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Learning Target: Identify types of maps, the types of information presented in maps, and different kinds of spatial patterns and relationships portrayed in  maps.

• Reference maps are designed for people to refer to for general information about places. The two main reference maps are political and physical

• Thematic Maps are used as a communications tool – tell us how human activities are distributed 



Cartogram



Choropleth

Dot Density



Isoline



Proportional Symbol


Spatial Patterns Represented on a Map

absolute and relative distance and direction

Clustering: Grouped/bunched together

Dispersal: appears to be distributed over a wide area

Elevation: using levels of how high/low something is located on the land

Map Projections (distortion in shape, size, distance, and direction)



Mercator Map

Shape and directions of countries are fairly accurate

Greatly distorted toward poles 



Robinson Map

Everything is distorted in small amounts



Goode

Continent sizes are accurately portrayed

Directions and distant aren’t accurate



Gall Peters

Shape of countries especially near the equator are distorted 

2. Geographic Data

Learning Target: Identify different methods of geographic data collection.

Geospatial Data: all information including physical features and human activities

Geographic information system (GIS) is a computer system for capturing, storing, checking, and displaying data related to positions on Earth's surface

GPS stands for Geographic Positioning System: This system uses data from satellites to pin-point a location on earth and help people find their way to a destination. 

Remote sensing: refers to the process of taking pictures of the Earth's surface from satellites (or, earlier, airplanes) to provide a greater understanding of the Earth's geography over large distances.

• Spatial information can come from written accounts in the form of field observations, media reports, travel narratives, policy documents, personal interviews, landscape analysis, and photographic interpretation.


3. The Power of Geographic Data

Learning Target: Explain the geographical effects of decisions made using geographical information.

Geospatial Data: all information including physical features and human activities

Census data: an official count of individuals in a population (in the USA, it happens every 10 years)


4. Spatial Concepts

Learning Target: Define major geographic concepts that illustrate spatial relationships.

Absolute location: The precise spot where something is located

Relative Location:  where something is in relation to other things 

Space: extent of a area and can be in a relative and absolute sense

Place: refers to the specific human and physical characteristics of a location.

Distance Decay: a geographical term which describes the effect of distance on cultural or spatial interactions

Time-Space Compression: is the increasing sense of connectivity that seems to be bringing people closer together even though their distances are the same

Pattern: The geometric or regular arrangement of something in an area


5. Human-Environmental Interaction

Learning Target: Explain how major geographic concepts illustrate spatial relationships.

Sustainability: the goal of the human race reaching equilibrium with the environment; meeting the needs of the present without while also leaving resources for future generations

Natural Resources: a physical material constituting part of Earth that people need and value

Environmental Determinism: How the physical environment caused (determined) social development 

• Possibilism: the physical environment may limit some human actions, but people have the ability to adjust to their environment


6. Scales of Analysis

Learning Target: Define scales of analysis used by geographers explain what scales of analysis reveal

Scale: the relationship between the distance on the ground and the corresponding distance on a specific map - also a concept describing how "zoomed in" you are while studying a geographic trait (Global (Globalization), Regional, National, State, and Local)

Scale of Analysis: how zoomed in or out you are when looking at geographic data


7. Regional Analysis

Learning Target: Describe different ways that geographers define regions.

Region: a place larger than a point and smaller than a planet that is grouped together because of a measurable or perceived common feature

Formal Region: a region that is based quantitative data data (that can be documented or measured) - all government areas are this because they share a government (Example: Wisconsin)

Functional Region: a region based around a node or focal point - terrestrial radio broadcasts are an example of this (example: Radio station broadcast area, DC metro)

Vernacular (Perceptual) Region: an area that shares a common qualitative characteristic, it's only a region because people believe it's a region (example: midwest)

UNIT TWO: POPULATION & MIGRATION

1. Population Distribution 

Learning Target: Identify the factors that influence the distribution of human populations at different scales.

Ecumene is a term used by geographers to mean where people are settled on the earth. (along rivers, fertile land, coast, etc)

• Physical Factors: People avoid areas too dry, too wet, too cold, too high

• Cultural Factors: Populations will be concentrated in areas that have access to Education, health care, and entertainment opportunities 

• Historical FACTORS: certain areas where life could be sustain and lived (Areas where human flourished and survived)


Learning Target: Define methods geographers use to calculate population density.

Arithmetic Density - total number of objects in an area

Physiological Density: Number of people supported by a unit area of arable land (Land suited for agriculture)

Agricultural Density: Ratio of the number of farmers to amount of arable land


Learning Target: Explain the differences between and the impact of methods used to calculate population density.

• Agricultural density reflects how developed a country is,

• Physiological density (as a measure of how many people must be fed by a particular amount of land) reveals whether the country is considered overpopulated

• Arithmetic density is a calculation and not terribly meaningful on its own.


2. Consequences of Population Distribution

 Learning Target: Explain how population distribution and density affect society and the environment.

Areas with larger populations and greater population density have greater political, economic, and social power

• Political – greater control over laws and larger influence

• Economic – concentration of jobs, areas make more revenue 

• Social – greater access to health care, better educational opportunities, greater cultural diversity

As population grows and communities expand we start to alter the environment and  landscape (remember landscape is what you see when you look around) 

Carrying Capacity: the maximum population size of the species that the environment can sustain

Overpopulation: when there are not enough resources in an area to support a population


3. Population Composition

Learning Target: Describe elements of population composition used by geographers.

Age/sex ratio: comparison of the numbers of males and females of different ages

Population structure is unique to each area due to their own unique history and current condition

• Learning Target: Explain ways that geographers depict and analyze population composition.

Population Pyramid: a graph of the population of an area by age and sex - when a population is growing it takes a pyramid shape

4. Population Dynamics

Learning Target Explain factors that account for contemporary and historical trends in population growth and decline.

Demography - the study of population

Crude Birth Rate (CBR) - the number of live births per one thousand people in the population

Crude Death Rate (CDR) - the number of deaths per one thousand people in the population 

Doubling time - the time period it takes for a population to double in size

Fertility - the number of live births occuring in a population

Infant mortality rate (IMR) - the number of children who don't survive their first year of life per 1000 live births in a country 

Mortality - the number of deaths occuring in a population

Infant Mortality Rate – number of babies that die during the first year per 1,000 live births

Rate of Natural Increase (RNI) (also known as NIR)- (birth rate - death rate)/10 - a positive NIR means a population is growing and a negative NIR means a population is shrinking

Total fertility rate (TFR) - the average number of children a woman is predicted to have in her child bearing (fecund) years

• Social factors can affect fertility, mortality, and migration (Role of genders in society, is family planning acceptable, age of marriage and traditional family size values, and if marrying young is culturally expected fertility rate is going to be higher)

• Cultural factors can affect fertility, mortality, and migration (Religion - Catholic church forbidding birth control, Ethnicity – certain ethnic groups have larger families (ties into religion as well), Seeking health care or using home remedies to cure diseases)

• Governments can play a role (Policy on limiting or encouraging children, Government supports/funds healthcare for society)

• Economic factors that affect fertility, mortality, and migration (Women in jobs and education = less babies)

5. The Demographic Transition Model

Learning Target: Explain theories of population growth and decline.

Demographic Transition Model

• Epidemiological Model

Explains how society has developed and the change in how/why people are dying as we have progressed


Stage 1: Pestilence and Famine (High CDR)

Infectious