They show the body parts and they show whats in the inside of your body
>>Physical Geography (about the land forms on the planet)...^_^ >>Human Geography (focuses on the study of patterns and processes that shape human interaction with the environment)...^_^
both
physical
Human geography focuses on the interaction between human societies and their environment, including themes such as population, culture, and urbanization. Physical geography, on the other hand, looks at the natural environment and its processes, including landforms, climate, and ecosystems, without the human influence aspect.
In Geography, you often look at maps to study the earth's physical features, spatial relationships between places, human activity patterns, and environmental systems. Geography also involves examining how factors like climate, vegetation, population distribution, and geopolitical boundaries impact different regions.
physical geography and human geography
Physical geography and human geography. Physical geography covers the elements that concern climate, land forms and vegetation. Human geography involves human society and its relation to its environment.
>>Physical Geography (about the land forms on the planet)...^_^ >>Human Geography (focuses on the study of patterns and processes that shape human interaction with the environment)...^_^
2. Write a paragraph using the following concepts: geology, physical geography, human geography, geologists and geographers.
human geography= the study of past/present of humans and physical geography= the study of landforms and things on the surface of earth.
Geography of the earth means to outline the physical features, different lines of zones,the outlines of physical boundries,line contours ,maps ,vegetation, and human habitation of the earth.
both
Physical geography is a branch of Geography; the main branches of Geography are Physical and Human, these are mainly taught at school level. Physical geography relates to the natural environment.
physical
Human geographyPhysical geography
they both eat and sleep and drink
Yes, geography could still exist as a discipline without maps. Geography encompasses the study of Earth's physical features, climates, ecosystems, and human societies, which can be examined and analyzed through various methods beyond just maps, such as fieldwork, satellite imagery, and digital technologies. Maps are a tool used to visually represent geographical information, but they are not the only way to study the spatial relationships and patterns that are central to geography.