2. “Globalization” Globalization can be a wonderful thing and it can be a terrible thing, sometimes at the very same time. Find a current event to show globalization,make sure that it is something happening in the world today that has impact in multiple countries and is an event that has happened in the last 30 days.
a. Summarize the event that happened.
b. Explain the local impact to the area where the event happened.
c. Explain the global impact, give examples of more than one country that is not in close proximity to the event area, that still has felt the ramifications of the event.
d. Share you opinion, on how this event illustrates globalization and state if it is a good thing, bad thing or both and why.
3. “GIS” Geographers have been working with geographic information systems (GIS) long before there were computers, using overlays and maps, which would seem crude today. Explore the advancement of GIS to its current state by answering the following questions:
a. When were computers first used in GIS?
b. What were the major advances in GIS within the last two decades?
c. What are some of the most common uses for GIS?
d. What are some strengths and weaknesses of particular GIS software?
e. How has the availability of information changed in the last 10 years?
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4. So geography is considered a spatial discipline. What do you think is meant by that?
5. All map projections, which represent the three-dimensional surface of the Earth on a two-dimensional surface distort one or more of the four properties - area, shape, distance, direction. How then are we to judge whether any map is a "good map"?
6. There are three main causes of precipitation: 1) convection, 2) orographic uplift, and 3) frontal uplift. Explain each (in your own words) and give unique examples of where each cause can be encountered around the world.
7. Some say to be lost is not to know where you are. Others say when you are lost, you know where you are but do not know where other places are. What does the idea of being lost tell us about the nature of geographic location. How does relative location and absolute location play into this?
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