UNIT ONE: CANADA AND THE WORLD
Focus Questions:
•What is the approx. population of Canada?
41 million (41 288 599
• Map of Canada
o Name the 3 oceans that touch Canada – be able to locate them on a map
Pacific ocean
Arctic ocean
Atlantic Ocean
o Name the 10 provinces and their capital cities
British Columbia (Victoria)
Alberta (Edmonton)
Saskatchewan (Regina)
Manitoba (Winnipeg)
Ontario (Toronto)
Quebec (Quebec City)
Newfoundland and Labrador (St.John’s)
Prince Edward Island (Charlottetown)
New Brunswick (Fredericton)
Nova Scotia (Halifax)
o Name the 3 territories and their capital cities
Yukon Territory (White Horse)
Northwest Territories (Yellowknife)
Nunavut (Iqaluit)
o Locate the provinces and territories but not the capital cities (just know them for each province and territory)
•What are the 6 factors of the HDI?
Life expectancy (how long you can live)
Population Growth (how fast the population grows)
Education (access the opportunity to learning)
Health Care (access to availability to health)
Wealth (measures the wealth of the nation)
Food supply (measures the availability of nutrition)
•What is a Developed Country? Describe it and list 3 developed countries
A developed country is in higher demand in living conditions. I.e. higher social and economic levels, average incomes, many luxuries.
-20% of the world's population live in these countries
Canada
USA
Japan
Spain
France
•What is a Developing Country? Describe it and list 3 developing countries
A developing country is in lower demand for living conditions. I.e. lower social and economic level, high levels of poverty.
Primary industry is agriculture→in order to feed themselves and to trade for money
Ethiopia
Nigeria
Rwanda
Bangladesh
Pakistan
•What are cash crops? Which countries grow these?
Cash crops are crops that are grown to be sold for money (exports)
Crops that are grown:
-Bananas/tropical fruit
-Mango
-Cocoa beans
-Coconuts
-Coffee beans
-Dragon fruit
-Cotton
-Sugar
•Which country gives the most in foreign aid money?
Foreign Aid: Money, food or other resources given by one country to another to promote development and welfare
United states gives the most in foreign aid money ($66.04 billion)
UNIT TWO: INTERACTIONS IN THE PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT Focus Questions:
•What is Pangaea and who came up with this idea and what did he call the theory?
200 million years ago the continents formed a single giant land mass supercontinent called Pangaea and started to split up
-Alfred Wegner came up with this theory and named it continental drift
•What evidence did Wegener have to prove his theory? There were 4
PUZZLE PIECES-
Shorelines of the continents seem to fit together like a puzzle piece (east coast of South America fit with the west coast of Africa)
SIMILAR FOSSILS AND ROCK TYPES
Similar rock types were found in these two locations despite the fact that they were thousands of km apart (East coast of south america and west coast of africa)
LOCATION OF MOUNTAINS
Wegener found mountains formed 300 million years ago that are similar in age and structure on both sides of the Atlantic ocean
EVIDENCE OF ICE SHEETS
Ice sheets covered southern Africa, India and Australia about 250 million years ago
•What are the 4 layers of the earth and which is liquid?
Crust
Mantel
Outer core (Liquid layer)
Inner core
•What is the Ring of Fire and where is it located?
An area where large amounts of earthquakes and volcanic eruptions occur
The Ring of Fire is a direct result of plate tectonics and the movement and collisions of plates.
Located in: Basin of the Pacific Ocean
•Landform Regions of Canada
o Review the map
o Which landform region do you live in? Toronto is in this landform region.
I live in the Great Lakes-St Lawrence Lowland region.
o Which landform region has the Rocky Mountains?
Western Cordillera
o Which landform region is near the Pacific Ocean?
Western Cordillera
o Which landform region is the furthest north?
Innuitian Mountains
o Which landform region is the smallest?
Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Lowlands
o Which landform region is the largest?
Canadian Shield
•Which landform region is known as the Breadbasket with large wheat farms?
Interior Plains
• Define climate and weather – what is the difference?
Weather
The day to day conditions of the atmosphere
-Short periods of time
-Small areas
-Temperature and precipitation
Climate
Weather conditions of a large area for a long period of time
DIFFERENCE
TIME PERIOD-
Weather describes atmospheric conditions over a few days while climate describes many years (around 20)
LAND AREA-
Weather=localized (ex. Rainy in brampton and sunny in vaughan)
Climate=regionalized (ex. All of southern Ontario has the same climate)
•What are the factors that affect climate? List them (LOWERN)
Latitude
Ocean Currents
Wind currents
Elevation
Relief
Nearness to water
o Which one might affect the coast of BC the most
Nearness to water affects BC the most.
o Which one might affect the Arctic the most
Latitude
•What are the 3 ocean currents that affect Canada? Where are they?
Pacific- West coast
Arctic- Northern
Atlantic- Eastern
• Maritime vs continental
MARITIME:
-Mainly found along the eastern and western coasts (typcial climate fo areas near the coast
-Mild winters and summers
-Frequent precipitation (close to or usually over 1000mm a year, lowest around 900)
Examples- Vancouver, British Columbia or St. john’s NFL or Halifax, Nova Scotia
CONTINENTAL:
-Typical climate of areas more inland in the interior of Canada (Prairie provinces such as Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba)
-Variations of temperature because of the lack of bodies of water (Hot summers and very cold winters)
-Increased temp fluctuations (high summer temps and low winter temps)
-Less precipitation (usually 200-1000 of rain a year)
Examples- Regina, Saskatchewan, Calgary, Alberta, Winnipeg, Manitoba, and Ottawa, Ontario
• Climate Graphs and how to do the calculations:
Climate graphs show TOTAL MONTHLY PRECIPITATION and AVERAGE MONTHLY TEMPERATURES typically in a particular location
o What is the formula for calculating the average temperature?
Add up all the temperatures and divide by 12 (℃)
o What is the formula for calculating the total precipitation?
Add up all the monthly precipitation totals (mm)
o What is the formula for calculating the temperature range?
The highest temperature minus the lowest temperature (℃)
o Can you figure out how to find the month with the highest temperature and the Lowest temperature
On a graph you look at the highest points and the lowest
• Name the climate region by the Pacific Ocean
Pacific Maritime
• Name the climate region by the Atlantic Ocean
Atlantic Maritime
• Name the climate region in Canada’s far north
Arctic
• Name the climate region you live in.
Boreal
•Which climate region is a frozen desert?
Arctic
•What is global warming?
The rising of the average temperature on Earth
o Why does it happen?
Global warming happens because of the greenhouse gases that are emitted into the Earth’s atmosphere.
o What activities cause it? Are they mainly human made reasons?
NATURAL CAUSES (cannot be caused by humans)
MAN MADE CAUSES
(Human actions)
Temperature fluctuations of the planet
Volcanic eruptions
Increased solar activity
Transportation
Manufacturing
Oil drilling
Farming
Deforestation
MAN MADE CAUSED OVERPOWER NATURAL CAUSES
o Which gases are most responsible for global warming? Where do they come from?
Four main gases that absorb radiation are
H20- water vapor
CO2- Carbon Dioxide (burning fossil fuels and Deforestation)
CH4- Methane (agriculture)
N2O- Nitrous Oxide (Agriculture)
o Which is the worst greenhouse gas?
Carbon Dioxide
o How does it happen - Explain the process of global warming
Sun emits energy in the form of SHORTWAVE RADIATION which can go through anything clear
Reaches earth and absorbs but some escapes back into space
Long Wave cannot go through anything (not even greenhouse gases)
Longwave returns back to Earth making it hotter than it should be
o What is the difference between longwave vs shortwave radiation?
Short wave-
Can go through anything clear
Long wave-
Cannot go through anything
o What might be some global warming problems in Canada
Changes rain and snow patterns
Migration and life cycles
Less snow and ice
Higher temperatures and more heat waves
UNIT THREE: CHANGING POPULATIONS AND L
IVABLE COMMUNITIES Focus Questions:
•What is a census?
A census is used to count the population and learn important data
•Where does the majority of Canada’s population live?
Ontario
• Name the 4 main classes of immigrants to Canada?
Economic Class
Family class
Refugees
Humanitarian and other
•Which class of immigrants goes through the point system and how many points do they need to earn?
ECONOMIC CLASS- 67/100 points
•What factors can you earn points for?
Hasn't committed a serious
Doesn’t pose a risk to Canada’s security
Hasn’t violated human or internationa rights
Is in good health (determined by a medical exam)
Has a valid passport or travel document
Anyone applying to live permanently in Canada must provide
A police certificate or criminal record check
Their photo and fingerprints if over 14 or under 79 years of age
•From which class does Canada accept the most immigrants?
Economic Class
•Which people can immigrate to Canada in the Family Class Immigrants?
FAMILY CLASS:
-Parents
-Spouses
-Children joining family members that are already living in Canada
•What is a refugee?
Two Main types of resettled refugees:
GOVERNMENT ASSISTED
PRIVATELY SPONSORED
Referred by the UN refugee agency based on their location and vulnerability and are getting government assistance during this transition
Brought to Canada by government approved citizens and organizations that assume legal and financial responsibility for them
Refugees cannot apply directly to be resettled in Canada
All refugees undergo screening by Canadian officials and generally have permanent resident status when they arrive.
• Define and list examples of push factors for immigrants
PUSH FACTORS (Reasons for leaving your home country to go live in another one, what pushes people out?)
War and conflict
Natural disasters
Unfair political reasons
Poverty
Limited rights and freedoms
Lack of employment
Racial persecution
Religious persecution
Lack of services- lack of access to education and healthcare
Dislike the climate
No family
• Define and list examples of pull factors for immigrants
PULL FACTORS (Reasons to choose a country to go live in (what pulls people to come?)
Religious freedom
Marriage
Opportunities for better employment
Family
Improve standard of living
Favourable climate
Democratic government
More rights and freedoms
•Population pyramids
It is a diagram that gives information about a country’s population breakdown by age and gender for any year
% of males and females in each group
The proportion of young people (0-14 years old)
The proportion of Working people (15-64 years old)
The proportion of Elderly people (65 and older)
o How do you calculate the total % of children in a population?
Add the percentages from 0-14
o How do you calculate the total % of working population
Add the percentages from 15-64 years old
o How do you calculate the total % of seniors in a population?
Add the percentages from 65 and above
o What is dependency load and how do you calculate it?
The % of the population that does not work and so it depends on the working population
(Add the % of children and the % of seniors to get a total %)
o pyramid with a wide base means what?
POPULATION GROWTH
o A pyramid with a narrow base means what?
POPULATION DECLINE
•What is a baby boomer?
In 1950, after WW2, many families began to have children which meant the birth rate was very high. (1950-1965)
-As the baby boomers grow older Canada’s population will continue to age as there is so many of them to still age
•What is a centenarian?
A person who is 100 years old and above
•What does the greying of Canada’s population mean?
Population is getting older so it is aging as a whole and not made up of mainly young people
o Why is this happening? There are 2 main reasons – can you explain them?
INCREASE IN LIFE EXPECTANCY
- Life expectancy in Canada is currently 83 years old for men and 84 for women
- More Canadians than ever before are living to 85 and beyond
DECREASE IN BIRTH RATES
- People are not having large families anymore as woman no longer stay home and choose to work, children are expensive and not everyone gets married today
o what are some of the problems we can encounter as a country in the future if this continues?
More Candians are receiving old age pension and are seeking more health care and services = expensive to have many seniors
Proportionally fewer people are working and paying income tax = less money available
Housing and transportation needs are changing, as is consumption, which is shifting towards goods and services for seniors
The # of families made up of couples whose children have left home is also on the rise
•Where does the majority of Canada’s population live?
ONTARIO
UNIT FOUR: CANADIAN INDUSTRIES AND RESOURCE
Focus Questions:
•What is an Ecological Footprint?
THE AMOUNT OF THE ENVIRONMENT NECESSARY TO PRODUCE THE GOODS AND SERVICES NECESSARY TO SUPPORT OUR LIFESTYLES
-It is a way of looking at how much of the Earth we each use to live the life that we are in this country
-An area of land and water that would be required to provide for a countries populations resources and absorb its waste
o How is it measured?
Calculated in hectares of land, and is used to calculate the amount of Earth’s bio-productive space needed to keep a population at its current level of resource consumption
-Use the amount of land area / person
o Which countries have large footprints?
CHINA
USA
INDIA
o Which countries have small footprints
ETHIOPIA
MALI
o How does a footprint get larger?
o What can be done to reduce a footprint?
Switch of the lights
Take the stairs
AC on? Shut the windows
Take shorter showers
Power down laptops
Unplug electronics when not in use
Keep room temp moderate
Do full laundry loads
Use fewer or share appliances
Switch to LED lightbulbs
•What is sustainable development?
Meeting present needs without compromising the chances of future generations to meet their needs
•What is an export?
The selling of goods and services to another country
•What is an import?
The buying of goods and services from another country
• Name and explain the 3 main types of industries found in Canada and what they do
PRIMARY SECTOR
(Resource based industries)
SECONDARY SECTOR
(Manufacturing)
TERTIARY SECTOR
(service industries)
Harvesting or extracting raw materials from nature
JOBS:
-Mining
-Famers
-Fishers
-Foresters
-oil workers
Converting raw materials into fishing products
JOBS:
-Factory workers
-Food processors
-Construction workers
Providing services to businesses and consumers
JOBS:
-Retail workers
-Teachers
-Nurses
-Dentists
-Restaurant staff
-Lawyers
-Electrician
o Which sector employs the most people
SERVICE INDUSTRIES (76% OF CANADA’S POPULATION)
•List the conventional sources of energy
FOSSIL FUELS
NUCLEAR ENERGY
NATURAL GASES
•List the alternative sources of energy
SOLAR ENERGY
WIND ENERGY
HYDROELECTRICITY
GEOTHERMAL
BIOMASS
O what are some of the advantages of alternative energy forms?
-Never runs out
-Abundant (more power than needed)
-Sustainable (energy were getting now is gonna be the same later)
-Clean
•Which sources of energy are renewable and which are non renewable?
ALTERNATIVE= RENEWABLE CONVENTIONAL= NON RENEWABLE
•Which source of energy does Canada produce the most?
ALTERNATIVE SOURCES (hydroelectricity)
•Which sector of the economy uses the most energy?
PRIMARY SECTOR (RESOURCE BASED INDUSTRIES)
•Which sources are Canadians dependent on?
ALTERNATIVE SOURCES
•Which province has a lot of production of fossil fuels?
ALBERTA
WHEN YOU ARE DONE THIS REVIEW, COMPLETE THE PRACTICE SHEET