Geography, asked by sarfrazalamsa455419, 9 months ago


Explain the relationship between man and environment​

Answers

Answered by KRPS500
6

The relationship between the man and the environment has been established in the early periods itself. Human beings live in the kingdom of nature and interact with it constantly. The influence of nature in the form of the air he breathes, the water he drinks, the food he eats, and the flow of energy and information.

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Answered by ayushraj8928
0

Answer:Physical geographers have increasingly been attentive to human–environment relationships, helping to break down the barriers between social, earth, and biological science. Ken Young and Blanca Leon, for example, have documented contemporary biodiversity at a variety of spatial scales, in the context of human activities. Tom Veblen and his colleagues have studied disturbance regimes along environmental gradients in northern Patagonia, and shown that both human-historical and natural disturbances need to be studied in tandem to explain vegetation patterns at the scale of landscapes. Carol Harden's work on soil erosion has shown that abandoned land and roads/trails are especially critical in accelerating erosion in Latin America's mountain regions. Work by Karl Butzer, Paul Hudson, and others is showing that Latin American watersheds need to be studied as units, and in the context of both human and natural impacts, to fully understand river behavior and aid in water resource management decisions.

Physical geographers have increasingly been attentive to human–environment relationships, helping to break down the barriers between social, earth, and biological science. Ken Young and Blanca Leon, for example, have documented contemporary biodiversity at a variety of spatial scales, in the context of human activities. Tom Veblen and his colleagues have studied disturbance regimes along environmental gradients in northern Patagonia, and shown that both human-historical and natural disturbances need to be studied in tandem to explain vegetation patterns at the scale of landscapes. Carol Harden's work on soil erosion has shown that abandoned land and roads/trails are especially critical in accelerating erosion in Latin America's mountain regions. Work by Karl Butzer, Paul Hudson, and others is showing that Latin American watersheds need to be studied as units, and in the context of both human and natural impacts, to fully understand river behavior and aid in water resource management decisions.By 1970 the survey and mapping of Latin America was well underway, with the use of the tools of air photography and (increasingly) remote sensing. The recent rapid expansion of Geographic Information Systems and other technologies, in conjunction with remote sensing, gives geographers a set of powerful tools for addressing environmental and planning problems. Numerous GIS facilities have been established in Latin America to analyze a wide range of social and environmental problems.

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