Geo Notes
Geo Notes
Form I Geography
Introduction to Geography
Environment
• The surroundings
Branches of Geography
1. Physical Geography
a) Mining
b) Forestry
c) Agriculture
d) Fishing
f) Industry
g) Energy etc.
3. Practical Geography
a) Statistical methods
b) Map work
c) Field work
d) Photograph work
Importance of Studying Geography
1. Mathematics
2. History
3. Biology
5. Chemistry
6. Agriculture
7. Meteorology
8. Geology
Theories
Weaknesses
• Doesn’t explain the origin of the sun and star.
2. Collision Theory
• There was a slowly rotating cloud of dust and gas called Nebula
Evidence
4. Supernova/explosion Theory
Weaknesses
1. The Sun
Characteristics
• It’s a star.
• It’s made of very hot gases mainly hydrogen (70%) and helium
(30%).
• Has gravitational pull which holds all the planets in orbit around
it.
Characteristics
• Spherical in shape
• Don’t have their own light but reflect it from the sun.
Mercury
• Has no satellites
Venus
• Has no satellites
• Together with the earth they are called twin planets due to
having many similarities
Earth
Mars
• Also called The Red Planet because when it’s observed through
a telescope it appears reddish.
• Between Mass and Jupiter there are small celestial bodies called
planetoids.
• Has no satellite.
Jupiter
• Has 16 satellites
Saturn
• Has 18 satellites
Uranus
• 7th planet from the sun
• Has 8 satellites
Neptune
• Has 8 satellites
Pluto
• The smallest
Natural Satellites
• Any natural heavenly body that orbits around a planet e.g. moon
for earth, tritan for Saturn and Triton for Neptune.
Asteroids/Planetoids
• Are small fragments of rocks left going around the sun when the
solar system was formed
Comets
• Their tail is made of gases and points away from the sun.
• Their orbits cross the earth’s orbits e.g. Halley’s Comet which
appears after every 76 years.
Meteoroid
• Small heavenly body which strays from its orbit in the solar
system and enters the earth’s atmosphere at very high speed.
Meteor
Meteorite
• When they fall they sink into the ground forming craters
• They are rich in iron
The Moon
• A natural satellite
• Receives its light from the sun and reflects it onto the earth.
• Has gravitational pull which causes the rising and falling of the
ocean level
Eclipse
-Phenomenon occurring when the rays of the sun are blocked from
reaching the earth or the moon.
Solar/Sun Eclipse
Lunar/moon Eclipse
3. Places in the east see the sun earlier than those in the west.
5. All the planets are spherical so the earth being one of them is
also spherical.
• Equatorial diameter-12756km
• Equatorial circumference-40085km
• Polar diameter-39995km
• Water surface-73%.
1. Creates day and night because at any one time one side of the
earth faces the sun (day) and the other remains in darkness
(night).
Examples
40◦+20◦=60◦
60×4=240min=4hours
Ecuador is behind in time =12.00-4=8 am.
If the places are on the same side subtract the degrees to get the
difference and add or subtract from the reference time depending
on which side the place is.
Calculation of Longitude
Effects of Crossing It
• The sun moves from the tropic of cancer to the equator and then
towards tropic of Capricorn and back to the tropic of cancer.
1. mining
2. drilling
3. quarrying/excavation
A. Crust/Lithosphere
• Extends 0-50km
• Has 2 layers
1. Sial
2. Sima
B. The Mantle/Asthenosphere
1. Upper mantle
2. lower mantle
Gutenberg Discontinuity
C. Core/barysphere/Centrosphere
• Has 2 layers
Outer Core
• Composed of very dense rocks
Inner Core
a) The Atmosphere
a) Gases-exist as a mixture
b) Smoke particles
c) Dust particles
d) Water vapour
1. Troposphere
2. Stratosphere/ozonosphere
3. Mesosphere
4. Thermosphere/ionosphere
• Gases and molecules in this layer exist as ions due to high radiation.
• Has no definite top but merges gradually into the outermost part of the
atmosphere called exosphere.
Significance of Atmosphere
• Part of the earth’s surface covered by water masses e.g. oceans, seas,
lakes, rivers and even underground water.
• The lower atmosphere, hydrosphere and the upper part of the earths
crust are called biosphere meaning the sphere of the earth in which
organic life exists.