Two approaches to study
Geography:
1.
Regional Approach: The regions
of the earth are different and these differences must be studied. Descriptive
discipline.
2.
Systemic Approach: Though all
places differ in some respects, yet there are similarities between different
parts of the world. The aim of the geographer should be to identify these
similarities. Analytical discipline.
History:
First geographers: Hecateus and
Theophrastus
Kant differentiated between history and
geography by proposing that geography is a chorological science while history
is a chronological science.
Branches:
Main branches:
1.
Physical G: Physical
environment and processes of changes on the earth. Consists of geomorphology
(similar to geology), climatology, oceanography, biogeography (relationships of
organisms with their environment.
2.
Human G: Study of pattern and
activities of human occupancy on earth.
Population geography, cultural geography, settlement geography(urban and
rural geography), political geography (geopolitics and electoral geography)
3.
Economic G: Offshoot of human
geography. Study of spatial patterns of various economic activities. Consists
of agricultural & nutritional geography,
industrial geography, transport geography, resource geography, geography
of development.
Besides, there
can be historical g, military g, radical g, medical g, gender g etc.
Origins of Earth
Came into
existence 4.6 billion years back
Theories:
Gaseous
Hypothesis: (Kant) Clouds of gases flattened down under gravity to create
earth.
Nebular
Hypothesis: (Laplace) Formed by solidification of a ring thrown away by a
rotating nebula (sun)
Tidal Hypothsis:
(Jeans and Jeffreys) Proposed effects of two nebulas in forming the earth. A
larger nebula came close to the smaller one (sun). The gravitational pull
caused tidal upsurge on the surface of sun. As the larger nebula moved away,
small rings of nebula separated from the smaller nebula and formed the earth
and other planets.
Nature of earth:
Layered
structure: Crust, mantle, core
Crust: sial (silica
and aluminium)
Mantle: sima
(silica and magnesium)
Outer Core: (nickel
and iron)
Core: Iron
Time line:
Age estimated
through carbon-dating
Three Eras:
Palaeozoic (542 to 241 million years ago), Mesozoic (240 to 64 million years
ago) and Cenozoic Era (63 million to 10000 years ago). The era before the
Palaeozoic era is called the Pre-cambrian period.
Earlier forms of
life have existed as long ago as 3.5 billion years back. Human species came
into existence around 2 million years back.
Solar System
Sun and eight
planets
All planets
rotate on their axis from west to east except Venus and Uranus which rotate
from East to West. Direction of revolution around the sun is also west to east.
Jupiter has the
largest number of satellites (63) while Mercury and Venus have none.
Asteroids and
planetoids: Bodies revolving around the sun that are small to be classified as
planets. Asteroid belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. Jupiter Trojans
are asteroids revolving around the sun in Jupiter’s orbit.
Near-earth
objects: perihelion distance <1.3 AU.
Geocentric View:
Ptolemy; Heliocentric View: Copernicus
Inner planets:
Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. Rest are outer planets.
Mercury and
Venus which are closer to the sun that earth are called inferior planets. Venus
is the closest planet to earth.
Brightest: Venus
Smallest:
Mercury
Most elliptical
orbit: Pluto. It intersects with Neptune’s orbit.
Earth: Shape and Size
Shape: Spheriod. (Oblate spheroid or oblate
ellipsoid)
Diameter: Equatorial – 12757 km (7927
miles); Polar – 12715 km (7901 miles)
Geoid: Imaginary shape of the earth where
sea level surface of the oceans is extended to the continents to form
continuous figure.
Mass: 5.976*1024 kg
Volume: 1.083*1024 liters
Mean density: 5.518 kg/litre
Total Surface Area: 509.7 million sq.km.
Land – 148.4 million sq.km (29 pc). Water – 361.3 million sq. Km (71 pc)
Rotation: 23hrs 56 mins 4.09 sec
Revolution: 365 days, 6 hrs, 9 mins and
9.54 sec
Highest point: Mt Everest (8848 m asl)
Lowest point on land: Coast of Dead sea
(399 m bsl)
Mean height of land: 756 m
Deepest point: Mariana trench (near Guam:
11033 m bsl)
Avg ocean depth: 3730 m
Earth’s Crust: Oxygen (46.6 pc), silicon
(27.7 pc), Al (8.1 pc), Iron (5 pc), Ca (3.6 pc), Na (2.8 pc), K (2.6 pc), Mg (
2 pc). Other elements (1.6 pc)
Hottest: Lut deserst, Iran (70.7
degreeC)(internet). Al Aiziyah, Libya (58 degree C)
Coldest: Vostok Station, Antarctica (-89.6
degree C)
Inclination on polar axis: 23 deg 26 min 50
sec
Orbital Speed: 29.8 km/s
Mean distance from sun: 149,598,500 km ( 1
AU).
Max distance: 152 million km (aphelion,
July 2-5)
Min distance: 147 million km (perihelion,
Jan 2-5)
Location on Earth
Latitude: Angle subtended by a point to the
equatorial place. Lines of latitudes are called parallels.
Longitude: Distance east or west of the
meridian of Greenwich.
Equator: Parallel of zero is called
equator. It is the largest circle that can be drawn on earth.
Countries on Equator: (countries) Sao Tome
and Principe, Gabon, Republic of Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo, Equador,
Columbia, Brazil, Uganda, Kenya. Somalia, Indonesia. (water bodies) Atlantic
Ocean, Gulf of Guinea, Indian Ocean, Gulf of Tomini, Halmahera Sea, Pacific
Ocean.
Geographical Mile: One arc of the equator.
Tropic of Cancer: 23.5 degree North.
Countries on Tropic of Cancer: (countries)Mexico,
Bahamas, Western Sahara, Mauritania, Mali, Algeria, Niger, Libya, Egypt, Saudi
Arabia, UAE, Oman, India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, China, Vietnam, Taiwan; (water
bodies) Red Sea, Arabian Sea, Indian Ocean, Taiwan Strait, Pacific Ocean, Gulf
of California, Gulf of Mexico, Atlantic Ocean
Tropic of Capricon: 23.5 degree South
Countries on Tropic of Capricon: (countries)
Chile, Argentina, Paraguay, Brasil, Namibia, Botswana, South Africa, Mozambique,
Madagascar, Australia; (water bodies) Indian Ocean, Atlantic Ocean, Pacific
Ocean
Arctic Circle: 66.5 degree North
Areas on Arctic Circle: (countries) Norway,
Sweden, Finland, Russia, US-Alaska, Canada, Greenland, Iceland; (water bodies)
Arctic ocean, White Sea, Kandalaksha Gulf, Gulf of Ob, Chukchi Sea, Kotzebue
Sound, Norwegian Sea, Davis Strait, Greenland Sea.
Antarctic Circle: 66.5 degree South
Areas on Antarctic Circle: (land) Different
regains on Antarctica are claimed by some countries – By this claim the circle
passes through territories in Antarctica claimed by Australia, France,
Argentina, Chile and United Kingdom; (water) Southern Ocean
The two tropics mark the limit of the zones
at between which sun’s rays can be vertical at one time of the other. At
tropics, sun rays are vertical once a year while in between the tropics twice a
year.
Summer Solistice: Sun overhead Tropic of
Cancer
Winter Solistice: Sun overhead Tropic of
Capricon.
Greenwich: Prime meridian
Great circle: It is the largest circle that
can be drawn on earth. Its plane passes through the centre of the earth.
Navigators follow the great circle routes to minimize distance.
Motion of the Earth & Effect of inclination
Earth’s axis is inclined at 23.5 degree
from the line perpendicular to the plane of ecliptic (the plane of orbit of the
earth around the sun)
Change of season occurs due to a combined
effect of the revolution of the earth around the sun and the inclination of its
axis. If the axis was not inclined there would have been no change in the
amount of energy received by a place throughout the year and hence no change of
season. Also, day and night would have been equal in length.
ritical
positions of earth:
Summer solstice: (June 21) Tropic of Cancer
receives vertical rays of the sun. North Pole experiences a continuous day
while South Pole experiences a continuous night. Longest day in northern
hemisphere.
Winter solstice: (December 22)Tropic of
capricon receives vertical rays of the sun. South Pole experiences a continuous
day while North Pole experiences a continuous night. Longest day in the
southern hemisphere.
Exquinoxes: (23rd September and
21st March) Equator receives vertical rays of the sun. Day and night
are of equal length throughout the world on these days.
The season in the two hemispheres are
reverse of each other
At the equator, the days and nights are
exactly equal all the year round. Longer than 24 hours day and night are
experienced only in the arctic and Antarctic circles.
Time
Time is reckoned with respect to the
position of the sun.
Time of all places on a given meridian is
the same.
Time required for one degree rotation is
four minutes.
International
Date line: The line at 180 degree distance from the
prime meridian is called the International Date line. Moving from the west to
east one loses a day if he crosses the line. The date in the Eastern Hemisphere
is ahead that in the western hemisphere. The date line is bent and altered to
keep some countries in the same time zone.
The central meridian for India is the
longitude of 82.3 degree E which passes near Allahabad. Indian Standard Time is
the time of this meridian. It is 5 hrs 30 minutes ahead of the GMT.
Solar Day: Average time period required for
the successive passages of the sun over a given meridian. It is 24 hours
Sidereal day: Time required for a given
star in the sky to return to the same position with respect to the earth. It is
four minutes less than the solar day. This difference between solar and
sidereal day exists because the position of earth with repect to sun keeps
changing due to revolution. However, the position with respect a star at
infinity is constant.
Solar year: measured with respect to the
sun
Sidereal year: measured with respect to a
star
Leap year: Since earth takes slightly more
than 365 days for revolution around the sun, one day is added every four years
to the calendar. This correction is however too large because the actual solar
year is 365.2419 days and not 365.25 days. Hence, the leap year is omitted in
the century year unless the century year is divisible by 400 (a leap century).
Thus, 1900 was not a leap year while 2000 was.
Gregorian Calender: Julius Ceaser. Pope
Gregory XII.
Moon
Axis of moon makes an angle of 58 degree 43
mins to the ecliptic plane.
Diameter: 3480 km
Mass: 1/81 of earth
Perigee: nearest point to earth (356000 km)
Apogee: Farthest point to earth (407000 km)
Period of revolution around earth: 29.53
days. This is called synodic month.
The time taken by moon to complete one
rotation on its axis is exactly same as its sidereal month (27.5 days). Hence,
we see the same face of the moon from the earth.
Only 59 percent of the total surface of
moon is visible from earth.
Phases: The synodic month begins when the sun and the moon are in
conjunction. At this time, moon is dark and called the new moon. This is
followed by various phases and the month ends with again the new moon phase.
Tides:
Regular rise and fall of water level in the seas
and oceans. Twice a day. Successive high tides are about 12.5 hours apart.
Tides are caused by a combined effect of the gravitational pull of moon and sun on earth. When the forces of sun and moon complement each other, higher tides known as spring tides occur. This occurs on full moon and new moon days when the earth, sun and moon are in the same straight line.
Tides are caused by a combined effect of the gravitational pull of moon and sun on earth. When the forces of sun and moon complement each other, higher tides known as spring tides occur. This occurs on full moon and new moon days when the earth, sun and moon are in the same straight line.
When the forces of sun and moon act
contrary to each other the tides of lower magnitude known as neap tides occur.
Neap tides are observed in the first and the last quarters of the moon.
Tides are stronger at the time of perigee
and weaker at the time of apogee.
Tidal range: difference between the water
levels at the time of high tide and low tide. It changes from time and
place.Narrow bays have higher tidal range.
Bay of Fundy has the highest tidel range in
the world.
Tides may lead to advance of water upstream
into the rivers. This is known as tidel bore.
Atmosphere
Structure
Layered structure: troposphere,
stratosphere, mesosphere, ionosphere, thermosphere-exosphere
Troposphere:
Most important for life forms
Thickness: 8-16 km. (low at poles, high at
equator)(more in summer, less in winter)
Contains ¾ of the total molecular mass of
the atmosphere.
All weather phenomenon occur here
Temperature: Falls with increasing height
at rate of 1 degree for every 165 metres (or 6.5 degree per km). This is called
the lapse rate. Lapse rate varies with latitude and altitude. Decreases with
altitude. Higher over tropical zone. Hence, the upper limit of troposphere is
cooler over the equator than over the poles.
Stratosphere:
Extends upto height of 50 kms. Upper part
is also called ozonosphere.
Uniformity in horizontal distribution of
temperature; however, increase with height.
Contains most of atmospheric ozone. Absorbs
UV rays.
Free from dust particles and atmospheric
turbulence. Ideal for flying aircrafts.
Mesosphere:
Upto height of 80 km.
Temperature decreases with height.
Mesopause (the upper boundary of
mesosphere) is the coldest atmospheric layer with an average temperature of -85
degree C.
Ionosphere:
Upto 600 km
Contains
electrically charged ions. Used for radio communication.
Temperature
increases with height.
Most meteors burn up here upon entering the
atmosphere.
Thermosphere,
Exosphere, Magnetosphere:
Thermosphere: 85-400 km. International
Space Station orbits in this layer.
Exosphere: Upto a height of 9600 km. The
outermost part of exosphere is called magnetosphere.
Radiation Belts
There are two belts in the upper atmosphere
having a high concentration of ionized particles. They are known as Van Allen’s
radiation belts. Lower belt lies at about 2600 km height while the upper belt
is about 13000-19000 km height.
Composition of Atmosphere
Heavier gases concentrated in the lower
part while lighter gases are in the upper apart.
Nitrogen (78 pc), Oxygen (21 pc) by volume.
They are also called permanent components of the atmosphere.
Proportion of other gases like Co2, H2,
water vapour etc varies from place to place. Hence, they are called variable
components of the atmosphere.
Nitrogen has a moderating influence on
temperature and controls combustion. It is also an important nutrient for
vegetative growth.
Oxygen is important for breathing,
decomposition and combustion.
Water vapors help in containing
temperature.
Carbon dioxide and water vapors lead to
greenhouse effect preventing the earth from cooling down excessively.
Ozone: The maximum concentration of ozone
is found in the stratosphere, about 25-30 km above the earth’s surface.
Ozone depletion: Ozone depleting at rate of
4 pc per decade since late 70s. Ozone has declined by about 33 pc in the
Antarctic. This is known as the Ozone hole.
Global Warming: According to IPCC, global
surface temperature increased 0.74 +- 0.18 degree C during the 20th
century.
Aurora and Magnetic Storms
Aurora is natural display of lights in the
atmosphere in the polar regions. Produced by the entry of charged particles
from the sun into earth’s magnetic field. In northern hemisphere, they are
called aurora borealis or northern polar lights. In southern hemisphere, they
are called aurora australis or southern polar lights. They are most intense
during solar storms.
Magnetic storms are temporary disturbances
in the earth’s magnetic field that are supposedly caused by the occurrence of
solar flared and sun spots.
Sun spots are temporary phenomena on the
surface of the Sun that appear as dark spots compared to surrounding regions.
They are caused by intense magnetic activity. They occur in a cycle of 11 years
Insolation and Heat Budget
Insolation is the energy received on the
earth surface from the sun.
Although the entire amount of insolation
reaching the earth has to pass through the atmosphere, very little of it is
absorbed by the atmosphere before reaching the earth’s surface. This is because
solar radiation is in the form of short waves for which the atmosphere almost
acts as a transparent medium.
When the heated surface of the earth
radiates this energy back it is in the form of long waves which is absorbed by
the atmosphere.
Distribution
of insolation:
Solar constant is the amount of solar
energy received upon a unit area of surface held at right angles to the sun’s
rays. Its value is 2 gm-calorie/sq.cm/minute. Solar constant, however, varies
with sun spots cycle. Also, due to varying sun-earth distance, more energy
reaches earth during perihelion than aphelion.
Albedo: The proportion of solar radiation
reflected from earth. High for light colored surfaces and low for dark colored
ones.
Latitudes affect insolation by affecting
the angle of sun’s ray and determining the length of the day. Vertical rays
provide more energy.
Slope of land also affects insolation.
So, tropical areas receive the maximum
amount of insolation while the polar areas the minimum.
Heat
Budget:
Earth’s temperature remains fairly constant
despite insolation because it loses an amount of heat equal to that gained
through insolation. This mechanism of maintaining the same temperature is
called the heat budget or heat balance.
Long waves in terrestrial radiation.
There are latitudinal variations in heat
budget. Tropical areas gain more heat than lost and polar areas lose more heat
than gained. This imbalance is corrected by latitudinal transfer of energy.
This takes place through air and water circulation.
Greenhouse Effect
The process by which radiative energy
leaving a planetary surface is absorbed by some atmospheric gases called
greenhouse gases.
It is due to this effect that cloudy nights
are warmer.
Co2’s greenhouse effect is a factor in
global warming.
Temperature Distribution
Temperature at a place, to a large extent,
depends on the angle of incidence of sun’s radiation.
Earth receives only about 1/2000 millionth
part of the total energy emitted by the sun.
Part of the incident energy is reflected
back. Other is absorbed by the surface of earth which gets heated up and starts
radiating energy. This makes the air near the earth surface hotter. This fact
explains why it is cooler as one goes higher up.
Latitude, altitude, distances from sea,
aspect of the land and nature of surface are some of the factors that affect
the global distribution of temperature.
Latitude: Highest temperature near the
equator and lowest near poles
Altitude: Temp decreases with height
Nature of surface: Albedo. Land has higher
albedo than water. However, if the angle of incidence is high and there is
movement in water, its albedo might become higher than land.
Distance from sea: Due to difference in
specific heats of land and water bodies, land gets heated faster than oceans
and cools faster as well. Hence, while oceans have moderate temperatures,
continents experience extremes of temperatures. Effect of nearness to sea is
called maritime influence while that of location in the interiors of a
continent is called continental influence.
Temperature
Zones: Torrid zone (tropical region), temperate
zone (mid-latitude areas) and frigid zone (polar areas)
Isotherms: The horizontal distribution of
temperature is represented with the help of isotherms – the lines joining
places with the same temperature. They are generally parallel to the latitudes
but are modified at places due to the maritime influence. In the month of July
they bend northwards while moving from land to sea while in January they bend
southward.
Vertical distribution of temperature: Lapse
rate. It is also measured by adiabatic rate. Adiabatic cooling occurs when the
air moves upwards and expands. Adiabatic rate higher when air is dry and lower
when it is saturated.
Temperature inversion
When temperature increases with increasing
altitude (instead of decreasing), it is called inversion of temperature. Mostly
found in mountain valleys.
Air
gets cooled and night and becomes heavier to move downwards to the valley and
in the process pushing the warmer air upwards. This kind of inversion is also
called drainage inversion. It is responsible for frosts at valley bottoms. This
is the reason why fruit orchards in mountainous regions are laid on valley
slopes instead of valley bottoms.
When inversion occurs due to rapid cooling
of air near the surface it is called radiation inversion. It is common in
plains in winter.
Advection inversion: When air from a warmer
area blows over to a colder surface.
Frontal inversion: When warm air and cold
air masses converge, the warm air will rise above the cold air. It is found in
latitudes where polar air mixes with tropical air. It leads to foggy
conditions.
Thermal anamoly: The difference between the
average temperature of a place and the normal temperature of its latitude. They
are caused by the factors mentioned before. Depicted on map using isanomals
which are lines joining places with equal anomalies. In winter, oceans have
postitive anomaly while continents have negative anomaly. Vice versa in
summers.
The annual range of temperature is the
lowest over the oceans and near the equator.
Thermal
Equator: It is the isotherm of the highest mean
annual temperature. It is generally taken as coinciding with the geographical
equator. The annual range of temperature near the equator is lower than the
daily range of temperature.
Pressure
Pressure = force/area
1 milibar = 1000 dynes/sq.cm.
Measured through barometer. Aneroid
barometer: no liquid. Barogram.
Distribution
of Pressure:
Pressure is inversely related to
temperature and altitude.
Depends on rotation of earth and effect of
ascent and descent of air.
There are seven belts of pressure: the
equatorial low, the subtropical high (two belts), sub-polar low (two belts) and
the polar high (two belts). This is the planetary distribution of pressure.
Swing of pressure belts: Due to the shift
in the position of vertical rays of the sun, the pressure belts move slightly
northwards during summer solstice and southwards during winter solstice.
Interruption of pressure belts: Due to
maritime and continental effects, the pressure belts are not continuous but
subdivided into blocks of low and high pressure.
Isobar: lines joining places with equal
pressure. Use to show distribution of pressure on map. Sea level affects here
as well.
Planetary Winds
Winds are caused due to differences in
pressure.
Pressure gradient: rate of decrease of
pressure per unit of horizontal distance. It is measured in the direction of
fall of pressure. Direction of the pressure gradient determines the direction
of the wind. Its steepness determines the velocity of wind.
Coriollis effect: Deflection of winds due
to the rotation of earth. Due to this the winds are deflected to their right in
the northern hemisphere and to their left in the southern hemisphere. This is
referred to as Farrel’s law.
The May 22, 1960 Valdivia earthquake or
Great Chilean Earthquake is to date the most powerful earthquake ever recorded,
rating 9.5 on the moment magnitude scale.
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