles)! He also mapped the world, with remarkable accuracy around the Mediterranean.
77 C.E.
Pliny publishes an encyclopedia of geography which provides descriptions and distances for cities and landmarks in Europe, Asia, and the far south and far east, including India.
150
Ptolemy's map of the world includes the first use of a coordinate system similar to latitude and longitude.
1519
Ferdinand Magellan begins the first-ever voyage around the world with five ships and 250 men. About three years later, one ship and 18 of the original men return to Spain. Magellan lost his life in the Philippines.
1714
After about 2,000 sailors lose their lives in one night because a navigator could not determine the correct longitude at sea. The British government offers a reward equal to several million dollars today to anyone who could develop a reliable method. The prize is not awarded until nearly 60 years later. An untrained clockmaker develops a clock that would continually keep accurate time in a ship's home port.
1804
The Lewis and Clark expedition produces the first accurate maps of the western areas of North America.
1864
George Perkins Marsh publishes Man and Nature, which is considered the first book to connect human actions to environmental degradation. He suggests that clearing woodlands could lead to desertification.
1909, 1911
Explorers reach the poles for the first time. Robert Peary and Matthew Henson reach the North Pole in 1909 and Captain Roald Amundsen reaches the South Pole in 1911.
1969
An estimated 600 million people watch Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon for the first time.
2000
GPS becomes 10 times more accurate and more accessible when President Clinton orders GPS signals to be unscrambled.
Geographers to know:
Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859) – A German scientist who advanced the field of physical geography through his research and emphasis on the impact of physical features on regions
Carl Ritter (1779-1859) – A German geographer who theorized that the physical environment played a significant role in the development of human societies. This theory is also known as environmental determinism.
Carl Sauer (1889-1975) – An American geographer who developed the field of cultural geography and emphasized the relationship between different cultures and their environments
Branches of Geography:
Physical Geography:
Human Geography:
Environmental Geography: