Geography  

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 +[[Image:Carte du tendre.jpg|thumb|right|200px|The ''[[Map of Tendre]]'' (''Carte du Tendre'') is a French map of an [[imaginary country]] called ''[[Tendre]]''. It shows a geography entirely based around the theme of [[love]]]]
 +
{{Template}} {{Template}}
The study of the physical [[structure]] and [[inhabitant]]s of the [[Earth]]. The study of the physical [[structure]] and [[inhabitant]]s of the [[Earth]].
 +==Notable geographers==<!-- Please respect chronoogial order -->
 +
 +* [[Eratosthenes]] (276BC&nbsp;– 194BC)&nbsp;– calculated the size of the Earth.
 +* [[Strabo]] (64/63 BC&nbsp;– ca. AD 24)&nbsp;– wrote [[Geographica]], one of the first books outlining the study of geography.
 +* [[Ptolemy]] (c.90–c.168)&nbsp;– compiled Greek and Roman knowledge into the book [[Geographia]].
 +* [[Al Idrisi]] (Arabic: أبو عبد الله محمد الإدريسي; Latin: Dreses) (1100–1165/66)&nbsp;– author of Nuzhatul Mushtaq.
 +* [[Gerardus Mercator]] (1512–1594)&nbsp;– innovative [[cartography|cartographer]] produced the [[mercator projection]]
 +* [[Alexander von Humboldt]] (1769–1859)&nbsp;– Considered Father of modern geography, published the Kosmos and founder of the sub-field biogeography.
 +* [[Carl Ritter]] (1779–1859)&nbsp;– Considered Father of modern geography. Occupied the first chair of geography at Berlin University.
 +* [[Arnold Henry Guyot]] (1807–1884)&nbsp;– noted the structure of glaciers and advanced understanding in [[Glacial motion|glacier motion]], especially in fast ice flow.
 +* [[William Morris Davis]] (1850–1934)&nbsp;– father of American geography and developer of the [[cycle of erosion]].
 +* [[Paul Vidal de la Blache]] (1845–1918)&nbsp;– founder of the French school of geopolitics and wrote the principles of human geography.
 +* Sir [[Halford Mackinder|Halford John Mackinder]] (1861–1947)&nbsp;– Co-founder of the [[London School of Economics|LSE]], [[Geographical Association]]
 +* [[Ellen Churchill Semple]] (1863–1932)&nbsp;– She was America's first influential female geographer.
 +* [[Carl O. Sauer]] (1889–1975)&nbsp;– Prominent cultural geographer
 +* [[Walter Christaller]] (1893–1969)&nbsp;– human geographer and inventor of [[Central place theory]].
 +* [[Yi-Fu Tuan]] (born 1930)&nbsp;– Chinese-American scholar credited with starting Humanistic Geography as a discipline.
 +* [[Karl Butzer|Karl W. Butzer]] (1934–2016)&nbsp;– An influential German-American geographer, cultural ecologist and environmental archaeologist.
 +* [[David Harvey (geographer)|David Harvey]] (born 1935)&nbsp;– Marxist geographer and author of theories on spatial and urban geography, winner of the [[Lauréat Prix International de Géographie Vautrin Lud|Vautrin Lud Prize]].
 +* [[Edward Soja]] (1941–2015)&nbsp;– Noted for his work on regional development, planning and governance along with coining the terms [[Synekism]] and Postmetropolis, winner of the [[Lauréat Prix International de Géographie Vautrin Lud|Vautrin Lud Prize]].
 +* [[Michael Frank Goodchild]] (born 1944)&nbsp;– prominent GIS scholar and winner of the RGS founder's medal in 2003.
 +* [[Doreen Massey (geographer)|Doreen Massey]] (1944–2016)&nbsp;– Key scholar in the space and places of [[globalization]] and its pluralities, winner of the [[Lauréat Prix International de Géographie Vautrin Lud|Vautrin Lud Prize]].
 +* [[Nigel Thrift]] (born 1949)&nbsp;– originator of [[non-representational theory]].
 +
 +==See also==
 +* [[Flat earth]]
 +* [[Gazetteer]]
 +* [[Cartography]]
 +* [[List of explorers]]
 +* [[Map]]
 +* [[Navigator]]
 +* [[Psychogeography]]
 +* [[World map]]
 +
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

Revision as of 07:37, 11 July 2017

The Map of Tendre (Carte du Tendre) is a French map of an imaginary country called Tendre. It shows a geography entirely based around the theme of love
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The Map of Tendre (Carte du Tendre) is a French map of an imaginary country called Tendre. It shows a geography entirely based around the theme of love

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The study of the physical structure and inhabitants of the Earth.

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