II. Geography and History. A. Themes of geography.
-
Upload
erika-parrish -
Category
Documents
-
view
218 -
download
1
Transcript of II. Geography and History. A. Themes of geography.
II. Geography and History
A. Themes of geography
1. Location - where a place is on Earth
Absolute Location – exact spot
Relative Location – position in relation to other places
1101 Bastogne Avenue, Ft. Campbell, KY
Between Gates 2 and 3
2. Place - physical or human characteristics that make it different
3. Human-Environment Interaction –
humans shape/change/adapt to the
environment
4. Movement - People, goods, and ideas
move continuously: spatial interaction
5. Geography’s role in history:Settlement patternsResourcesTopography
B. Themes of History
1. Economics -
development of economic systems
2. Government -
different forms
how they affect society
3. Culture -
Influence on social and political events
4. Science and Technology - effects on culture and society
5. Citizenship -
Rights and responsibilities
A society’s ideas of citizenship
6. Belief Systems
C. How Do We Know?
Prehistory - time before history, before writing was invented
1. Historians examine written records and other evidence
2. Anthropology - Study origins and development of people and societies
Anthropology studies all aspects of human life in all geographic regions of all time periods
3. Archaeology – study artifacts of past people and cultures
4. Geologists date artifacts by age of nearby rocks
5. Botanists and zoologists examine seeds and animal bones to determine diet
Animal bones dug up in an Indian trash midden
6. Climatologists determine past the weather conditions
7. Biologists analyze human bones or bloodstains on stone tools and weapons
D. Historians Reconstruct the Past
Study how people lived using artifacts and written records
A tortoise shell from the Shang period (1766-1122 BC) inscribed
with characters believed to be the first form of Chinese writing
1. Written records began as oral traditions
2. Oral tradition include: Family historyStories about heroes Events in the past
3. Oral traditions tell how a society lived and what people considered important