Our Natural Environment Introduction. Atlantic Region Every place we live has a personality? What...

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What would you say? If you were trying to explain the Atlantic Canadian Region to a person from New Zealand, what would you tell them about the physical features or cultural features in this region.

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Our Natural Environment

Introduction

Atlantic Region

• Every place we live has a personality? • What are the characteristics that define

the Atlantic Region?

What would you say?

• If you were trying to explain the Atlantic Canadian Region to a person from New Zealand, what would you tell them about the physical features or cultural features in this region.

Do it!!

• What features of the natural environment are important?

• How do people in Atlantic Canada interact with their natural environment?

• How do the physical characteristics affect the people living there?

Atlantic Canada as a Region• Region- is an area that shares common

features that make it different from other areas. Geographers categorize regions in 2 ways:– 1. Physical – landforms (mountains, hills),

climate, soil, natural vegetation.– 2. Cultural – political, economic, religious,

agricultural, industrial, language, human activity.

This region of low hills, plains, islands, and peninsulas includes the Atlantic Provinces of Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick.

• The sea has long shaped the life of the Appalachian region. 

• Early Europeans built small fishing settlements along the rocky coast.  From there, they fished in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and on the Grand Banks off Newfoundland.

• Since the 1960’s, however, fishing has become less profitable because the region has been over fished. 

• Discoveries of offshore oil and natural gas promise to revive the regions economy.

Questions

• Answer questions 2 and 3 on page 20

Time Zones• In 1878, Canadian Sir Sanford Fleming

proposed the system of worldwide time zones that we use today.

• He recommended that the world be divided into 24 time zones, each spaced 15 degrees of longitude apart.

• Since the earth rotates once every 24 hours and there are 360 degrees of longitude, each hour the earth rotates 1/24th of a circle or 15 degrees of longitude.

• Sir Fleming's time zones were heralded as a brilliant solution to a chaotic problem worldwide.

• What was the problem?

• United States railroad companies began utilizing Fleming's standard time zones on November 18, 1883.

• Time Zones were originated in 1884. Today, many countries operate on variations of the time zones proposed by Sir Fleming.

• Video

Newfoundland’s Unique Time Zone

• Why do you think Newfoundland has a unique time zone?

• Share your answer with the class.• Many people wonder why the Province of

Newfoundland has a time zone that varies by the half hour rather than the standard one-hour.

• While the system of Standard Time employs 24 meridians, and each are theoretically the centers of 24 Standard Time zones.

• Some adjustments have been made to the time zones for the convenience of inhabitants that lie within the zones.

• Newfoundland, (but not Labrador), lies squarely in the eastern half of its time zone, exactly three and a half hours from Greenwich.

• The Newfoundland government attempted to bring the province into conformity with the other Atlantic Provinces in 1963, but withdrew in the face of stiff public opposition.

• Other countries that operate on the half hour time difference are: Suriname, Iran, India, Sri Lanka, and Central Australia.

Questions

• Questions 2-5 on page 23