Well I think I deserve an 85. I don’t really talk a lot, I answer
sometimes. I mainly just don’t like to talk so I would probably give myself an
85. Since I answer sometimes, but not all the time, so I participate a little
bit. So I help sometimes. I'm not the person who sits there quietly and doesn’t
talk at all. I will be quiet most of the time. Since I don’t feel like talking,
but I do answer when no one else can get it. The class this semester was good.
I liked it, but in my opinion it was a little too easy. I think that the tests
could have been a little bit harder. Though the tests covered most the
materials, I feel like it could have gone into a little more detail with the
questions, make people think a little bit more. Challenge people in the class,
make them thing more. So in my opinion it was a good class, we covered a lot,
but it could have been a bit more challenging. I hope the next semester class won’t
be that bad.
Liam's HumanGeo
Monday, January 14, 2013
Friday, January 11, 2013
Blog #59- fast development
Well In human geo today we watched the final
part of the movie that we will watch in class for a grade. The last part just
reviewed all the parts that we covered. Saying how that crops and animals
shouldn’t be enough. That the people’s culture, technology, and what germs they
are in contact should have something to do with how fast they advanced, so we
will not know the rest since we are done with this semester basically. Then we
did a little game of who could find the most important fact about developing
New Guinea. So some of the facts were that 1 in 3 people are in poverty, and
that they are the 12th fastest growing country economical wise. So they
are growing very fast and it is something that is important since they were so
poor to begin with
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Blog #58- more more more
We didn’t really cover as much of the video today in Human
Geo as we have on other days. We probably got through about a part and a half.
So what we watched today talked about how at some point in history the Fertile
Crescent was no longer fertile. The environment changed, and the ground could
not support constant growth of food that early humans were doing. Since they
were no longer getting food, they had to move. They moved east and west of the
Fertile Crescent. It was best for them to do this since they would be on the
same line of latitude, which meant that the same plants could be grown where
ever they moved. And the animals could thrive where ever they went. Since the
climate is roughly the same from when they first began coming human in a way,
they could continue becoming more advanced.
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
Blog #57- Animals
Well today in Human Geo we covered more of the Germs, Guns,
and Steel movie. This one talked about how domesticated animals are very
important to why civilizations could evolve faster than others. That there are
over 2 million different animal species on the world and only a fraction of
them could be tamed for human use. The best animals to tame would be over 100
pounds, would eat plants, and provides products other than just meat. So only
14 animals in the world meet the criteria, and have been domesticated in the
past by humans. These 14 animals are Cows, Pigs, Water Buffalo, Bali Cattle,
sheep, Goats, Horses, Donkeys, Bactrian Camels, Arabian Camels, Yaks, Mithans,
reindeer, and llamas. 13 of these 14 animals are found in Asia, Europe, and the
Middle East. The last animals are found in South America and it is the llama. This
helps explain why New Guanine didn’t evolve too much since they didn’t have any
of these important animals or any important plants. They spent all there time
looking for food, while these places in the Europe, and the Middle East didn’t
have to worry about food as much, so some people worked on food in society,
while others could start to work on other skills. That would better their
village. Then people in these regions started to make permanent houses, that
they would decorate, and make it theirs. So the people the Middle East had the
advantage of location, plants, and animals. So in a way they just got plain
lucky.
Monday, January 7, 2013
Blog #56- Advantages
Well today in Human Geo we continued watching Germs, Guns, and
Steel. It talked about how location changed how rapidly civilizations
developed. That those I'm the Middle East had wheat, which was nutritious and
very healthy for you and easy to grow, and lasted for months at a time. While
people in Papua New Guinea had Sago that was hard to grow, not nutritious, and
only lasted for a few days, all it had going for it was it was filling. So this
allowed people in the Middle East to not have to worry about food as much. Then
they developed a way to keep food fresh for like a year. Then they started to domesticate
the wheat by only picking the best ones and re planting them. Then over time
they started to domesticate animals like sheep and goats. Which give milk,
hide, meat, and fertilizer. So you can see that advantages the Middle Eastern
people had compared to the new Guineans.
Friday, January 4, 2013
Blog #55- Steel, germs, and guns
The book Steel, Germs, and guns shows the why some cultures
developed so much faster than other cultures. The main reason is location. Like
different animals to domesticate, different plants. Another reason is that if a
culture lives a farming life, they can support more people, have more food, not
have to worry about food, thus making them better a surviving. That in farmland
was acre of wheat and sheep holds more food than one acre of forest. Since they
didn’t have to worry they could start to think, and start focusing on different
things besides just food, they could develop.
The author of this book is Jared Diamond. He is a very smart
man, he is so smart that when he wants to learn something, he learns it and
becomes top in the field while he is at it. He has been awarded the MacArthur
Foundation Fellowship (Genius Award). He is mainly interested in birds though.
He became interested with the different cultures when he was bird watching in Papa
New Guinea. He has made 22 expeditions to New Guinea to study the evolution of
birds. He has written many books, and each one has caused controversy since
they state very interesting facts.
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/explorers/bios/jared-diamond/
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/07/0706_050706_diamond_2.html
Saturday, December 15, 2012
Blog #54-This wont be long.
The blog for today wont be that long because right now I'm studying for Exams. I hope you understand and if you excuse me, I'm going to go back to studying.
Bye
Bye
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