Maps, Graphs, and Charts

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Transcript Maps, Graphs, and Charts

Map Skills & Landforms

Watertown-Mayer Elementary Grade 4

Social Studies – Session 1 Standards: 5A.I.1 – Concepts of Location –

Locate major mountain ranges & rivers

(Appalachian Mountains, Rocky Mountains, Mississippi River)

5C.IV.1 –Physical Features and Processes

– Describe major physical features of the US

(Great Lakes, Pacific & Atlantic Oceans, Gulf of Mexico, Appalachian Mountains, Rocky Mountains, Mississippi River, Great Basin, Coastal Plains, Coastal Range, Great Plains)

5E.I – Essential Skills –

Demonstrate the ability to obtain geographic information from a variety of print and electronic sources.

Rose, Scale, Atlas, Thematic Maps) (Compass

Day 1:

Pretest – blank map of US…locate and label …

Great Lakes, Pacific & Atlantic Oceans, Gulf of Mexico, Appalachian Mountains, Rocky Mountains, Mississippi River, Great Basin, Coastal Plains, Coastal Range, Great Plains

Unit PowerPoint – whole group discussion

Day 2:

Unit PowerPoint Practice locating places using maps in front of Social Studies book or large desk maps

Day 3:

Assessment – observation as labeled – use spreadsheet as checklist Review location of

Great Lakes, Pacific & Atlantic Oceans, Gulf of Mexico, Appalachian Mountains, Rocky Mountains, Mississippi River, Great Basin, Coastal Plains, Coastal Range, Great Plains

Students label these on map of US

Day 4:

Continue labeling locations on map Draw compass rose on map

Day 5:

Color map Label

Great Lakes, Pacific & Atlantic Oceans, Gulf of Mexico, Appalachian Mountains, Rocky Mountains, Mississippi River, Great Basin, Coastal Plains, Coastal Range, Great Plains

Make flags to label -

Appalachian Mountains, Rocky Mountains, Mississippi River, Great Basin

Day 6:

Complete coloring and labeling Begin 3D land form creation

Day 7:

Finish 3D land form creation Use markers to color landforms after dry

Day 8:

Assessment – Label landforms on blank US map Complete landform map

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Landform Pretest

Map Skills

Practicing our map skills

Create a Physical Map

Coloring your map

Make your map 3-D

Summative Assessment

Unit Outline

THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Label the Following Landforms: Lake Erie Pacific Ocean Rocky Mountains Lake Huron Atlantic Ocean Coast Ranges Lake Michigan Gulf of Mexico Coastal Plains Lake Ontario Mississippi River Great Plains Lake Superior Appalachian Mountains Great Basin

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Map Skills

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What is a map?

A map is a representation, usually on a flat surface, of the features of an area of the earth or a portion of the heavens, showing them in their respective forms, sizes, and relationships according to some convention of representation.

Now what does that mean?

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A map is a representation, A map is a drawing or model usually on a flat surface, of a round Earth on a flat surface, of the features of an area of the earth that shows the landforms (mountains, rivers, etc.) or a portion of the heavens, or part of the sky in a particular region, showing them in their respective forms, sizes, and relationships drawn to scale according to some convention of representation.

using an accepted form of drawing or model.

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Types of Maps

There are three basic types of maps:

PHYSICAL POLITICAL

and

THEMATIC

.

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Physical Maps

• Physical maps show the natural features of the Earth. • Physical maps do not contain man made features.

• For example, a physical map would be a map of what you would see if you were looking down on Earth from space.

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When you look at this map, what do you see?

Notice you do not see country borders or city markings. These divisions are created by people. For example, there is no actual line dividing Texas from its bordering states. Although some astronauts (with the use of binoculars believe it or not) are able to see roads, large ocean tankers, and even the Great Pyramids from space, at very high altitudes, none of these are visible and all you are left with are natural land formations.

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Political Maps

Unlike physical maps, political maps show how humans have impacted the landscape. For example, city names, roads, country borders, etc. are all part of political maps. Political maps change frequently (physical maps change very, very slowly through geologic processes) and must be redrawn often. A political map of the world that is 50 years old is no longer accurate. Wars and ethnic conflict are two major causes political maps change.

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Political Maps

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Thematic Maps

• Thematic maps can represent a variety of information including things like climate, precipitation, vegetation, elevation, population, life expectancy, etc.

• Thematic maps are generally used when you are looking at a single piece of information.

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Map Components

Title

Grid

Compass Key or Legend Scale

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Compass • •

A compass is a tool that helps the user know what direction one is headed.

On a map, a compass or a compass rose helps the user locate these directions.

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Compass Rose

• The needle on a compass is magnetized to point to the earth's north magnetic pole. Thus with a compass, a person can roughly tell which direction they are headed. • • There are four major or cardinal directions on a compass- north, south, east & west. In between are the directions northeast, northwest, southeast, southwest.

Direction Quiz

Source: http://aerocompass.larc.nasa.gov

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Directions

• • • The cardinal directions are north, south, east, and west.

The intermediate directions are northeast, southeast, southwest and northwest.

They help describe the location of places in relation to other places.

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Scale

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To help us review basic geographic terms that are used to create grids, we will play a game.

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Creating a Physical Map

• • • • You are now going to create a Physical map. Look at the list of major United States landforms.

Locate them on your map (use your Social Studies book or a desk map) Label them neatly

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THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Label the Following Landforms: Lake Erie Pacific Ocean Rocky Mountains Lake Huron Atlantic Ocean Coast Ranges Lake Michigan Gulf of Mexico Coastal Plains Lake Ontario Mississippi River Great Plains Lake Superior Appalachian Mountains Great Basin

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THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

When you finish labeling and coloring your map, make small flags for the mountain ranges and Great Basin.

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Now that your physical map is labeled and colored, we can make it 3-Deminsional. When you get your mixture: 1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

Use a small amount along the Mississippi River. It should have texture, but should be flat.

Form your mountain ranges.

Put a small glob where the Great Basin is and use your finger to make it into a bowl.

Use a small amount to create texture along the coastal plains.

Slightly raise the area for the coastal range Use the toothpick end of your flag to poke a hole in the mountain ranges and the Great Basin. Tomorrow we will glue your flags into place.

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Summative Assessment

THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Label the Following Landforms: Lake Erie Pacific Ocean Rocky Mountains Lake Huron Atlantic Ocean Coast Ranges Lake Michigan Gulf of Mexico Coastal Plains Lake Ontario Mississippi River Great Plains Lake Superior Appalachian Mountains Great Basin

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