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Unit 2 Opener

Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

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Page 1: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Unit 2 Opener

Page 2: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Page 3: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.2 Average input of solar radiation to the Earth’s surface as a function of latitude

Page 4: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.3 Seasonal variation in day length with latitude is due to the inclination of the Earth on its axis

Page 5: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.3 Seasonal variation in day length with latitude is due to the inclination of the Earth on its axis (Part 1)

Page 6: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.3 Seasonal variation in day length with latitude is due to the inclination of the Earth on its axis (Part 2)

Page 7: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.4 Relationship between vertical circulation of the atmosphere and wind patterns on the Earth’s surface

Page 8: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.5 Main patterns of circulation of the surface currents of the oceans

Page 9: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.6 Major deserts of the world are not randomly distributed but tend to occur near 30° N or S latitude or along the leeward slopes of mountains

Page 10: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.7 Factors causing rain shadow deserts

Page 11: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.7 Factors causing rain shadow deserts (Part 1)

Page 12: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.7 Factors causing rain shadow deserts (Part 2)

Page 13: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.7 Factors causing rain shadow deserts (Part 3)

Page 14: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.8 Major climatic regions of the world

Page 15: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.9 Representations of the four major pedogenic regimes showing the resulting soil profiles

Page 16: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.9 Representations of the four major pedogenic regimes showing the resulting soil profiles (Part 1)

Page 17: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.9 Representations of the four major pedogenic regimes showing the resulting soil profiles (Part 2)

Page 18: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.10 Diagram depicting the relationships between major soil types and climate

Page 19: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.11 World distribution of major soil types

Page 20: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.12 The local elevational distribution of soil particle size and vegetation on a desert bajada on the Sonoran coast of the Gulf of California

Page 21: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.13 Vertical temperature profiles of Lake Mendota, Wisconsin, at different dates from summer through winter showing the loss of thermal stratification as the lake cools

Page 22: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.14 Local- to regional-scale spatial and temporal heterogeneity of surface waters in the North Atlantic Ocean is caused by meanders of the Gulf Stream

Page 23: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.14 Local- to regional-scale spatial and temporal heterogeneity of surface waters in the North Atlantic Ocean is caused by meanders of the Gulf Stream (Part 1)

Page 24: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.14 Local- to regional-scale spatial and temporal heterogeneity of surface waters in the North Atlantic Ocean is caused by meanders of the Gulf Stream (Part 2)

Page 25: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.15 (A) Representation of how the centrifugal force of the spinning Earth and the gravitational force of the moon cause the tides. (B) Movement of surface waters in response to these tidal forces

Page 26: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.16 A tide calendar for the northern Gulf of California showing the typical pattern of tides due to the gravitational influences of the moon and sun

Page 27: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.17 Perhaps the first systematic, biogeographic map was the Carte Botanique de France, commissioned for the third edition of Flore Francaise (Lamarck and Candolle 1805)

Page 28: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.18 Although map projections are created using various mathematical formulae, the basic approach is not difficult to understand

Page 29: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.19 William Smith fundamentally transformed the way scientists viewed the world and the evolutionary dynamics of its rocks and life-forms

Page 30: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.20 William Smith’s seminal map, A Delineation of the Strata of England and Wales with Parts of Scotland

Page 31: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.21 Alexander von Humboldt’s landmark Tableau physique des Andes et pays voisins

Page 32: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.22 The graphical equilibrium model, first sketched in a letter from Robert H. MacArthur to Edward O. Wilson in 1962, became one of the most compelling features of their theory of island biogeography

Page 33: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.23 Since the first general accessibility to geographic information systems in the 1980s, their use has continued to accelerate

Page 34: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.24 Cartograms utilize special projections to purposefully distort geographic units to emphasize geographic variation in characteristics of those units

Page 35: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.24 Cartograms utilize special projections to purposefully distort geographic units to emphasize geographic variation in characteristics of those units (Part 1)

Page 36: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.24 Cartograms utilize special projections to purposefully distort geographic units to emphasize geographic variation in characteristics of those units (Part 2)

Page 37: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template

Figure 3.24 Cartograms utilize special projections to purposefully distort geographic units to emphasize geographic variation in characteristics of those units (Part 3)

Page 38: Unit 2 Opener. Figure 3.1 All biogeographic patterns are ultimately influenced by the geographic template