TPC 1 - Unit 1
TPC 1 - Unit 1
GLOBAL
CULTURE AND
TOURISM
GEOGRAPHY
Asia 19
Europe 29
III Continent of the World
North America 4O
South America 43
IV Continents of the World
Africa 53
Australia/Oceania 76
Antartica 98
Chapter I
Introduction
At the end of the chapter, the students should be able to:
Meaning, Scope and contents of Geography.
Importance of Geography in tourism,
Climatic variations, climatic regions of world, study of maps, longitude &
latitude, international date line, Standard time and Day light saving time.
Introduction.
Geography is a field of science dedicated to the study of lands, the features,
the inhabitants, and the phenomena of earth. A literal translation would be “to
describe or write about the earth”. The first person to use the word ‘geography 'was
Eratosthenes (276-194 BC). Geography is largely the study of the interaction of all
about how, why and where human and natural activities occur and how these
1. Human geography
2. Physical geography
3. Regional geography.
pattern and processes that shape the human society. It encompasses the human,
of all sizes across the earth. The main aim is to understand, or define the uniqueness,
elements.
Tourism: The activities of a person travelling outside his or her usual
environment for less than a specified period of time and whose main purpose of travel
is other than exercise of an activity remunerated from the place visited (WTO).
as an industry and as a social and cultural activity. It is that branch of science which
deals with the study of travel and its impact on places. The geography of tourism is
dominated by number of key themes, which relate location, place, space, human and
cultural characteristics, and the movement of people. The geography of tourism is also
concern with the flows of tourism from generating countries to the destinations. These
can be heavily influenced by the economic and political factors, with the flows of
tourism from traditionally from developed countries to the less developed countries.
country traveling only within that country. A domestic holiday is a holiday spent in
the same country; this class may overlap with staycation, a vacation spent in the same
national borders. Globalization has made tourism a popular global leisure activity.
Scope of Geography.
Geography has acquired the status of science that explains the arrangements of
various natural and cultural features on the earth surface. In general, the natural
phenomena like mountains, rivers, lakes etc. change slowly while the cultural
elements like buildings, roads, crops, change fast. Travelling from one place to
another you notice that the trees number and types of trees change from area to area.
All this because of continuous interaction between the environment in which we live
in and the way we use it. The study of geography is about observing such patterns.
economic and demographic factors change our physical landscape and create new or
reports, travel diaries and gazetteers. At present maps can be drawn by using satellite
images using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) tools. Thus, the scope of
water resources, disaster management, meteorology and planning and various social
sciences. Apart from that, a geographer can help in day to day life like tourism,
housing and health related activities and more. Importance of geography in tourism.
nature. Tourism occurs in places, it involves movement and activities between places
and it is an activity in which both place characteristics and personal self-identities are
formed, through relationships that are created among places, landscapes and people.
Physical geography provides the essential background, against which tourism places
are created and environmental impacts and concerns are major issues, that must be
Contents of Geography
geography is that branch of natural science which deals with the study of
understanding the surface of the Earth and the processes by which it is shaped,
both at the present as well as in the past. Geomorphology as a field has several
sub-fields that deal with the specific landforms of various environments e.g.
landscapes look the way they do, to understand landform history and dynamics
distribution, and quality of water on Earth and other planets, including the
Thus the field encompasses water in rivers, lakes, aquifers and to an extent
glaciers, in which the field examines the process and dynamics involved in
these bodies of water. Similar to most fields of physical geography it has sub-
fields that examine the specific bodies of water or their interaction with other
generally ice and natural phenomena that involve ice. Glaciology also has a
vast array of sub-fields examining the factors and processes involved in ice
examines both the nature of micro (local) and macro (global) climates and the
largely into the climates of various regions and the study of specific
paleoclimatology.
atmosphere that focuses on weather processes and short term forecasting (in
are explained by the science of meteorology. Those events are bound by the
time.
one of two main branches of soil science, the other being edaphology.
(biogeochemical cycles) and its position and effects on the landscape such as
laterization.
generally refers to the study of physical landscapes, but it can also refer to the
the ocean and the land, incorporating both the physical geography (i.e. coastal
particularly wave action, sediment movement and weathering, and also the
ways in which humans interact with the coast. Coastal geography, although
coastal landforms, but also the causes and influences of sea level change.
the Earth's oceans and seas. It covers a wide range of topics, including marine
plate tectonics and the geology of the sea floor (geological oceanography); and
fluxes of various chemical substances and physical properties within the ocean
world. The branch bridges the divide between human and physical geography
B. Human Geography.
of patterns and processes that shape the human society. It encompasses the
products and norms and their variations across and relations to spaces and
geography which refers to the standard of living and quality of life of its
different subject matters, including but not limited to the location of industries,
within the more general field of human geography that examines how people
distinctive political groups, and how they influence and interact with each
other. It is the study of how space is made into territory - that is to say, how
7. Religion geography
religion, such as early mapmaking, and the biblical geography that developed in the
16th century to identify placesfrom the Bible.Thus, geographers are less concerned
about religion, but are more sensitive to howreligion as a cultural feature affects
The point of focus is not the specifics of religious beliefs and practices, but
how thesereligious beliefs and practices are internalized by adherents, and how these
vehicles,commodities, information.
At the most basic level, humans move and thus interact with each other by
locations. Itfocuses on things such as travel time, routes chosen, and modes of
as anindustry and as a social and cultural activity. Tourism geography covers a wide
and it isan activity in which both place characteristics and personal self-identities are
formed,through the relationships that are created among places, landscapes and
people.
placesare created and environmental impacts and concerns are major issues that must
whichconcentrates on those parts of the Earth's surface that have a high concentration
settlementswith a high population density and with the majority of economic activities
C. Regional Geography.
A regionitself is defined as a part of the Earth's surface with one or many similar
vary, with the common denominator being cultural, economical, historical or social
smaller than a state to which it belongs, but larger than a municipality. Typical
Climatic Variation.
given region over long periods of time. Climate is different from weather, in that
weather only describes the short-term conditions of these variables in a given region.
A region's climate is generated by the climate system, which has five components:
location is affected by its latitude, terrain, and altitude, as well as nearby water bodies
and their currents. Climates can be classified according to the average and the typical
change: Climate change is the statistical distribution of weather patterns when that
change lasts for an extended period of time (i-e., decades to millions of years).
activities have also been identified as significant causes of recent climate change,
Climate although very slowly, keeps evolving. There are many causes behind
variation in climate. Climate variations can be categorized into two broad contexts.
There are several natural causes that force climate to change across
time and scale. It can be further drilled down into the following categories;
1. External Forcing
These are essential linked to changes in the orbital parameters of the earth that
control the intensity and location of incident solar radiation, and fluctuations in solar
energy.
2. Internal Forcing
These comprise all those changes that occur within the same system itself, in
changes in the marine and terrestrial biosphere or in the cryosphere. The Sun and
the Global Energy Balance. The sun is the prime source of external energy for the
earth. Every moment huge amount of energy reaches the earth from the sun. Let
us see this from a flow chart that shows what happens to the solar radiation that
3. Radiative Forcing
At equilibrium, the average net radiation is zero. However, a change in either the
solar radiation or the infra red radiation changes the net radiation. This imbalance is
called radiative forcing. A positive radiative forcing tends to warm earth’s surface on
the average where as a negative radiative forcing tends to cool it. In either case
4. Greenhouse Effect:
radiation caused by the presence of gases such as carbon dioxide, water vapour, and
methane that allow incoming sunlight to pass through but absorb the heat radiated
back from earth’s surface. The gases that trap heat radiated from the earth are called
There are lots of natural factors that cause significant changes in the climate.
These causes can be within the earth or coming outside from the earth. Based on this ,
It refers to the impact of some external factor that leads to variability such as
Scientists agree that humans very likely bring about changes in climate
through various activities. This can happen at an individual level or at a group level.
Each individual in today’s world plays a role, directly or indirectly, in contributing his
Vehicles run on petrol or diesel, both are fossil fuels. These releases a huge
amount of GHGs.
The more people consume luxury goods, essentials, and household goods,
A great deal of waste that we generate such as plastics, does not get
degraded and remains in the environment for many years, causing damage.
The use of trees in large quantities for construction of houses leads to further
depletion of forests.
effect. The enhanced greenhouse effect is a direct result of human activities through
processes such as the burning of fossil fuels, industrial operations and forest clearing
releasing carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide into the atmosphere.
2. Land use evolution: By replacing forests with arable lands or the natural vegetation
by asphalt and concrete, humanity modifies the way in which terrestrial surface
reflects sunlight and releases heat. All these changes can also modify the regional
adds great quantities of fine particles called aerosols to the atmosphere. Most of the
aerosols are quickly falling due to gravity and precipitations, but they do not less
influence the atmosphere radiative absorption. It is the quantity and the nature of these
particles as well as the nature of underneath surface (land or water) that determines if
which can be used to identify the locations on the earth surface. When using these
lines to find a location the coordinates are always given latitude first and then
longitude.
Latitude: Latitude is the name for a group of imaginary lines that run parallel
to the equator. The equator is the 0 degree line and splits the earth into two equal
degrees, from the equator to the pole. Lines of latitude get smaller as they get further
north because the distance around the earth decreases. At the poles the latitude is 90
degrees and the circular distance is 0 km, each pole being just a single point
Longitude: Lines of longitude run north-south around the planet. They begin at the
prime meridian and split the Earth into East and West hemispheres. There are 180
degrees in each hemisphere. All lines of longitude are the same length. There is only
one important line of longitude other than Prime Meridian-the International Date
It is the imaginary line on the Earth that separates two consecutive calendar
days. The date in the eastern hemisphere, to the left of line, is always one day ahead
clocks during summer months by one hour so that in the evening hours day light is
experienced later, while sacrificing normal sunrise times. Typically, users in regions
with summer time adjust clocks forward one hour close to the start of spring and
adjust them backward in the autumn to standard time. New Zealander George Hudson
proposed the modern idea of daylight saving in 1895. Germany and Austria-Hungary
Standard Time
region to a single time standard, rather than using solar time or a locally chosen
meridian (longitude) to establish a local mean time standard. Historically, the concept
was established during the 19th century to aid weather forecasting and train travel.