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Human Geography Unit One Notes

Human geography is the study of how humans interact with and adapt to different environments. It examines topics like location, regions, and human-environment interaction. There are two main types of geography: physical geography, which studies the natural environment, and human geography, which focuses on how human societies are organized and how they impact the earth. Human geographers use various tools like maps to analyze spatial patterns and relationships between people and places.
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
146 views5 pages

Human Geography Unit One Notes

Human geography is the study of how humans interact with and adapt to different environments. It examines topics like location, regions, and human-environment interaction. There are two main types of geography: physical geography, which studies the natural environment, and human geography, which focuses on how human societies are organized and how they impact the earth. Human geographers use various tools like maps to analyze spatial patterns and relationships between people and places.
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✳ What is Human Geography?


Name: ------ Date: August 19

Topic: AP Human Geography Unit One

Essential Question: What is Human Geography

Notes

Definition
- There are two different types of geography:
- Physical Geography- study of the environment that we are
in.
- Human Geography- study of the events and processes that
have shaped how humans have adapted to the earth.

- Geographers study how people organize themselves socially,


politically, and economically and what impact they have on our
earth.

5 Themes of Geography
- Location
- Absolute Location: Exact location of an object using
latiduage (horizontal) and longitude (vertical lines).
- Relative Location: Based on human perceptions.
- Place (Where somewhere is like)
- 2 Types of Characteristics
- Human Characteristics: What the People are Like
- Physical Characteristics: Landscapes
- Site: Referring to the physical characteristics and
absolute location.
- Situation: A place’s connections to other places like.
Things associated with the area.
- Space: The area between two or more things on Earth’s
surface.
- Density: the number of things (people, animals or objects)
in a certain area.
- Movement/Flow
- Pattern: How things are arranged in a particular place and
how they are connected/similar.
- Distance Decay: How distance affects interaction. The
further away from a distance or event, the less it will
affect you.
- Friction of Distance: the concept that states that
someone will not go farther than it needs to.
- Time Space Compression: the process causing the relative
distance between places to shrink.
- Human Environment Interaction
- H/E: how we impact and are impacted by the environment
- Sustainability: The use of the earth’s land and natural
resources that ensures they will be used in the future.
- Sustainable Development: meeting the needs of the present
without compromising the future.
- Regions
- Formal Region: An area that has one or more shared traits
in it’s clearly defined boundaries. Can be political or
physical boundaries.
- Functional Region: An area organized by it’s function
around a focal point or a..
- Node: Metro rail, subway, school district, etc
- Perceptual/ Vernacular Region: a type of region that
reflects a person’s viewpoint of an area.

Types of Maps
Who makes maps?
- Cartographers are people who make maps.
- Absolute Distance: A distance that can be measured using a
standard unit of length.
- Relative Distance: Is described using other criteria such
as time or money. If it is used before the measure it is
relative. Ex. about 10 minutes away.
- Absolution Direction: Cardinal Directions (North, South,
East, West)
- Relative Directions: Based off people’s perceptions (Left,
Right, Up, Down, Front, Or Behind)
Map Scale
- Large Scale Map: Zoomed in look of an area. Ex map of
Charlotte.
- Medium Scale Map: Zoomed father out. Ex Map of SC
- Smaller Scale Map: Zoomed into a smaller area.
Types of Maps
- Reference Maps:
- General Purpose
- Generalized Geographic Data
- Focus on location.
- Physical Map:
- Shows physical land features.
- Political Map
- Shows political boundaries.
- Thematic Maps
- Display a specific topic.
- Cartogram Map is distorted to Indicate the value of a
specific topic.
- Choropleth Maps uses colors to indicate value (can
generalize a whole area).
- Tell a story of the area.
- Ex. Migration, Rainfall, Political Etc.
- Isoline Map has lines that represent a value.

Map Projections
- Difference Between Globe vs Map
- Maps are 2 dimensional which will always cause
distortion!
- Projection: 2 dimensional representation.
- Areas which Projections Distort:
- Shape
- Area
- Distance
- Direction
- How to Make the World Flat
- Cylindrical (Compromise)
- Compromising all four.
- Shows the Entire World
- Pretty Accurate around the equator
- Relative Location of Land Masses.
- Becomes disordered as you reach the poles.
- Conical
- Shows shape fairly accurately
- Used to show land masses that extend over
large areas.
- Distorts land masses at the edges.
- Azimuthal/Planar (same thing)
- Preserves direction
- Distorts Shape and Area
- Only shows one Half of the Earth

Important Projections to Know


- Mercator (Cylindrical)
- Advantages
- Useful for navigation because it shows accurate
directions
- Disadvantages
- Famous for its disorition.
- Increases distortion towards the poles.
- Robinson
- Advantages
- Globe like appearance
- Tries to balance projection errors and minimize
distortion
- Disadvantages
- Distorts area, shape, distance, and direction
Summary:

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