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प्रश्न
Give geographical reasons:
Geography is dynamic in nature.
संक्षेप में उत्तर
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उत्तर
- Most geographical phenomena, whether physical or human, are not static and can change over time.
- In economic geography, we study economic activities and factors affecting their distribution and changes.
- In climatology, we study changes in temperature and rainfall due to global warming. Depending upon the changes in climate, changes are made in cropping patterns.
- Geographers study the relationship between production, distribution and geographical factors.
- For example, tea is grown on a large scale in the State of Assam due to high temperature, heavy rainfall, red soil, hilly relief, cheaper water transportation due to the Brahmaputra River and cheap and skilled labour supply from nearby States of Bihar and Orissa.
- We study weather over a period of about 30 years and decide the climate of that place or population of a country or the world over a period of time. Since changes occur from time to time. Thus, geography is dynamic in nature.
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Nature of Geography as a Discipline
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संबंधित प्रश्न
Give geographical reason:
Geography is dualistic in nature.
Answer in detail:
Explain the nature of Geography in detail.
A branch of geography which studies various aspects of natural sciences:
A nature is more dominant than man. This is ______.
Assertion: Geography is dualistic in nature.
Reason: It refers to existence of two contrasting or separate approaches of geographers.
Assertion: Nature of human geography is dynamic.
Reason: Branches of human geography are co-related to each other.
Give geographical reason
Geography is dynamic in nature.
Identify the incorrect factor
Hecataeus – Scholar of Geography:
Complete the chain:
| Sr. No. | A | B | C | ||
| 1. | Human geography |
(i) | Geographical effect method |
(a) | Biology |
| 2. | Physical geography |
(ii) | Economic geography |
(b) | Economics |
| 3. | Geographical method |
(iii) | Bio geography | (c) | Statistics |
| 4. | Strabo | (iv) | Man determines nature |
(d) | Encyclopedia |
| 5. | Possibilism | (v) | Geographica | (e) | Dualism |
Author of Ges-Periodus: (description of the earth) book
