Tuesday 26 November 2013

Trouble in the heart of Africa

Location of the Central African Republic-

locator map of Central African Republic

Landlocked CAR is, according to advisors, on the brink of a civil war.
Central African Republic


France to send 1,000 more troops to Central African Republic, to join the 400 or so already in place.
One issue is sectarian violence between Christian and Muslim groups in the country.
Reports suggest the country is in utter chaos with armed gangs committing all sorts of atrocities, including shootings, burnings, rape and murder.

As well as French troops (sent as the CARs former colonial power) there are African Union peace troops all ready in place and more to join by January, to increase the total to 3600. But the current 2500 are struggling to maintain any order in a country larger than France with very little infrastructure (many villages have no paved roads).
The UN deputy secretary general has claimed that 1/3 of the countries 4.6 million inhabitants are in dire need of food, shelter, protection, healthcare and other necessities.

The mineral rich nation has a chequered history of coups and chaos. Trouble has flared again since the president, Francois Bozize, was overthrown by a coalition of rebel groups, including mercenaries from Chad and Sudan.

Increasingly the violence has pitted the mainly Muslim Seleka rebels against the Christians of the south.  In the CAR Muslims = 15/% and Christians 1/2 of the population.

Amnesty has called for action and declares it may descend further if nothing is done. Ban Ki moon (UN secretary general) has pledged to send in UN peace keeping troops to total 11,000 if the crisis worsens.

Problems in the Ukraine

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/26/ukraine-police-clash-with-protesters



The problems of grouping countries...

The FCC/ Ex- soviet state Ukraine is experiencing trouble after, its current government, which is seen as pro Russia, rejected a trade deal between the Ukraine and the EU.  Pro Europe demonstrators have rallied and the opposition leader (currently in Jail) has begun a hunger strike. Serious clashes are being reported in the capital Kyiv.

Its a complex situation as many in Ukraine are pro Europe however many are sill allied with Russia.
The opposition leader's daughter has said that she was refused entry to see her mother who because of her hunger strike is in hospital, and she claims her mother is being deliberately isolated, Kyiv government claims their is an outbreak of a respiratory disease so people have to stay away.


Russia controls gas supplies into Ukraine and many feel this lies at the heart of the issue,  Russia says the EU is trying to put the Ukraine under duress.
Russia set up its own customs union with Belarus and Kazakhstan in 2010 and wants Ukraine, as well as other former Soviet republics, to join. Ultimately it sees the customs union as an alternative to the 28-member EU.

Cameron, and the Princes to host summit to halt ivory trade...

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/nov/26/david-cameron-illegal-trade-global-summit

Prince Charles and David Cameron

David Cameron has invited 50 countries to attend a summit on combating the illegal  ivory trade.

The IUCN red list 2013...some of the world's most endangered animals...

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/nov/26/iucn-red-list-endangered-species-extinction

IUCN red list : Male Okapi in Epulu Ituri Rainforest Reserve Democratic Republic of Congo
The national symbol of Congo DR, the 'blue tongued giraffe' or 'okapi' is under threat from the on going civil war in Congo DR.
This years' global wildlife assessment has highlighted 1,000 new species are under severe threat.
The shy forest giraffe is confined to the fast-disappearing and militia-filled forests of DRC, and its population is plummeting as its meat is prized. "It is revered in Congo as a national symbol but, sadly, DRC has been caught up in civil conflict and ravaged by poverty for nearly two decades," said Noëlle Kümpel, co-chair of the IUCN Giraffe and Okapi specialist group.
The animal, which has a prehensile blue tongue and zebra-like stripes on its behind, is extremely difficult to protect in an area rife with elephant poachers and illegal mining. In a notorious incident in 2012, armed rebels attacked the headquarters of the DRC's Okapi Wildlife Reserve and killed seven people and all 14 captive animals.
Other species whose prospects are plunging include the white-winged flufftail, a secretive African wetlands bird threatened by agriculture. "People treat wetlands as wasteland that needs to be drained," said Craig Hilton-Taylor, manager of the IUCN's red list unit in Cambridge.

However some species have come off the list- including the Atlantic Leatherback turtle and a the Island fox of California.

Thursday 21 November 2013

Polar bear under threat from the Canadian government????

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/nov/21/canada-refusal-protect-polar-bears-endangered-America

CITES in Bangkok : Polar bear in Hudson Bay, Canada

A USGS study in 2007 that predicted that a number of Polar bear groups inside Canada would be at best, severely decimated or at worst, completely disappear. Partly in response the USA designated Polar bears an endangered species, but Canada took the Polar bear off the species of special concern list in 2011.

New Islet off Tokyo....

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/21/volcano-japan-new-island-china
new Island created off South East coast of Tokyo, Japan

Location of the new island 620 miles south of Tokyo

New management for the seas of the UK....

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-25032255

A seahorse reflected in a tank

It will protect from trawling and dredging.

27 new designated areas to protect coral, oyster beds and seahorses.

9% of UK waters should now be better protected, but some say move does not go far enough as some argued for 127 zones to be created.

Some sites not protected as too costly or there was not enough evidence to suggest protection was needed

Wednesday 20 November 2013

Hull- UK capital of culture....

http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2013/nov/20/hull-residents-celebrate-city-culture

Hull has won the battle to be the UKs next capital of culture- will it act as a catalyst?

http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/video/2013/nov/20/hull-named-city-of-culture-2017-video  VIDEO CLIP

http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2013/nov/20/hull-10-reasons-uk-city-culture-2017
Reasons to visit

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-humber-25018146  hidden Hull

Satellite image of Hull with thumbnails of famous residents

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-humber-25017168

Year 13 videos for threats essay....

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/video/2013/nov/05/polar-bears-fight-for-survival-sea-ice-melts-video

Climate change threatens Polar bears as it is delaying the freeze, keeping them from their pray

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/video/2013/aug/01/congo-virunga-national-park

Mountain gorillas could be under threat from oil exploration

Calls from some to abandon mining idea in Borneo rainforest....

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/nov/07/fears-orangutans-bhp-urged-abandon-coalmine

Preserving the American Prairies

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/oct/25/dakota-conservation-prairie-wetlands-farming
 
These ecosystems are under threat from oil drilling, but also increasingly from farming expansion, 1/2m hectares of prairie lost between 2005 and 2011.
Prices for soya and other crops have increased rapidly over recent years, meaning landowners are developing more land and quicker, previously farmers were paid not to develop land for 15 years, however the fee is now insufficient.
The plan is to maintain prairies by mimicking natural patterns, like moving cattle like natural buffalo would and ensuring fields are not ploughed so the natural wildlife is not affected.
 

Red Squirels under further threat!

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/nov/18/red-squirrels-threat-humans-pets
Red squirrels, under further threat from parasites from humans and from pet attacks reports say.

Just 90 companies caused two-thirds of man-made global warming emissions

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/interactive/2013/nov/20/which-fossil-fuel-companies-responsible-climate-change-interactive

Very interesting graphic here, exploring the companies and countries most responsible for climate change.

Managing the future forests

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/nov/20/forests-un-climate-talks-warsaw


Some of the world's richest are pledging money to reduce the emissions from deforestation and try and save some of the world's precious remaining forest reserves.

Monday 18 November 2013

Glasgow commonwealth games 2014- catalyst?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-24965794


Many are talking of the potential for the games to kick start the regeneration of Glasgow and surrounding areas.

Olympic stadium not being used to full potential....rebrand failure?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-24979954

Deforestation on the rise...

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-24950487

Amazon deforestation rises by 28%


The loss is mapped by Google Earth here

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-24934790

Global map of forest change

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/gallery/2013/nov/15/global-deforestation-10-hot-spots-on-google-earth-in-pictures

10 deforestation hotspots

Volcano- back to life

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-24992586

Nepalese migrant workers die building FIFA stadia

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-24964807

Many Nepalese are going to work in Qatar to make money to support their families back home, but many do not return...

a negative of globalisation

Tuesday 1 October 2013

Year 11....this week....globalisation......

We moved onto our second topic globalisation-

First we defined the term-
Globalisation is the way ideas, businesses, lifestyles, cultures, people, etc. are being more easily spread across the globe. Places are becoming more connected.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ByHKYDBc-90

We learnt that there are 2 economies working- the old economy where secondary jobs dominated, mainly males worked, and location near to raw materials like coal was important.

The new economy- where human resources are more important, work is more flexible (more females employed) and their is a knowledge based economy.

We then looked at the Clarke Fisher model- the model that shows us how employment changes as countries develop.

Here it is....

clark_fisher_model.jpg

PRE- INDUSTRIAL
Countries like Burkina Faso are Pre- industrial, they are LDC nations, some of the poorest countries in the world. So because they have little 'money' most people are employed in Primary industries (mainly farming) and many live a subsistence lifestyle (growing enough to feed themselves).  As a result few jobs are in secondary industries.  Often these countries are  isolated (BF is landlocked and much is desertified) meaning businesses are not attracted to locate there.   There are some jobs in tertiary industries (services) like hospitals and transport, but these are lower than in more developed countries due to the lack of money, the governments of these countries have little to invest in vast amounts of services.
 
INDUSTRIAL
Most countries at some point will get rich enough, or start to develop some secondary industry- this process is INDUSTRIALISATION. where factories are built and many people move to the cities to work in these factories. This becomes a dominant sector and these countries manufacture vast amounts of goods the world uses.   These are industrial countries- today China and Mexico are examples, of countries where large numbers of people have jobs in manufacturing. Secondary jobs peak and then fall off, tertiary jobs increase too, as houses are needed for the factory workers and as the country is getting wealthier they have more to invest in services for their people.
 
 
A country may then find that the manufacturing moves elsewhere, as wages increase and laws are tightened, it moves to new industrialising countries where its cheaper to do so.  When a country loses its industry this process is known as DE-INDUSTRIALISATION.  Factories will close down and jobs will be lost in the country- like in the welsh valleys.  This will lead to a negative multiplier effect, mainly male employees lose their jobs, they can become depressed as a result, because they can no longer provide for their families. May can turn to alcohol and get addicted, creating a need for more investment in healthcare services, etc.
 
POST- INDUSTRIAL
Once a country or place DEINDUSTRIALISES it becomes POST INDUSTRIAL, a new sector is born QUATERNARY, where people are employed in hi technology or advanced thinking, etc. This is due to the fact that in developed countries the government is more wealthy and thus has money to invest in giving their people a good education, many get degrees and thus can be employed in these hi tech jobs.  Tertiary sector dominates as a material 'want' culture develops, people work in retail, hotels, catering etc. as people have disposable income to spend on such things.
 
 
So the basic idea is the model shows that as a country develops, the dominant sector of employment changes. In pre-industrial countries Primary employment like subsistence farming dominate due to lack of money to invest in building factories.  As a country gains wealth it industrialises, factories are built and tertiary jobs increase to provide services for the factory workers and make newly built towns function.  Over time secondary jobs will dry up as it becomes cheaper to manufacture goods elsewhere, then deindustrialisation will happen and jobs will be lost, quaternary jobs will begin as the citizens are educated and have the skills to work in hi technology jobs. Tertiary will be at its highest as people have money to spend on luxuries (disposable income) creating jobs in retail and other sectors.
 
 
What are the criticisms of the model?
 
It is based on the UK and the USA and the way the employment changed in those countries as they developed.
 
Not all countries will follow the model through like the UK and USA, some like the UAE and Saudi Arabia rely on primary oil drilling and tourism.  Countries like the Gambia in Africa have a high % employed in tertiary jobs as they have a lot of tourists, so they skipped the industrial stage. 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 

Year 10 final population lesson......UK migration past and present-

Today we did a fact finding mission where we looked around the room and gathered information about the history of immigration n the UK.

The following links will help you revise over this topic-

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/static/in_depth/uk/2002/race/short_history_of_immigration.stm#1950 this is an overview of the information we  put onto our own timelines today, read from the 1950s onwards.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BdX5kYufkbY  This video shows what happened in the 1950s when people came over from the Caribbean to the UK, after the war.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oVcWVjNOCFA This one the 60s

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uol876E01CY This one is about the Kenyan Asians migration in the 60s

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uo3fcooY6lU This is about the migration in the 70s

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SZYEJBfjs5M the 1980s race riots are documented here

There are lots of other videos on this topic, but not all just concentrate on the facts which is a shame!


The current UK migration policy is here

http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/geography/migration/migration_trends_rev4.shtml

The UK offers a points based system and has a more closed door policy today, than recently.  There are caps on the number of migrants allowed to enter and you can no longer enter if you are considered unskilled.  You must have skills to enter Britain as a migrant, unless you are an EU resident, they have freedom of movement into the UK. As we do to EU member countries.

Year 10 this week

Assessment week for module 1, you need to revise

The Gambia and its youthful population, including- why it has a youthful population and the problems that having a youthful population can bring

Japan and their ageing population, the causes of it and the problems that an ageing population can cause.

Also revise the Demographic Transition Model (DTM) and how the birth, death rate and total population change as countries move through the model.

Also revise under, optimum and over population and the UKs current immigration policy.

Saturday 28 September 2013

Year 10 Geographers week....

We looked at how countries have to manage their populations.

We looked first at China and its one child policy.

China has an ANTI-NATAL population policy- it's a STICK policy- that punishes citizens who do not adhere.

Why did China need a one child policy?

They had a population explosion, after the previous president ordered Chinese people to have many babies to build up a large population to rival the USA.
In the late 70's the new government realised there were just too many people, so they decided on a policy of limiting all native urban Chinese couples to one child only. (rural people could have 2 and foreigners were exempt
 
The above video shows some of the impacts of the one child policy, like 'little emperor' syndrome, female infanticide, lonely children, small families.
But it also highlights that it has prevented an estimated 400 million extra Chinese people being born, easing the strain on the countries resources.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/china-business/10221730/China-to-ditch-its-one-child-policy-as-ageing-crisis-looms.html

This is the latest take on the policy- you see 30 years of limiting most of the population to only one child has left China with a problem- ageing people and fewer workers to look after them

dependency ratio is negative- as China has increased wealth and invested in medical care, keeping people alive longer- those reaching pension age now are numerous as born before policy, so there are many of them.  Due to the one child policy, there are fewer 30 year olds to work and support the larger numbers of retirement age people.

We then looked at countries that have PRO-NATAL population policies (encouraging baby births), these policies are found in countries at stage 5 of the DTM, who have a declining population and need more children to be born to support the increasing number of ageing people.

Russia has this problem and to try and solve it the government used a carrot (soft approach), by introducing a 'sex day'

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/6990802.stm 
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/skip-work-have-sex-russians-celebrate-day-of-conception-as-sporting-community-continues-to-criticise-putins-antigay-legislation-8812840.html

In one Russian province, Ulyanovsk- the governor has offered cash incentives (to spend on education/ health or housing)  for people having a baby on Russia's national day, 12th June- so on September 12th couples try to make a baby to attempt to get a cash reward.

We also looked at France and their approach to encouraging their citizens to have 3 babies

http://geogaroundtheworld.blogspot.co.uk/2012/09/france.html

There is a PowerPoint on the above link that highlights the French policy and the reasons for the policy.

We then looked at how 2 different countries have to manage migration-
Bangladesh- an OVERPOPULATED COUNTRY- where they may need to ban immigration in the future and Russia an UNDERPOPULATED COUNTRY, where they need to encourage immigration as their population is in decline.

Saturday 21 September 2013

Year 11 Geography week, 16TH TO 20TH SEPTEMBER 2013

Firstly we looked at the destruction of the Congo Basin as an example of how humans can degrade and destroy the BIOSPHERE.


We learnt that the Congo basin is under threat from a range of sources-

LOGGING BY TNCs


This video summarises the reasons the Congo basin is important and threats to the delicate biome, including logging, bush meat and agriculture.
It also shows some ways the locals are trying to sustain the forest.
Certain levels of LOGGING are permitted, however some people   (including large TNCs) are illegally logging the Congo Basin to exploit it for timber and other goods

BUSHMEAT TRADE-



Bush meat is the term for live forest animals, obviously local people have to kill some animals for meat (protein source) however some animals, including endangered gorillas and apes are being killed and illegally transported to countries like the UK, where they are being sold on the black market, especially in large cities like London. This threatens the BIOSPHERE as it disrupts the delicate balance by interrupting the food web, where over hunting of one animal has knock on effects on the whole ecosystem.

MINING-

Increasingly the Congo Basin, especially in the Congo DR, is being degraded in order to extract the mineral Coltan.
This is an increasingly important mineral especially in the world of portable electronic devices.  Coltan is the component in mobile technology that allows the data to be stored in the device, without it, modern habits are under threat.



These threats we learnt are DIRECT threats (physically going in and degrading the biosphere). We also learnt that everyday activities that increase the ENHANCED GREENHOUSE EFFECT, Such as driving cars and wasting stuff that then goes to landfill, releasing methane, INDIRECTLY DEGRADE the biosphere as these activities can lead to climate change which in turns can alter pressure patterns across the globe, which in turn alters rainfall and temperature patterns, which over time may alter biomes, turning tropical rainforest to savanna and savanna to desert, impacting on the vegetation and animal life.

This clip shows the way locals are trying to protect the Congo Basin

 
 
 
We then looked at how we can manage the BIOSPHERE to protect it from these threats-
 
BIOSPHERE RESERVES- areas that are patrolled and protected from destruction, sometimes anti- poaching teams help to stop the killing of animals and to keep people out if they are degrading the area.
 
BUFFER ZONES- these have been used in the Congo Basin, and are areas where locals can use the forests for what they need as they have always done, whilst inside the BUFFER ZONE the land is kept as natural as possible
 
ZONING- this is done in many areas that are also NATIONAL PARKS (areas protected by Law), it involves dividing an important area into different zones, so most needs are met, but some areas are kept as natural as possible, to preserve the BIOSPHERE.  This is done in the Congo Basin- some areas are open to tourisms and some areas the natural life is left alone and undisturbed.
 
ECOTOURISM- On the edge of the Congo Basin, in the Virunga's they have created a NATIONAL PARK to protect the forest and the mountain gorillas who inhabit it.  In addition they have trained local people to look after the gorillas and to guide tourists around the park and on treks to visit the gorillas at certain locations.  This has protected the gorillas as they no longer need to kill the gorillas to make money, they can instead make money from visiting tourists who pay $400 to enter the park and have a guided tour.  This keeps the forest protected as the expense limits visitor numbers and certain areas are still no go so they are kept as natural as possible.
 
 
We also looked at how the BIOSPHERE is managed GLOBALLY by agreements such as CITES (The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fuana and Flora)
 
 
Even the Prince cares about this!!
 
We learnt that CITES is adhered to by over 130 nations, it controls the trade in endangered species and their parts (dead or alive), thus it seems preventing people moving endangered goods around the world, stopping the trade. It set up a permit system that must be obtained if you plan to trade in any species on CITES list (endangered species).
 
It reportedly worked on elephants as it reduces the demand for Ivory, thus people stopped killing
elephants as they were no longer able to make money.
 
See their website for more information
 
 
 
We understood that these GLOBAL agreements are necessary and work for some species, however they are difficult to enforce across all borders and thus illegal trade in endangered species does still happen.
 
 
Sustainable management of the BIOSPHERE was our final topic of the unit.  We looked at how they are managing an area of rainforest in Talamanca, Costa Rica sustainably.
 
 
We learnt how they used ECOTOURISM and sustainable logging to help protect the forest in the area of the country called Talamanca.
 
They only take dead trees not live ones, and used them to be a tourist lodge to educate tourists about the importance of sustainable forest management.  They remove the trees from the forest by buffalo instead of creating a road in and out, which would increase amount of deforestation.
 
Here are the unit review questions for you to have a go at-
 
Explain how local factors affect biomes (4)
Explain how precipitation and temperature affect the distribution of global biomes (4)
Describe the value of a named biome you have studied (4)
Explain how humans can impact (degrade) biomes (4)
Explain how the biosphere can act as out life support system (4)
Describe one way the biosphere can be managed (2)
 
 


Tuesday 17 September 2013

How to rebrand a Whiskey town......



http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2013/aug/30/bushmills-paints-derelict-shops-houses


A novel way to rebrand.....

China opens up Tibet...

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/sep/17/china-flights-worlds-highest-airport

China has finally began flying operations into the world's highest airport reportedly to be able to open up Tibet to tourism.

This goes hand in hand with a new train line (world's highest) across permafrost to the Tibetan capital Lhasa.

The travel time between the Tibetan region and Chengdu (Sichuan provinces capital) will reduce from 2 days by bus to 65 minutes.

This will mean the Chinese can send the military their quicker during times of unrest

Monday 16 September 2013

Short haired bumble bee back in the UK!!




http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/sep/16/short-haired-bumblebee-comeback



The bees have been reintroduced in Kent and young worker bees have been spotted, showing the bees are back!

It was declared extinct in the UK in the year 200, it's decline was bought about by increasing farmland overtaking the natural wilder grassland landscape of Southern England.
Other rare bees have also been seen in the specially created habitat full of wildflowers at Romney Marsh.

The bees are back!!

Year 13, this is an important debate in our culture unit....

 
 
Should people be able to wear the full veil in public? or not?
In fact should people be able to wear anything they want, wherever they want?
What about in school? Should religion and state (schools, public buildings, etc.) be separated as they are in France
 
 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-24112067

What about in court?

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/sep/16/veil-biggest-issue-uk-niqab-debate  Is it the biggest issue Britain will ever have to face?


 

Sunday 15 September 2013

Year 11 Geographers week...

This week we looked at the rainforest, it's climate, and the goods it provides us with

we leant about the medicines it provides us with including:-

Mammosa fruits are boiled in water and the steam inhaled to treat sinus infections. It is related to the eggplant. Eggplant preparations are used to treat skin cancer in some countries.

Rosy Periwinkle-


Originally from the dry tropical forests of Madagascar, this plant yields two of the most important anti-cancer

drugs—vincristine and vinblastine—in use today. Since the development of these medicines, the chance of

surviving childhood leukaemia has risen from 10% to 95%.
 
Golden Trumpet flower-

 
In Surinam

traditional medicine, the flowers are used as a laxative, while the roots are used to treat jaundice, an enlarged

spleen and complications with malaria. The plant has also been discovered to have antibiotic properties.

We also learnt that the biosphere acts as our LIFE SUPPORT SYSTEM by regulating  the atmosphere, hydrosphere and lithosphere

 


 

Year 13 Geographers week...

We looked at vulnerable cultures, working on the basis that cultures are mainly under threat from 3 factors:-
socio-economic
political
environmental factors
students have been working on an example in a group to complete a presentation to the rest of the class about their chosen 'threatened' culture. 

Some are looking at the threat to the Middle Eastern culture and landscapes, mainly caused by the current government regime and arguably the failure of the west to put a stop to it.  Perhaps the UN is to blame as China and Russia have permanent seats ad can prevent mandates being put through.  Yesterday however, things seemed to be looking up as the USA and Russia seemed to strike a deal on a course of action to try and put a stop to the attacks in the country.
These articles highlight why Syrian culture is currently under threat-

http://www.damaskus.dk/2008/09/the-syrian-desert-al-badia-a-cultural-and-natural-heritage-under-threat/


http://theheritagetrust.wordpress.com/2013/03/06/conflict-in-syria-threatens-more-heritage-sites/

https://oi.uchicago.edu/pdf/oip137.pdf

Another group is looking at the people of the Arctic and what is threatening them
Climate change threatens the people of Illulisat (Greenland), Shishmaref and Newtok (Alaska)
cultural dilution and climate change threaten the people of Qaanaq, Greenland



Whereas the Evenki people are less under threat due to the way they promote their culture and the fact that most people return to their traditional way of life



Some others have looked at the threat to Tibet posed by China





 
Some others have looked at the threat to the people of the forest-
Kayapo people of Brazil

 

 

They have been placed under threat by the Brazilian Government's decision to build a HEP and dam called Belo Monte along the Xingu river

http://www.survivalinternational.org/about/belo-monte-dam

 
This will be a thing of the past once the dam is built, no more traditional fishing along the Xingu river

http://amazonwatch.org/work/belo-monte-dam







Year 10 Geographers week...

This week year 10 will be looking at ageing and youthful populations, in Japan and the Gambia, they will need to learn the impacts that these have on the countries.

Here are some helpful places to find extra information-


A video going over the reasons The Gambia has a youthful population, the impact it has on the country and its people and the ways the problems can be tackled.

A country with a youthful population will have a Population pyramid that looks like this-


A wide base, indicating higher % of younger (youths) people and a narrow top (indicating fairly high death rate as few reach old age).

A youthful population brings many challenges, such as lack of school places, so some Gambian children have to go to school in shift.  As the Gambia lacks money they cannot build enough schools to cater for the large numbers of children in the country. Furthermore, due to the lack of wealth invested in healthcare many children die young, this means that some people have more children than they otherwise would have.
In addition to these issues, a high dependency ratio is created meaning each person of working age in the country has to pay more in tax, as they have more dependents (people 0-15 and 65+) to support this means families have less money to spend so the country can struggle to develop.

We will then look at the case of Japan which has an ageing population, some problems with an ageing population are similar to those countries which have a youthful population- such as a high dependency ration, where the amount of tax per person of working age (economically active) has to increase as the % of ageing people increases.
This is Japan's population pyramid- compare it to the Gambia's...



Other problems created by an ageing population include-

increased healthcare budgets, paid for by decreasing economically active people, which is unsustainable/
There is also a problem for younger people who need to support their ageing parents as well as children, this can place pressure on them financially and socially.

The issue is looked at in this video clips-


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=59tvl6mJGrQ

You will have to compare Japan and Gambia in terms of their populations for homework too!

Good luck!

Sunday 8 September 2013

Great British Wildlife revival

An excellent TV show for biosphere and biodiversity, has features on cleaning up rivers, otters returning to our rivers, salmon and the battle to get them to return to the river Tyne and a feature on the animal most likely to become extinct, which is the white clawed crayfish

 
It's not the cutest or the cuddliest, but it is important to the ecosystem.  It is at risk from an alien invader the much larger American signal crayfish


It was introduced by farmers, when the crayfish escaped from the farms and spread out far and wide, they are now found in almost all areas of the UKs river network.  They also carry a plague which kills the native white clawed crayfish.



Would you stay in an unbalanced hotel?

Just take a look at this rebranding strategy, a bold architectural design aimed at providing Lima, Peru with the iconic (flagship) building it has been lacking to attract visitors and investors to its borders-

Do you think this will work? It has yet to be backed so it may never materialise unless someone takes a chance and invests their cash into the venture, still it is unique.  Would it attract people to Lima? would you stay in it?




Rebranding Somalia- very interesting look at this previously blighted nation...

http://edition.cnn.com/2013/05/30/business/mogadishu-holidays-business-economy/index.html?iid=article_sidebar

What ambition these people have and what an opportunity to rebrand somewhere, many thought was unbrandable, I wish them luck....

Geography of the week- 1st- 8th September 2013

Well it's been a massive week in the world of Geography across the globe and in the UK, so here is my round up of the best stories to help with your studies.

Last night the IOC announced the next host of the Summer Olympic games, with Rio and Sochi under fire as the next 2 Olympic hosts this story was big news, here's the announcement
http://edition.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/world/2013/09/07/sot-olympic-2020-city-selection.cnn.html

So the games 32nd Olympiad were awarded to the city of Tokyo in Japan, I for one am upset, mainly because I will never be able to afford to go and because the time difference is so great.  Tokyo beat off strong competition from Istanbul in Turkey and Madrid in Spain, but it's hardly surprising that this was the outcome, after the recent history of the 2 defeated nations is discussed.  Of course the bid went to Tokyo, it was the safe option and recently global sporting events have taken the gambles, South Africa in 2010, Rio 2014 and 2016 and the Winter Olympics given to Sochi in Russia and the football world cups post next year's Rio grand will go to Russia and Qatar, all controversial, so I guess they had to return to the sensible, safe option eventually.


Also think of the financial implications if Spain can't host it due to finances, I guess the sentiment is that the country that has the organisation skills and technological capability that is second to none should have the games.

Meanwhile currently Japan is newsworthy due to the on going leak of radioactive material into the oceans from the Fukushima plant damaged by the quake in 2011, having described the bid as safe, well make of it what you will!


Meanwhile neighbouring Turkey is Syria, the violence and conflict continues, however discussion has evolved to encompass the idea that the conflict may result in a challenge to the current 'unipolar' world we have with Americanisation in control of the globe, the tension between the USA and it's previous cold war enemy (or at least a large part of it) is reaching fever pitch and we in the UK have been described as a

'Just a small Island, no-one pays any attention to them'

little Island that doesn't matter, the status of superpowers is shifting, will it be centred on Syria?

Andrew Marr articulated this well on his show this morning, the link is below- it's just the opening preamble you need to hear really!

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b03bf185/The_Andrew_Marr_Show_08_09_2013/

It's excellent for when we come to do the Superpowers unit for unit 3 in a few weeks time.

 You can join the debate on the crisis in Syria here

http://edition.cnn.com/2013/09/04/opinion/opinion-roundup-syria/index.html?hpt=hp_t5

Lots of opinions to help you decide?
Should the US attack Syria?


Over in Senegal a local fisherman has found a unique way to preserve a key part of his culture, by doing this


Fishing craft to foosball tables, furniture to float your boat

What a cool idea- turning part of his people's culture into something useful whilst preserving important artefacts that are needed to understand the culture.

Whilst in Somalia they are building, building and building and asking, what about tourists, can a nation with perhaps, the most negative brand of all attract visitors?

 Investment optimism is gradually returning to Mogadishu as the capital of war-ravaged Somalia tries to recover after more than 20 years of conflict.

http://edition.cnn.com/2013/05/30/business/mogadishu-holidays-business-economy/index.html?iid=article_sidebar
scroll down for video about what they are doing.

Certainly looks like somewhere pristine and 'other worldly' in this image.

I would love to visit Somalia one day and personally would love it to rebrand itself and become the place it was before the world interfered and colonials came and the fighting began.
Good luck Somalia, my heart is with you and your people.

Over in Australia (down under as they say!) they have a new prime minister, Tony Abbott who claims he aims to stop people arriving by boat and stop the carbon tax, he is a liberal-national coalition leader and this result is the first time the labor party have not won in 6 years.

How will he unite Australia?

Look at my pearl tree....

http://www.pearltrees.com/#/N-u=1_1490318&N-p=88664518&N-s=1_9134652&N-f=1_9134652&N-fa=9134652

This is pearltrees, a way to organise links, I have used it to create an all access to various links to your courses, just click on your course and the topic and you will find a series of useful links.  You can also look in the 'useful' pearl to find generally good places to find stuff to complete tasks.

Year 11 Geographers first week back...

On to Battle for the biosphere- looking at ecosystems one of my favourite topics to teach at any level-

Got to watch I do not go on too much.....

So we started by defining key terms-
Biosphere, biodiversity, biome, ecosystem, latitude, etc. into their books with the terms having matched them up, a job well done with most students applying their key stage 3 learning on deserts, rainforests and the cold climates to their definitions, along with nice cross curricular links to biology too.

Then we looked at the world's major BIOMES (large scale ecosystems)



Then we looked at the factors affecting biome location-
First the 2 global ones-
Precipitation and temperature .
Temperature at a global scale is dictated by the LATITUDE of a place
The students were able to describe the general pattern and give valid reasons for the pattern.  The higher the latitude (distance from the equator) the lower the temperature will be because at the equator (lowest latitudes) the sun's rays and therefore insolation (heat) are concentrated over smaller area so are more intense creating warmer temperatures, as you increase the latitude (move further from the equator) the sun's rays dissipate and the same amount of rays are spread over a wider area, meaning places at high latitudes are colder.

Furthermore the low latitudes have the same exposure to the insolation from the sun through the year, whereas the poles (higher latitudes) have periods where, due to the Earth's tilt, they face away from the sun and therefore receive no insolation at all.



Then we looked at precipitation and how globally it is controlled by AIR PRESSURE patterns like so




Students noted that High pressure means no clouds are able to form, thus there is little rain and thus little vegetation, leading to hot and cold deserts at areas where High pressure dominates; horse latitudes (apx. 30 degrees north and south of the equator) and poles.  The opposite occurs at low pressure areas, as low pressure allows clouds to form and thus rain is common, meaning more vegetation is able to grow, areas like these are found at the equator (doldrums) and mid latitudes (UK).

We then looked at factors that affect biome location at a local scale-

Altitude-

elevation zones and vegetation

Students determined that as altitude increased vegetation and temperature decreased as above, as you increase height by 100 metres the temperature drops by 1 degree.

This is why you get snow on the equator at the summit of mount Kenya, because it is higher in latitude than surrounding forests, which are expected at the equator due to the intense heat and high rainfall, due to low latitude and low pressure creating increased potential for photosynthesis.

Prevailing (dominant) wind-
We then looked at wind and ocean currents, establishing that wind coming across an expanse of water like an ocean, would increase the precipitation of a region and thus mean it would have increased vegetation- thus explaining the pattern in South America

The wind north of the equator comes into South America from the east (Atlantic ocean) full of moisture, creating the Amazon rainforest in the north east of the continent, by the time the wind has reached the Atacama desert in Chile it has run out of moisture meaning parts of the Atacama have had no rain for 400 years.  The Andes mountains cause any remaining moisture to be lost as the air loses moisture as it rises over the high mountains.

If wind comes across land it will be dry (carry little moisture) meaning deserts are likely to form, e.g. the Sahara desert exists as the wind reaching it has had to travel across the vast expanse of the Eurasian continental landmass.

Albedo-

We looked at the role the colour of land plays, white land reflects heat, meaning the ice worlds of the poles are further cooled by their colour, we discussed the change in land colour if that ice melts and that it would end up brown, which being darker would absorb more heat, creating warmer conditions.

Meanwhile the rainforests at the equator are dark green, already warm due to their location and their colour helps retain heat too.

This week we are going to become climate detectives and look at rainforests in a bit more detail.

AS students first week.....

So the year 12's begin their advanced Geography studies, first thing to note is the sheer number of them- 2 classes and 49 students in total, a massive number and my teaching must adapt to accommodate such massive numbers.

Due to my illness we are commencing their studies with AS unit 2- rebranding places instead of the usual unit 1.
So I begin by introducing the concept 'what is rebranding' and showing them examples of places that have been rebranded and defining the key unit terms- rebranding, reimaging and regeneration.



Then we moved onto perceptions of places to establish a need for rebranding, we did quick perception surveys and image analysis of places like Las Vegas, New York, London, Walton on the Naze and Blackpool, to start introducing students to techniques they will need to use in their fieldwork over the coming weeks.



This week we are going to look at profiling places and delve further into establishing a need for rebranding urban, rural and coastal areas.



A2 Geographers first week- an introduction to culture-



So the year 13's are back and as enthusiastic as ever (well most of them are!).
Ready to learn and interested just the tonic for the new term (if you ask me!).  We are teaching the unit 4 research unit alongside the topic based unit 3 side by side for the first time this year, due to the removal of January exams, so let's see how it goes.

We began by defining culture from a range of sources and the students were encouraged to look at a variety of definitions from a range of sources before using them to come up with their own definition of what culture is.


This video has a definition of culture and goes on to describe the elements of culture which is the second topic we looked at in lesson 1.



The students were asked to rank the elements and we then discussed their justifications, needless to say were did not reach a unanimous conclusion as was expected due to the complex nature of the term.  Most seemed to enjoy the discussion and the room was above with youngsters passionately explaining their reasoning for their ranks.

Having completed these tasks students were then asked to design their own models of culture- really to explain their idea of culture so that they could have a model to explain it in their 70 mark exam report.  We looked at some models like the cultural iceberg idea to give them some inspiration- for those who do not remember here it is 
 
 
 

We then went on to look at cultural change and how some cultures change due to new cultures entering the dominant, and how we get assimilation form some cultures in some nations.

We then went on to look at cultural landscapes; modern and traditional.

We found a pattern emerging where traditional cultures had more natural landscapes less changed over time, like the Native Americans and Inuit cultures and the nation of Bhutan, whereas big cities and 'scapes' landscapes; ethnoscapes, technoscapes, financescapes, commodityscapes, etc, tend to look the same whichever nation you are in.

Pupils were set the task of comparing a traditional and modern culture and landscape for their very first research task- now it's a wait and see till Thursday to see what they have produced.
This coming week we are moving on to threatened and vulnerable cultures- which is one of my favourite things of all to teach- must remember not to talk too much!!!!!!