Name                                                         Date             CHAPTER 1, LESSON 1
Summary: The Geography of Our World
    Welcome to Geography                                                   Find and underline each
    Geography is the study of the people and places of Earth. It           vocabulary word.
    explains forces that shape the land. Geographers study how             geography noun, the study
    our environment affects us and how we affect our                         of the people and places
    environment. Geographers ask three questions about a                     of Earth
    place. They ask, “Where is it?” If you want to tell someone            environment noun, all the
                                                                             surroundings and
    where you live, you can say your address or you can say                  conditions that affect
    where your home is in relation to other places. Geographers              living things
    ask, “Why is it there?” They look for clues about forces that          hemisphere noun, one half
    shaped mountains, rivers, landforms, and bodies of water.                of the earth’s surface
                                                                           region noun, an area that is
       Geographers study why some communities grow and                       defined by certain
    some disappear. They ask “What is it like there?” They                   features
    study the physical features of the land. They also study
    human features, such as how people use land, the work
    they do, their foods, languages, and beliefs.
                                                                            REVIEW What are two
    Where in the World Are You?                                            ways to describe the
                                                                           location of a place?
    A globe shows the earth’s oceans and continents. Continents            Highlight the sentence that
    are masses of land. There are four large oceans: the Atlantic,         tells how you can describe
    Arctic, Pacific, and Indian. There are seven continents:               where you live.
    Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America,             REVIEW What physical
    and South America. The earth can be divided into                       features does a globe
                                                                           show? Draw a box around
    hemispheres. The United States is in the Northern and                  the sentence that tells what
    Western Hemispheres. The United States has many regions.               features are shown on a
    A region is an area that can be described by features, such as         globe.
    the language people speak there or the kinds of landforms                REVIEW Why are maps
    found there.                                                           useful? What does a map
                                                                           with latitude and longitude
       Maps with latitude and longitude lines show the exact
                                                                           lines show? Underline the
    location of a place. Latitude lines run parallel to the equator.       sentence that tells the
    Lines of longitude, also called meridians, run from the North          answer.
    Pole to the South Pole. The lines have numbers, called
    degrees. The equator is 0 degrees latitude. It divides Earth
    into two hemispheres, Northern and Southern. Other
    latitude lines are measured in degrees north or south. The
    prime meridian is 0 degrees longitude. Other longitude lines
    are measured in degrees east or west. To give the exact
    location of a place, find where the latitude and longitude
    lines cross. For example, New Orleans is at 30 degrees north,
    90 degrees west. This is written as 30° N, 90° W.
Resources for Reaching All Learners
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.          Use with States and Regions, pp. 6–11