Geographic Essays

  • Balkans, History On Geographic

    774 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Balkan Peninsula has many physical features, but there are three main ones, they are the fact that it is a peninsula, its mountains, and its rivers. Within the Balkan Peninsula there are a good majority of ethnicities. There will be a majority of instances that the geography has helped or hindered certain peoples in the Balkans history. The mountains had a few of different effects on the early people living in the Balkan Peninsula. The mountains of this area, helped certain ethnic groups, and

  • Massai Warriors- National Geographic Report

    544 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the September 1999, issue of National Geographic Magazine, there is quite an interesting article that has been written by Carol Beckworth and Angela Fisher. It deals with the Masai Warriors of Kenya, and how their culture recognizes an adolescent male that is becoming a man, or entering manhood. The Masai warriors are a group of semi- nomadic people who live on the border of Kenya and Tanzania. They are a relatively small group, with only about 300,000 people in their culture. They hunt for

  • Essay On Geographic Tongue

    1494 Words  | 3 Pages

    Geographic tongue is a disease that affects .6% of Americans. The papillae on the tongue is depleted which leads to several symptoms. The causes of outbreak are certain food types and sometimes stress. This disease gets its name because of the appearance when the tongue breaks out into lesions. It appears to look like a map of different countries on the tongue. The treatment for this disease is usually topical creams, antihistamines, and steroids. Life with geographic tongue is difficult but manageable

  • Geographic Factors that Influenced U.S Government Actions

    544 Words  | 2 Pages

    Geographic factors often influence United States government actions, both foreign and domestic. Some of these factors include location, physical environment, movement of people, climate, and resources. Although these geographic factors can lead to increase in our countries land size and some positive outcomes, there are also chances for negative outcomes. One action taken by the United States government that was influenced by geographic factors was the Louisiana Purchase. There were many historical

  • Bermuda Triangle as a Mythical Geographic Area

    1198 Words  | 3 Pages

    Bermuda Triangle as a Mythical Geographic Area The Bermuda triangle is a mythical geographic area. It is believed to extend from the tip of Florida to Bermuda and to Puerto Rico. Over 100 planes and ships have disappeared in the last century. There are many theories about what might cause the disappearances of theses ships and planes. Scientist have come to believe that the most possible theory has something to do with the climate change such as tsunamis, hurricanes or waterspouts. The other theory

  • The National Geographic Society

    905 Words  | 2 Pages

    The National Geographic Society “It’s right here”, was the old guard’s response when I asked him where I could find the National Geographic Society. Immediately upon entering the gates of the Shura Council Compound, I found a plaque on one of the two buildings indicating it to be the National Geographic Society. I entered the Society and began to analyze all of its aspects to determine whether or not the museum is achieving its purpose of improving the study of geography in Egypt. The National

  • How Natural Processes Operate at Coastal Geographic Environment

    1040 Words  | 3 Pages

    How Natural Processes Operate at Coastal Geographic Environment Natural Processes are actions or events that have natural causes, which result in natural events. The three main coastal environment processes that operate at Muriwai are Coastal Erosion, Coastal Transportation and Coastal Deposition. The elements that interact to produce natural processes are wind, waves and tides. Each phenomenon at Muriwai's coastal geographic environment has been produced by interaction. Coastal Erosion is

  • National Geographic: Mysteries Underground

    559 Words  | 2 Pages

    National Geographic: Mysteries Underground The video I reviewed was a National Geographic film called Mysteries Underground. This video was about extraordinary sites there are to see in underground caves. You traveled along with cave explorers and got to see all the beautiful untouched natural formations such as gypsum chandeliers, gnarled calcite columns, and jewel-like lakes. It showed and talked about all the careful proceders the cave explorers go through. It also talked about how the formations

  • Geographic Information System

    596 Words  | 2 Pages

    Geographic Information System or GIS provides the IT professionals the tools to create “smart maps,” maps that knew a circle represented a sampling point, a rectangle represented a building and a long curvy line represented a road (Hammond, 2006). “Mapifying” data sets identifies the uniqueness of each process involves in data trail. Therefore, a project manager should understand the collision of each process and each process evaluates its success. Understanding what comprises success for the

  • National Geographic Society

    1306 Words  | 3 Pages

    National Geographic Society The Problem Essay Position Statement The key managerial problem which John Fahey is facing is to decide as to whom the e-commerce head should report, in the current organizational structure of NGS, so that the new position gives him enough freedom to leverage the growth opportunities of the e-commerce platform efficiently. How much span of control for the new head is required to cope with declining print media sales and build the right balance between allocating investments

  • The Use of Geographic Information Systems in Real Estate Appraisal

    5011 Words  | 11 Pages

    The Use of Geographic Information Systems in Real Estate Appraisal Abstract Appraisers need to show the reasoning behind their value opinions by discussing important spatial relationships and their likely effect on value. Geographic information systems (GIS) can be used to analyze these relationships and to show why a client should select an appraiser who has this level of information. Gilbert Castle has noted that real estate is essentially a game of information arbitrage. The likely

  • Essay On Geographic Information System

    708 Words  | 2 Pages

    Yong Sha Yu Sun Final Paper 04/07/2014 Geographic Information System After I reading the document’GIS Soltution for Environment Management’, it is very interesting and I also learn a lot about GIS from it. The technology of GIS is used to support and send information to environmental managers and mass. GIS allows the combination and analysis of various layers of those data in different areas including environmental measurements. According to the potential users, the environmental application areas

  • Geographic Technology in Real Estate

    2330 Words  | 5 Pages

    Geographic Technology in Real Estate: A Technology Assessment Report Introduction Real estate is defined by the Barron’s Dictionary of Real Estate Terms as the “land and everything more or less attached to it. Ownership below to the center of the earth and above to the heavens.” This definition clearly conveys the geographically fixed nature of real estate and the inherent risk associated with this characteristic that is not found in other financial assets such as stocks and bonds. It is

  • Importance Of Geographic Information System In Saudi Arabia

    1067 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Geographic Information System (GIS) is used in Saudi Arabia for several projects. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is one of the biggest exporter or oil, gas and phosphates; therefore, using GIS is beneficial to them as they understand further information regarding drilling and extracting the two major natural resources. Another aspect in which the geographical information system is used is for projects such as water management. A problem they seem to be facing for years, they finally found a solution

  • Geographic Luck

    593 Words  | 2 Pages

    Jared Diamond’s Theory of Geographic Luck explains the reason why some countries, such as Iraq, were able to develop more rapidly than other countries, such as New Guinea. Their ability to become modernized and gain power, wealth, and strength are based on various factors, such as the climate they lived in, the plants found in their surrounding environment, and the animal species found in the region that could be domesticated. Ultimately, it came down to one thing—geographic luck. Firstly, Diamond’s

  • RIG VEDA

    1137 Words  | 3 Pages

    or a philosophy. It contains so many cultures, philosophical systems that make itself complicated. Besides it has so many Gods and Goddess. We can convey that this state is the reflection of complex society in Indian, people from different races, geographic areas. Whereas it would be seen as a complication, there is a constant ritual with the spiritual of Hinduism. ‘ The oldest Scriptures in all of India and the most important are called the Vedas. All Hindus recognize the Vedas as the true origin

  • Sumartran Tsunami

    1475 Words  | 3 Pages

    relevant articles in the future. The National Geographic Society is good source of information, and no person can argue the artistry of its presentation, however, the magazine, and its television and internet productions are directed toward a curious, but mostly naive audience. If searching for an overview, a middle man one may say, National Geographic does provide a history and account of the event in “The Deadliest Tsunami in History” (National Geographic News, Jan 7, 2005). Organized and succinct

  • Greece

    618 Words  | 2 Pages

    about Greece. On this Page: •     Key Facts •     Geographic Landmarks •     Points of Interest •     Major Industries •     Historical Highlights •     Population and Culture •     Books about Greece •     Links to other sites about Greece Other related pages: •     World Geography Index •     Ancient Greece Key Facts     Top of Page Greece is one of the oldest civilizations, dating back over 5000 years. Population: 10 million people Geographic size: 51,000 square miles Capital: Athens Major cities

  • Arctic and Alpine Soils

    2746 Words  | 6 Pages

    altitude produce similar meteorologic effects. In these geographic regions where temperature is at such a pronounced extreme, climate would seem to be the leading factor of soil development. It is my goal in this research paper to answer the following question: How do the soils of arctic and alpine areas differ? This idea, taken largely from an abstract by Birkeland (1975), will be explored through the comparison of the soils of these two geographic regions, and an analysis of the soil development factors

  • The Importance of Dinosaur Discoveries

    1855 Words  | 4 Pages

    Minnesota (National Science Foundation). The paleontologists in total found a skeleton that possessed a set of 80 to 90 vertebrate from the neck all the way down to the tail (National Geographic). The two teams also discovered two nearly complete skulls, one from a young Rapetosauras and another from an adult (National Geographic). The Rapetosauras is a type of Dinosaur called a Titano... ... middle of paper ... ...4 <http://www.nature.com> (Primary Source) Hartman, Joseph, Krause, David, and Rogers