Geography Grade 11 Unit 1
Geography Grade 11 Unit 1
Geography Grade 11 Unit 1
Ancient Greeks defined geography for the first time by combining two
words “geo” and “graphic”
There are 5 pertinent questions about the phenomena they study. There
are: 1. Where are things located?
The “how they are arranged” questions are primarily analytical because it
provides visual explanations of how the studied phenomena are spatially
distributed.
Geography’s scope is very wide but it does not mean that it is limitless.
Generally the geo-sphere is considered as geography’s scope. The geo-
sphere is made up of 5 sub spheres, namely the lithosphere, hydrosphere,
atmosphere(troposphere), biosphere and antroposphere.
Geospheres Description Related area of study
Lithosphere The solid part(rock layers) Geomorphology, soil
geography
Troposphere The lower part of the Climatology
atmosphere where weather
changes occur
Hydrosphere The water surfaces Oceanography
Biosphere The part that supports life Biogeography
Antroposphere The earths cultural landscape Cultural geography,
population geography
1.3 Approaches of Geography
a. Topical or Systematic Approach
It applies a specific geographical element or phenomenon over a
defined geographical unit.
For example it takes a phenomenon and treats the distribution of
the selected element over a country, continent or the world at large.
Example: the geography of hunger, the geography of climate
b. Regional Approach
It focuses on a region – a defined geographic unit or locality. Within
the region, the study examines a variety of geographic features.
The region could be continent, subcontinent or countries that share
common factor.
Regions called micro are relatively small, and those called macro are
relatively large.
Note: The two approaches are not independent of each other. Instead,
these approaches are interconnected and overlapping.
The 1930’s, witnessed major radical changes in the discipline, and were
turning points in the history of geography
Historical note