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Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and...

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Mapping the Earth
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Page 1: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Mapping the Earth

Page 2: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Imaginary Lines• A pattern of

imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary lines help us to find places on the Earth.

Page 3: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Lines of Latitude• 1. The east-west

lines in the imaginary grid are called lines of latitude.

• Lines of latitude are called parallels because they are always parallel to each other. These imaginary lines measure distance north and south of the equator

Page 4: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

The Equator• 3. The equator is an imaginary line that

circles the globe halfway between the North and South Poles.

Page 5: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Measuring the Earth

• 2. Parallels measure the distance from the equator in degrees. The symbol for degrees is a small circle . Degrees are further divided into minutes. The symbol for minutes is ‘. There are 60 minutes in a degree.

Page 6: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

For a more precise location latitude and longitude are measured in minutes and seconds.

Page 7: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

• Parallels north of the equator are labeled “N.”

. Those south of the equator are labeled “S.”

Page 8: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

• Lines of latitude range from 0 degrees for location on the equator, to 90 degrees N or 90 degrees S for locations at the North and South Poles.

Page 9: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Major Lines Of Latitude

Page 10: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Lines of Longitude

• 4. The north-south lines are called lines of longitude. Lines of longitude are called meridians. These imaginary lines pass through the Poles. 5. They measure distance east and west of the prime meridian.

Page 11: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

• Meridians west of the prime meridian to 180 degrees are labeled with a “W”. Those east of the prime meridian to 180 degrees are labeled with an “E”.

Page 12: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Prime Meridian

6. The prime meridian

is an imaginary line

that runs through

Greenwich, England.

It represents 0

degrees longitude.

Page 13: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

• Lines of longitude range from 0 degrees on the prime meridian to 180 degrees on a meridian in the mid-Pacific Ocean.

Page 14: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

The farthest west location,Cape Mulinuu Savaii, Samoa

180 degreesWest longitude

Page 15: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Hemispheres

• 7. The equator divides the globe into two halves, called hemispheres. The north half of the equator is the Northern Hemisphere. The southern half is the Southern Hemisphere. The prime meridian divides the world into the Eastern Hemisphere and Western Hemisphere.

Page 16: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Dividing the Earth

Page 17: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

North Pole

• 8. Robert Peary and 9 other men were first to reach the North Pole on April 6, 1909. 4 of these men were Inuit Eskimos, Ooque ah, Ootah, Egingwah, and Seegloo and 1 African American, Matthew Henson.

90 degreesNorth

latitude

Page 18: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Robert Peary 1856-1920

Had 8toes

amputatedfrom

frostbite

Page 19: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Matthew Henson

• Matthew was born of poor parents in Maryland. When he was 12 his parents died. He was sent to learn the trade of cabin boy. He traveled around the world eventually meeting Robert Peary.

• On this last trip to reach the North Pole, he and Robert Peary and 8 other men set out with a team of dogs and sleds. Robert Peary became ill, sending Henson on ahead to scout the area ahead. Later on it was found to be that Henson was actually the first to reach the North Pole, not Peary, although, Peary received the credit.

Page 20: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Matthew Henson 1866-1955

HensonIn

later years

Page 21: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

South Pole• 9. The South Pole was discovered after the North Pole on December 14,1911 by a Norwegian explorer named Roald Amundsen. He had hoped to discover the North Pole, but when Peary and Henson arrived first, he decided to head south.

• On October 19,1911, he set out with 4 companions, 52 dogs, and 4 sleds.

• He was also the first man to fly over the South Pole in a dirigible and the first to reach both the North and South Poles. He was also was first to navigate the Northwest passage in 1903.

• In 1928, he set out to find his navigator who had been lost returning from the North Pole. His plane crashed and the wreckage never found.

90 degreesSouth

latitude

Page 22: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Roald Amundsen 1872-1928

His boatThe Alaska

AmundsenAt the

South Pole

Page 23: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Polar Bears checking out a nuclear submarine

Page 24: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

South Pole TodayPenguin island in

Antarctica

A small city housing

scientists fromall over the world

Page 25: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

10. Seven ContinentsCan you name them?????

Page 26: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

See if you got them right!!!

• Africa

• Antarctica

• Asia

• Australia

• North America

• South America

• Europe

Page 27: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

The largest continent is Africa

Olduvai Gorge

Page 28: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

The smallest continent is Australia

Page 29: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

11. Major Oceans

Page 30: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

The largest ocean is the Pacific Ocean

Page 31: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

The smallest ocean is the Arctic Ocean

Page 32: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

12. Map TermsCompass Rose

Used to showdirection on

a map

Page 33: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

13. Legend or Map Key

Used to givemeaning to symbols

drawn on maps

Page 34: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Scale14. Used to showdistance relationship

on a map

Page 35: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Different Kinds of Maps

Physical Map

Page 36: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Historical Map

Page 37: Mapping the Earth. Imaginary Lines A pattern of imaginary lines circle the Earth in east-west and north-south directions. The intersections of these imaginary.

Route MapRoutes of Alexander

The Great’sArmies


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