unit 10 (still) australia, new zealand, oceania and antarctica

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Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

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Page 1: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

Unit 10 (still)

Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

Page 2: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica
Page 3: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND

Page 4: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica
Page 5: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

Physical GeographyAustralia is smallest continent, largest island. • Mountains in east, dry interior, tropical

grasslands in north.• Great Barrier Reef along northeast coastline. • Ayers Rock in center of continent.

New Zealand is two main islands, both very tectonically active. • Climate is cool and wet, mostly mixed forests. • Many volcanos and mountains, glaciers at

altitude.

Page 6: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

Human Geography

Page 7: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

European SettlementAustralia

• Discovered by Dutch in 1606• Colonized by Britain in 1788• Penal Colony – island for prisoners• Gave Britain a Pacific Ocean Naval base• Colonists vs. Aborigines constant

disputes.

New Zealand• Colonized by Hunters and Whalers

from Europe, America, and Australia• 1840 Treaty of Waitangi

– Signed by Maori– Britain controls NZ– Control vs. Governorship– Land Wars 1845-1847, 1860-1872

Page 8: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

Modern Australia

AUSTRALIA is a wealthy, stable republics with few major problems compared to other parts of the world.

• 23 million people (90% European, 8% Asia, 2% Aborigine)

• Economy based on tourism, ranching, export of resources and food, import of energy

• Issues with immigration of Asian population, and aboriginal rights

• Many types of animals found only in Australia, such as kangaroo, koala, and platypus, dingo, wombat.

Page 9: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica
Page 10: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

AboriginesAustralia – Settled by the Aborigines about 40,000 years ago. Arrived from Asia, had stone age technology at time of contact.

• Roughly 500 groups speaking 200 languages, less than a million people total.

• Animist religion, with belief in the “Dreaming” a complex set of myths and practices that establish the world and Aborigine culture.

• Still largely separated from Australian society, issues with discrimination and loss of ancestral lands.

Page 11: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

Rabbit Invasion

• 1859 Thomas Austin brings 24 rabbits to Australia to hunt for food

• 1900 Rabbit population = 1 Billion or more!

• Rabbits are heavy grazers, and strip foilage.

• Australia tried importing predators, fences, and Tularemia infections to control rabbits

Page 12: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

Modern New ZealandNEW ZEALAND is a wealthy, stable republic with few major problems compared to other parts of the world.

• 4 million people (65% European, 15% Maori, 20% Asian or Pacific, >1% Hobbits, Elves and Orcs)

• Economy based on film industry, tourism, resources, and agriculture.

• Issues with Maori rights, fishing and resource competition with other nations

Page 13: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

MaoriNew Zealand – Settled by the Maori about 1000 years ago from Polynesia

• Divided into various clans, claimed territory and warred with each other. Even after contact, they maintained a fierce warrior culture.

• Maori traditionally wear extensive tattoos, called “Moko” to show status.

• Though a minority, Maori are a large part of NZ culture, such as the “All-Blacks” rugby team.

Page 14: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

OCEANIA AND ANTARCTICA

Page 15: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF OCEANIA• Enormous region of the

Pacific ocean, with thousands of scattered islands.

• Islands are volcanic, coral atolls, or both.

• Islands divided into three groups:

– Melanesia – named for “dark skin of inhabitants”; includes New Guinea

– Micronesia – named for “tiny islands”; includes Guam, Marshall Islands

– Polynesia – named for “many islands”; includes Hawaii, Samoa, Tahiti

Page 16: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

Vocabulary• Archipelago – chain of islands• low island – made of coral reefs• high island – created by volcanoes• Atoll – coral island that surrounds a lagoon

Page 17: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

HUMAN GEOGRAPHY OF OCEANIA

• Settled thousands of years ago by boat from Asia. Explored by Europeans in the 1500’s, later settled for agriculture.

• Site of most of the big battles of WW2 in the Pacific. Gained independence from Europe and the USA in 1960’s and 1970’s.

• Modern population is less than 10 million, depending on how the region is counted. Most countries are poor and underdeveloped, relying on resort tourism for their economies.

Page 18: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

Antarctica

Page 19: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF ANTARCTICA• Coldest, driest, and windiest continent.

• The temperature in Antarctica has reached −89 °C (−129 °F)

• Most is covered by a sheet of ice over a mile thick, which has 70% of Earth’s fresh water.

• Life is abundant along the coasts, but the interior is a cold desert.

• Still mostly unexplored and little known.

Page 20: Unit 10 (still) Australia, New Zealand, Oceania and Antarctica

HUMAN GEOGRAPHY OF ANTARCTICA• No permanent human presence in

Antarctica.

• Between 1000 to 5000 people live there for short periods, living in various research stations.

• No government, other than 1959 Antarctic Treaty: No mining, no military bases or weapons, only peaceful scientific research.

• Various countries claim portions of Antarctica for their own use, but these areas overlap and are generally not recognized as official.