Geography 101
Fall 2008 Physical Geography:
The first three items below are periodically handed out in class; the most current copy should
always be available here.
- Syllabus -
Geography 101 course syllabus and general information (Fall 2008).
- Course Calendar -
updated course calendar and assignment info (Fall 2008).
- Homework -
Homework assignments (Fall 2008).
- Section 1 notes - Lecture notes (handouts) for
Physical Geography text, Chapters 1-4.
- Section 2 notes - Lecture notes (handouts) for
Physical Geography text, Chapters 5-7.
- Section 3 notes - Lecture notes (handouts) for
Physical Geography text, Chapters 8-14/21.
- Physical Geography text
Companion Web Site - Elemental Geosystems (5th Ed) companion web site at Prentice Hall.
Go here for additional chapter exercises.
Physical Geography Topic links:
- Geography Matters -
Animated presentation of why geography and GIS matters in the modern world
(courtesy of ESRI).
- Mapserver GIS Demo -
The MapServer Itasca Demo Application, illustrating several basic web application methods.
- Cloud Pictures - A sampling of my own
weather and cloud photos from around the Central Coast and elsewhere (including some
instrumentation).
- GeoSoft - A sampling of several open source software packages
for GIS, geography, earth science, and yes, even the social sciences (free stuff).
- Latitude and Longitude -
A brief description of latitude, longitude, timezones, etc.
- Map Projections -
Nice module on map projections from The Geographer's Craft Project, Department of Geography, The University of Colorado at Boulder.
- The Sun: Sunspots and Other Solar Mysteries -
Space Today articles on sunspots, space weather, and more.
- Solar System Science -
The Sun-Earth connection courtesy of NASA; general info, latest research, etc.
- Earth-Sun Relation -
Animation of the Earth-Sun relationship (requires Flash plugin).
- Planetary Scale -
A view of the physical scale of the planets in our solar system, as well as various stars.
- The Story of Plate Tectonics -
A nice little publication on plate tectonics from the USGS (also available in print).
- Hot Spots -
A short discussion of mantle plumes as the mechanism for volcanic hot spots (USGS).
- Volcano Types -
A great source of information on the geology of volcanoes from Vic Camp at SDSU.
- Long Valley Observatory -
The USGS maintains a long-term observation and data collection program for this caldera in
east-central California (several pamphlets and info on a nice CD-ROM database can be found
here).
- The World's Biomes - An
overview of the world's basic types of biomes (an online exhibit from the University of California
Museum of Paleontology).
- Lord of the Ants - A cool Nova episode on
E.O. Wilson's life and ideas, including sociobiology and biodiversity.
Humans and Earth Systems
A recent article in EOS describes the impact of regional climatology and meteorology on
southern California wildfires, including the effects on human populations and fire management.
Some of the references are available online:
Southern California 2003 Firestorm Report -
Report on the lessons learned from the Oct 2003 firestorm in southern and Baja California,
as well as other resources and a budding wildfire portal.
More links:
Current (as of 9-23) consensus forecast track for Hurricane Jeanne. Most models show
the track somewhat east of the one pictured, however, NOGAPS has it significantly west of there. So the consensus is
to move the average track of the other models slightly west. Is that correct? We'll have to see; perhaps NOGAPS knows
something the others don't...
Mathematics of Earth Systems
The universe is definitely nonlinear, even though the initial way of treating something like the
motion of the atmosphere, and most natural dynamical systems, is with simple linear mathematical tools.
In general, these tools can only approximate natural systems, sometimes only a small portion of the
overall solution space. As an example, check out these lenticular cloud pictures. Does that look
like the result of a simple linear process to you? I hope not...
For the mathematical viewpoint, including examples of fluid flow, check out these phase portraits, and
then go read up on Chaotic Dynamics and the Butterfly Effect. Fun stuff! (Start with a copy of
"Does God Play Dice?" by Ian Stewart).
- Phase Portraits -
Assorted nonlinear mathematical systems pictured in phase space.
The old geography web pages are no longer maintained. All the current content is now in Zope,
and no updates will be made to the old static pages.