How Does Air Temperature Shape A Place? Crash Course Geography #7

Learning Resource Type

Classroom Resource

Subject Area

Social Studies

Grade(s)

7

Overview

In this video, we’re going to visit Siberia and take a closer look at how temperatures there (and around the globe) impact the way cultures, communities, and landscapes form. Air temperature plays a much bigger role than just helping us decide what we’re going to wear every day, it dictates the kind of foods we can grow, how we build our cities and roads, and the kinds of industries that can even exist in a location. In a region like Siberia, where it can get cold, like REALLY COLD, the air temperature has had an incredible impact on life. Before we end this episode we’ll warm up with a visit to Phoenix, Arizona to talk about how they too have to make a lot of decisions due to the extreme heat of a city in the middle of the desert.

Social Studies (2010) Grade(s): 7 - 7th Grade: Geography

SS10.7G.3

Compare geographic patterns in the environment that result from processes within the atmosphere, biosphere, lithosphere, and hydrosphere of Earth’s physical systems.

UP:SS10.7G.3

Vocabulary

  • geographic or spatial patterns
  • regions
  • compare
  • geographic issues
  • human and natural processes

Knowledge

Students know:
  • Geographic patterns in the environment that result from processes within the atmosphere, biosphere, lithosphere, and hydrosphere of Earth's physical systems.
  • Earth-Sun relationships regarding seasons, fall hurricanes, monsoon rainfalls, and tornadoes.
  • Processes that shape the physical environment, including long-range effects of extreme weather phenomena, such as plate tectonics, glaciers, ocean and atmospheric circulation, El Niño long-range effects—erosion on agriculture, typhoons on coastal ecosystems.
  • Characteristics and physical processes that influence the spatial distribution of ecosystems and biomes on Earth's surface.
  • How ecosystems vary from place to place and over time, such as alteration or destruction of natural habitats due to effects of floods and forest fires, reduction of species diversity due to loss of natural habitats, reduction of wetlands due to replacement by farms, reduction of forest and farmland due to replacement by housing developments, reduction of previously cleared land due to reforestation efforts.
  • Geographic issues in different regions that result from human and natural processes.

Skills

Students are able to:
  • Interpret reasons for spatial patterns of Earth's regions.
  • Compare variations between and within geographic regions.
  • Explain processes that shape the physical environment.
  • Compare and explain geographic issues in different regions.

Understanding

Students understand that:
  • Spatial patterns are caused by human and physical processes in the atmosphere, biosphere, lithosphere, and the hydrosphere.

CR Resource Type

Audio/Video

Resource Provider

PBS

License Type

Custom

Accessibility

Video resources: includes closed captioning or subtitles
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