Using coordinates or simple objectives allows the ability to make proper determination. Geographic data allows identifiable information to be offered to subscribers with the encouragement of geographical indicators. Display tools offer a realism of visual effects and the most applicable advantages. Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, spatial statics and Geographic Information Systems (GIS): Systems of these nature offer geographers collaborative and analyzed information far more unique than traditional research techniques (Geographic Information Systems as an Integrating Technology: Context, Concepts, and Definitions,2015). Lastly, geographic reality and space relation must be gathered using input and output of data and formulaic sequences, but the tools make them applicable to user.
1. Cartographer – a person who makes maps The people in this book, this play, this TV serial are not meant to represent any actual painters, cartographers, mechanics anywhere. 2. Dictum – saying There was no dictum, no declaration, no censorship, to start with, no! 3.
Because latitude and longitude refer to a specific location, absolute location can be described as the same thing (p.37-38). Absolute location helps people understand exactly where things are and majorly affect the culture of LA. Relative location, which shows where a place is in relation to another place, helps the native people of Louisiana know where things are located (p.37). Latitude and longitude also help mark political boundaries. Boundaries allow people to know where states or cities end and where another begins.
2- Your View Point 2 also in hs2 it is stated that the scale
Geotagging- identify and storage of information by its latitude and longitude coordinates Greenwich Mean Time (GMT)- time zone where the prime meridian located at 0 longitude Hearth- region where innovative idea originate Hierarchical Diffusion- spread of trend through top down system to people or places Humanistic Geography- study of different ways individuals from ideas and give places symbolic meaning Hydrosphere- all water on or near earth surface International Date Line- arc that follow 180 longitudes to determine the date Latitude- lines go north to south Location- position of anything on earth surface Mashup- map overlay data on top of another map Mental map- the individual knowledge about a location Meridian- arc on map between south and north pole Participatory GIS (PGIS)- community based mapping, representing local knowledge and
Lisa Lowe’s book “Intimacies of Four Continents” attempts to escape the traditional historiography that usually has an Anglo-American perception of history. The recently published book makes a wake-up call to traditional scholarship that tend to prioritize the self-centered view of every matter, even foreign affairs, interpreting historical facts according to this Anglo-American narrow perspective and principles. The scenery of the Intimacies of Four Continents is the European expansion and the Atlantic trade focusing on slave trade followed by the Chinese indentured workers transportation to the Americas in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Lowe argues that scholarship fail to address the Chinese indentured workers that,
In Robert Morgan’s writing, “Lions of the West,” he tell a good point about the history of westward expansion. Morgan states that everyone notices the famous people that were apart of westward expansion but the people who are not noticed are the most important and that is what Morgan is trying to point out. He gave a great point and gives much evidence to why the natives and people who are not mentioned very often are some of the most important people of westward expansion. Mogan also tells how we only know so much about westward expansion because that is all that they really want to tell us, but really there is so much more.
Define the following terms and provide an example of each: IN YOUR OWN WORDS Succession: Succession is a process where changes are made to the base of a biological community over a period of time. Primary Succession: Primary Succession is a progression in vegetation that happens in a barren landscape with no initial soil. EX: Soil developing on a newly formed island. Secondary Succession: Secondary Succession is the recovery of vegetation post natural disaster.
In the article "This apple could have been saved" by Kristen Lewis, (and reporter Adee Braun) the author explains some ways food gets wasted every year in America. One way food gets wasted is because when the food in a store doesn 't look perfect for some people, they won 't buy it. This results in the food being thrown away by the store. This is important because it shows that it 's our faults for being too picky with our choices, and now we have to live with the consequences. One way to reduce the food waste that we produce would be to eat the uglier produce.
With this statement, Mackinder makes a claim and says that no rational political geography can function without being built upon the ideas of physical geography. He says the idea of political geography is currently based upon no principles of physical geography and must not be considered a true discipline. This defines the complex and typically unseen relationship between political and physical geography, “Geography is like a tree which early divides into two great branches, whose twigs may none the less be inextricably interwoven.” (Mackinder 159). After Mackinder makes an interesting claim about how the rivalry between physical geographers and geologists are perceived.
Doing so allows us as the reader to think and interpret the book, to understand it on not just blindly read it without truly understanding the depths. One of the items that Butler included as symbolism is the map. The map was mentioned as a symbol of freedom. It was mentioned more than once in the book, for two different reasons. The first time it was mentioned in the book, Kevin and Dana were talking about how if she goes back again,
Human geography has a wide variety of different factors, one of those many is political geography. Political geography is mainly focused and influenced by political affairs and human territoriality. With this there are different factors that were created within political geography such as, nation, nation-state, multinational state and united-nations. There are factors of our globe which are shaped by imperialism and colonialism. All these make up our world all in different places.
Ch.2’s illustration displays Louisiana’s natural region, weather symbols, and lines of latitude and longitude. The image contains the five major natural regions, which refers to elevation and relief. The natural regions aid the understanding Louisiana’s geography. Representing the signs for rain, temperature, sun, and hurricane, the weather symbols benefit Louisiana’s geography because the weather can change the physical appearance of the land, therefore benefiting the depiction of the geography. The lines of latitude and longitude help illustrate geography because they represent boundaries (p.37-61).
When people in the 21st century want to travel, we usually look up our destination prior to our trip. Before the use of smartphones and computers, traveling was not done with a digital global positioning system (GPS). So during the Age of Exploration when countries all around the world wanted to explore places they had never seen before, maps became of the utter most importance. People were trying to quickly learn how to be a mapmaker because of the high demand for these surveys by explorers and their patrons. These demands made maps very popular which lead them to become common everyday objects, along with being beautiful artwork.
In the chapter “Geography Matters”, Thomas C. Foster explains the effect of geography on a story. Geography contributes greatly to themes, symbols, and plot, and most authors prefer to use setting as a general area with a detailed landscape rather than a specific city or landmark. In Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, he does not reveal the actual region of America that the man and boy are traveling in, but describes the mountains and eventual beaches of their path. McCarthy might not have revealed their location because it might ruin the reader’s interpretation of the setting. For example, the pair come across a generic “gap” between mountains and this is a turning point because it confirms the man’s planned path to the south.