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Land Use

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greater car dependence. higher infrastructure costs. loss of open space and agricultural lands ... aimed at creating automobile access to increasing expanses ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Land Use


1
Chapter 14
  • Land Use

2
PUZZLE
  • Four switches can be turned on or off. One is the
    light switch for the incandescent overhead light
    in the next room, which is initially off, but you
    don't know which. The other three switches do
    nothing. From the room with the switches in it,
    you can't see whether the light in the next room
    is turned on or off. You may flip the switches as
    often and as many times as you like, but once you
    enter the next room to check on the light, you
    must be able to say which switch controls the
    light without flipping the switches any further.
    (And you can't open the door without entering,
    either!) How can you determine which switch
    controls the light?

3
Land Use
  • Land cover is what you find on a patch of land
  • Ex. forest, field of grain, parking lot

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5
Urban/Suburban/Rural
  • Urban city, or area that contains 2,500 or more
    people
  • Suburban residential area surrounding a city
  • Rural area of open land that is often used for
    farming

6
History
  • Until about 1850, most people lived in rural
    areas.
  • Many were farmers
  • The Industrial Revolution changed this pattern as
    machinery made it possible for fewer people to
    operate a farm or grain mill and better
    transportation allowed manufacturers to be
    located farther from their customers.

7
History
  • Thousands of rural jobs were eliminated, and many
    people had to move to cities to find jobs.
  • Urban areas grew rapidly during the 20th century
    and spread over more land.
  • The movement of people from rural to urban areas
    happened in developed countries between 1880 and
    1950.
  • It is occurring rapidly in developing countries
    now.

8
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9
Land Area
  • Area of land needed to support one person depends
    on
  • Climate
  • Standard of living
  • How efficiently resources are used

10
Urbanization
  • Urbanization increase in the density of people
    in urban areas rather than rural areas.
  • People leave rural areas for more and better
    paying jobs in towns and cities.
  • In developed countries, urbanization slowed in
    the second half of the 20th century.
  • Over time, small towns have grown together and
    formed large urban areas called megalopolises.
  • Ex. Washington D.C.-Baltimore

11
  • Urban areas that grow slowly are able to build
    roads and public transportation to meet the needs
    of citizens.
  • Buildings, roads, and parking lots are mixed with
    green spaces.

12
  • Green spaces provide ecosystem services
  • Ex. moderation of temperature
  • infiltration of rainwater runoff
  • aesthetic value

13
You do not need to write this down
14
Green Spaces
  • Moderation of Temperatures
  • Vegetation does not absorb as much heat
  • Soil does not hold heat as long
  • Infiltration of rainwater runoff
  • Vegetation uses water for survival
  • Water can be stored in the soil instead of all
    rainwater entering the sewer lines

15
Green Spaces
  • Because building a city means replacing
    vegetation with structures, the city loses the
    evaporative cooling advantages of vegetation.
  • Vegetation plays a large part in keeping an area
    cool through a process called evaporative
    cooling.
  • Evaporation is when liquid turns into gas.
  • After the plant is done with water, dry air
    absorbs that water by turning it into gaseous
    water vapor.
  • The air provides the heat that drives this
    process, so during the process, the air loses
    heat and becomes cooler.
  • We experience the same type of thing when we
    sweat -- when air hits your sweaty skin, it
    absorbs the moisture and cools the air around
    you.

16
Roof top gardens
17
Infrastructure
  • A rapidly growing population can overwhelm the
    infrastructure
  • traffic jams, substandard housing, polluted air
    and water
  • Infrastructure is the basic facilities of a
    country or region, such as roads, bridges,
    sewers, and railroads.
  • Urban Crisis more people live in a city than its
    infrastructure can support.

18
Urban Sprawl
  • Urban sprawl rapid spread of a city into
    adjoining suburbs and rural areas.
  • This growth results in the building of suburbs
  • Many of these suburbs are built on land that was
    previously used for food production.
  • Each year suburbs spread over another 1 million
    hectares (2.5 million acres) of land in the
    United States.

19
Urban Sprawl
  • Many cities were first built where there was
    little room for expansion.
  • As the cities grew, suburbs were often built on
    marginal land, or land that is poorly suited for
    building.
  • Ex.Los Angeles was built in a basin, and has
    expanded onto slopes that are prone to
    landslides.
  • Structures built on marginal land can become
    difficult or impossible to repair and can be
    expensive to insure.

20
Urban Sprawl
  • Results of Urban Sprawl
  • greater car dependence
  • higher infrastructure costs
  • loss of open space and agricultural lands
  • more energy-intensive development
  • urban core disinvestment
  • traffic congestion

21
Heat Islands
  • Environmental conditions in the center of a city
    are different from those of the surrounding
    countryside
  • Cities generate and trap more heat.
  • Heat island area in which the air temperature is
    generally higher than the temperature of
    surrounding rural areas.
  • Heat is generated by the infrastructure that
    makes a city run.
  • Roads and buildings absorb and retain heat longer
    than vegetation does.

22
Heat Islands
  • Heat islands can affect local weather patterns.
  • Hot air rises over a city, cools as it rises, and
    eventually produces rain clouds.
  • Increased rainfall is a side effect of the heat
    island effect.
  • Moderated by planting trees for shade and by
    installing rooftops that reflect heat.

23
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24
Puzzle
  • What word is pronounced differently when the
    first letter is capitalized?
  • In each of these puzzles, a proverb is written
    with exactly one letter of each word replaced
    with another. Can you figure out what the
    original proverb is?
  • Beauts in oily shin beep.
  • I pool ant has honey ale boon panted.

25
Heat Island Effect
  • Temperatures can differ between 1.8F (day) and
    22F (night) from rural to urban areas
  • Heat islands can affect communities by increasing
    summertime peak energy demand, air conditioning
    costs, air pollution and greenhouse gas
    emissions, heat-related illness and mortality,
    and water quality.

26
Heat Island Effect
  • Objects can absorb and reflect light. The amount
    of light reflected is known as the albedo.
  • The color of an object depends on what kind of
    light it reflects.
  • Ex. a green object reflects green light and
    absorbs all the other visible colors of light.
    When we see a green object, we perceive it as
    green because it reflects the green wavelength of
    color back to our eyes.
  • Darker colored objects are excellent absorbers of
    light. Black surfaces absorb almost all light.
    Lighter colored surfaces do not absorb much light
    at all -- they reflect almost all of it.

27
  • When an object absorbs light, it converts light
    energy to thermal energy (heat) and releases it.
  • When we build and expand cities, we tend to erect
    buildings with dark surfaces and lay down asphalt
    pavement. The buildings and the pavement absorb a
    significant amount of light and emit it as heat,
    warming the city.

28
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29
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31
Los Angeles Heat Island Effect
32
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33
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34
Infiltration
  • The way water moves through soil is called
    infiltration.
  • Infiltration helps maintain water quality because
    many soils and plants filter out certain
    pollutants as water moves through them.
  • An impervious surface is one that does not allow
    water to infiltrate to the soil layer.
  • As water runs off of impervious areas, water can
    pick up potentially toxic substances (like oil or
    fertilizer) and carry these materials to the
    sources of our water.

35
Puzzle
  • So thing owl heard by tree.
  • If as dot oven mill she far lazy sines.
  • To onto otters at yon could hale teem no undo yon.

36
Land Use-Planning
  • Land-use planning is a set of policies related to
    potential uses of land that is put in place
    before an area is developed.
  • The federal government requires developers to
    prepare detailed reports assessing the
    environmental impact of many projects, and the
    public has a right to comment on these reports.
  • Developers, city governments, local businesses,
    and citizens often disagree about land-use plans.

37
Land-Use Planning
  • Unsustainable urban sprawl as a result of 
  • zoning ordinances that isolate employment
    locations, shopping and services, and housing
    locations from each other 
  • low-density growth planning aimed at creating
    automobile access to increasing expanses of
    land. 
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