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introduction and definitions of geography, scope of geography and branches of geography
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Geography is a science that deals with the description, distribution, and interaction of the diverse physical, biological, and cultural features of the earth's surface. It also deals with the study of places and the relationships between people and their environments. Geographers explore both the physical properties of Earth’s surface and the human societies spread across it. They also examine how human culture interacts with the natural environment and the way that locations and places can have an impact on people. Geography seeks to understand where things are found, why they are there, and how they develop and change over time. The modern academic discipline of geography is rooted in ancient practice, concerned with the characteristics of places, in particular their natural environments and peoples, as well as the relations between the two. Its separate identity was first formulated and named some 2,000 years ago by the Greeks, whose geo and graphein were combined to mean “earth writing” or “earth description.” The first person to use the word "geography" was Eratosthenes (276–194 BC). However, there is evidence for recognizable practices of geography, such as cartography (or map-making) prior to the use of the term geography. To most people, geography means knowing where places are and what they are like. Discussion of an area’s geography usually refers to its topography—its relief and drainage patterns and predominant vegetation, along with climate and weather patterns— together with human responses to that environment, as in agricultural, industrial, and other land uses and in settlement and urbanization patterns. Geography, as an academic discipline is largely a 20th-century creation, forming a bridge between the natural and social sciences. The history of geography is the history of thinking about the concepts of environments, places, and spaces. Its content covers an understanding of the physical reality we occupy and our transformations of environments into places that we find more comfortable to inhabit. Geography provides insights into major contemporary issues, such as globalization and environmental change, as well as a detailed appreciation of local differences; changes in disciplinary interests and practices reflect those issues. Geography has been defined differently through different geographer in different periods of time but the most common definition of geography is that geography is derived from the Greek word geo meaning Earth and graphy meaning to study or to describe. Thus geography refers to the study or description of earth. It is a science devoted to the study of lands, its features, the inhabitants and various phenomenon of the earth. There are some more definitions of geography by different geographer which are given below:
Geomorphology Climatology Biogeography Soil geography Oceanography Hydrology Environmental Geography Glaciology Costal Geography Population Geography Urban Geography Political Geography Economic Geography Tourism Geography Social Geography Historical Geography Agriculture Geography Cultural Geography Astronomical Geography Settlement Geography
Glaciology: Glaciology is the study of glaciers and ice sheets, or more commonly the cryosphere or ice and phenomena that involve ice. Glaciology also has a vast array of sub- fields examining the factors and processes involved in ice sheets and glaciers e.g. snow hydrology and glacial geology. Coastal geography : Coastal geography is the study of the dynamic interface between the ocean and the land, incorporating both the physical geography (i.e. coastal geomorphology, geology, and oceanography) and the human geography of the coast. It involves an understanding of coastal weathering processes, particularly wave action, sediment movement and weathering, and also the ways in which humans interact with the coast. Hydrology: It deals with the study of hydrosphere which constitute more than 70% of the earth surface. Hydrology is predominately concerned with the amount and quality of water moving and accumulating on the land surface and in the soil and rocks near the surface and is typified by the hydrological cycle. Thus the field includes water in rivers, lakes, aquifers and glaciers in which the field examine the process and dynamics involved in these bodies of water. Astronomical Geography : It is that branch of physical geography that treats of the earth in its relation to the other celestial bodies. More generally, astronomy studies everything that originates outside Earth's atmosphere. Cosmology is a branch of astronomy. It studies the Universe as a whole. HUMAN GEOGRAPHY: Human geography is the branch of geography that deals with humans and their communities, cultures, economies, and interactions with the environment by studying their relations with and across locations. It analyzes patterns of human social interaction, their interactions with the environment, and their spatial interdependencies by application of qualitative and quantitative research methods. Human geography is further sub-divided into following sub-divisions: Population Geography: Population geography is often equated with demography but population geography is more than just patterns of birth, death, and marriage. Population geographers are concerned with the distribution, migration, and growth of population in geographic areas. Economic Geography: Economic geographers examine the distribution of production and distribution of goods, the distribution of wealth, and the spatial structure of economic conditions. Political Geography: Political geography investigates all aspects of boundaries, country, state, and national development, international organizations, diplomacy, internal country subdivisions, voting, and more. Urban Geography: The branch of urban geography investigates the location, structure, development, and growth of cities — from tiny village to huge megalopolis. Agricultural geography :
It is a sub-discipline of human geography concerned with the spatial relationships found between agriculture and humans. It is, the study of the phenomenon and effects that lead to the formation of the earth's top surface, in different regions. It investigates those parts of the Earth's surface that are transformed by humans through primary sector activities for consumption. It thus focuses on the different types of structures of agricultural landscapes and asks for the cultural, social, economic, political, and environmental processes that lead to these spatial patterns. Historical geography: Historical geography is the branch of geography that studies the ways in which geographic phenomena have changed over time. It is a synthesizing discipline which shares both topical and methodological similarities with history, anthropology, ecology, geology, environmental studies, literary studies, and other fields. Tourism geography: Tourism geography is that branch of human geography that deals with the study of travel and its impact on places. Geography is fundamental to the study of tourism, because tourism is geographical in 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 the relationships that are created among places, landscapes and people. Cultural Geography: It is the study of the relationship between culture and place. In broad terms, cultural geography examines the cultural values, practices, discursive and material expressions and artefacts of people, the cultural diversity and plurality of society, and how cultures are distributed over space, how places and identities are produced, how people make sense of places and build senses of place, and how people produce and communicate knowledge and meaning. Social Geography: Social geography is the branch of human geography that is most closely related to social theory in general and sociology in particular, dealing with the relation of social phenomena and its spatial components. Settlement Geography: Settlement geography is a branch of human geography that investigates the earth's surface's part settled by humans. Settlement geography describes and explains the settlements' location, substance, form and structure, as well as the functions and processes that produced them over time. It projects future settlement development and contributes to the sustainable development of human-environmental systems.