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Grade 7 Science

Wednesday 26 November 2014

Study Notes the Chapter 1 & 2 Geography Test - Thursday December 4th

What is Geography?
2014 – 09 – 15

Geography is the study of the earth, its people and the interaction between them.
2 main branches in Geography:
1)          Human Geography
2)          Physical Geography

Physical Geography is the study of landforms, climate, winds, and all other physical features of the earth.
Physical characteristics refer to natural conditions of an area or region such as plains, mountains, or shields. A physical region is defined by features such as landforms, climates and vegetation.

5 Themes of Geography
ü     Place & Location
ü     Region
ü     Movement
ü     Environment
ü     Interaction
Geographic Organizer

Unit Title
Chapter Headings
Themes of Geographic Inquiry
1)    Place & Location
2)    Region
3)    Movement
4)    Environment
5)    Interaction
Patterns in Physical Geography


1)    Landforms
2)    Climate and Vegetation
3)    Rivers
4)    Agriculture
Natural Resources
1)    Types of Natural Resources
2)    Non-renewable resources
3)    Renewable resources
4)    Flow Natural Resources
5)    Sustainable Development

Five Themes of Geography - Notes from the Video
2014 - 10 - 21
Geo - means earth
Graphia - means description
Therefore,  Geography is a description of the earth.

Maps & Globes

7 Continents on our globe - North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Australia, Africa & Antarctica
5 Oceans on our globe - Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, & Antarctic
Cartographers - people who design & create maps
Population - 7.2 billion
Surface Area - 315 200 000 squared kilometers (45.028 people / square km)        

Types of Maps -    a)      General
                             b)      Thematic

Map Criteria - All maps should include:
1.    Title
2.   Legend
3.   Scale
4.   Compass Rose
5.   Grid (Latitude & Longitude)
6.   Symbols

5 Themes of Geography
1.    Place & Location
2.   Region
3.   Movement
4.   Environment
5.   Interaction

Hemisphere= half of the earth, divided by the equator
Equator=0 degrees latitude
Longitude= Meridians
·        Prime Meridian & International Date Line

Location
·        2 Types - a) Relative - close/near
                b) Absolute- Exact/ use coordinates/ Latitude &                                    Longitude 
Place
·        Human characteristics - building, clothing, food
·        Physical characteristics- Plant life, landscape, weather
·        Seasons -          summer solstice June 21st (Longest day of the year)
                winter solstice - December 21st (Shortest day of the                                                                                 year)
·        climatic zones - tropical, temperate, polar
·        4 layers of the earth -crust, mantle, outer core & inner core
·        earth is made up of tectonic plates
·        where crust plates meet are called fault lines - could be locations of earthquakes & volcanoes





Chapter 1 - Key Facts / Chapter Summary
2014-10-21

Location is our personal position on the earth identified by an address. There are 2 types of location: Relative and Absolute.
1)        Relative location tells us where something is in relation to something else. Eg. Ruthven is between Kingsville and Leamington
2)        Absolute location gives us the exact location of any place on earth using lines of latitude and longitude. Eg. Kingsville is located at  42 02 N 82 45W
GPS - is a device that helps us locate any position on the earth's surface. (uses satellites)
GPS - Global Positioning System
Mental Maps - our image in our head of what a place looks like or where it is located.

Characteristics of a Map
2012-09-15
All maps should include the following characteristics:
1)   Title and date
2)   Colour – used to represent various physical features Eg. – Green for grass/land, blue for water
3)   Legend to identify all features
4)   Symbols
5)   Compass Rose – indicates cardinal directions (North , South, East, West)
6)   Scale – indicating the size of items on your map in relation to the actual size in real life or on the earth’s surface.
7)  **Alphanumeric Grid – you will find on most maps in atlas’ and road maps.
8)   Border
Location and Place
Unique characteristics will identify a certain location. For example, Niagara Falls cannot be mistaken for another place. The physical characteristics include the shape of the land, weather conditions, natural vegetation, and the animals that live in it. The human characteristics include the structures people have built, their economy, and their culture.

Chapter # 1 - Key Terminology
2014-10-21
1)    Place – is defined geographically as any area that has a size and shape, and has unique physical and human characteristics.
2)    Location – a) where you are – your position on earth.                                                  
b) where a place is and where it is relative to other                                                                                             places.
3)    Site – the place where you live.
4)    Absolute Location – the location of a point on the earth’s surface that can be expressed by a grid reference (eg. Latitude and longitude)
5)    Relative Location – the location of a place or region in relation to other places or regions (eg. Northwest, downstream, 2 kilometres past the library.)
6)    Mental Map – images or mind pictures of places around the world –  pictures of how things are in your mind.
7)    GPS – Global Positioning System – a system of 24 satellites stationed around the earth. The GPS picks up a signal from the 3 satellites and calculates latitude and longitude.
8)    Latitude – imaginary lines on the earth drawn east and west. Latitude measures are given north and south of the equator.
9)      Longitude – imaginary lines on the earth drawn north and south . Longitude measures are given east and west of the Prime Meridian through Grenwich, England.

CHAPTER 2 – Region
2014-11-12
Pages 18 - 29 Review
·        Region is any area that has a set of defined characteristics.
·        Regions can be identified by political boundaries, religion, culture and landforms.

Types of Regions
1.     Wilderness regions - region with no people
2.     Rural regions - farms, open country side, towns
3.     Urban regions - towns, (Leamington or bigger), but mostly cities, (Windsor, London, Toronto etc)

Different Ways of Organizing our World
1.     Physical Regions - an area defined by its' physical characteristics (Himalayas - mountain region - Sahara desert - desert region - Canadian Shield - landform region -climate, vegetation & soil regions) etc.
2.   Human Regions -  population density (amount of people in a certain area) , political boundaries (cities, county, province etc), times zones.
3.   Functional Regions - regions defined by use around a central focus point ( ie. ecozones)
Other important info:
·        Canada's population is approximately 35.7  million
·        USA's population is approximately 317 million
·        World population = 7.2 billion
·        nearly 90% of the population of Ontario lives in the Great Lakes St. Lawrence Lowlands region, which is only 25% of the area of Ontario.

Regional Boundaries
Drainage Basin  - the area drained by a river system.
Divide - a line of high ground that separates two drainage systems.
Natural Boundaries (not man-made) - rivers, mountains, coastlines & bodies of water.
Artificial Boundaries (man-made) - roads, walls (fences, barricades, or between provinces or territories, & between countries. Fly zones are also an example of an artificial boundary.