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84 lessons ยท 6th Grade
Earth has seven continents: Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, and South America. Each has unique landscapes, climates, and ecosystems.
The five oceans โ Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern โ cover about 71 percent of Earth's surface. They regulate climate, provide food, and enable international trade.
Mountains form when tectonic plates collide. Mount Everest in the Himalayas, at 29,032 feet, is the tallest mountain on Earth.
Rivers carry water from high ground to the sea. The Nile, Amazon, Mississippi, and Yangtze support agriculture, transportation, and millions of people.
Deserts cover about one-third of Earth's land. The Sahara is the largest hot desert; Antarctica is technically the largest desert because it gets very little precipitation.
Tropical rainforests near the equator are the most biodiverse ecosystems. The Amazon alone contains about 10 percent of all species on the planet.
The water cycle moves water between Earth's surface and atmosphere: evaporation turns liquid to vapor, condensation forms clouds, and precipitation returns water as rain or snow.
Climate describes average weather over long periods. Weather changes daily, but climate patterns persist for decades. Climate affects agriculture, clothing, and architecture.
Natural resources โ water, minerals, soil, forests, fossil fuels โ are essential for energy, food, and manufacturing. Sustainable management is a major global challenge.
Volcanoes form at tectonic plate boundaries. Eruptions produce lava, create islands like Hawaii, and produce fertile soils used for farming.
Earthquakes occur when tectonic plates shift suddenly. The Ring of Fire around the Pacific Ocean is Earth's most earthquake-prone region.
Islands are landmasses surrounded by water. Hawaii formed from volcanic activity; the British Isles were separated from the mainland by rising seas.
The Arctic is mostly frozen ocean; Antarctica is a continent covered by ice up to three miles thick. Both polar regions are affected by climate change.
Grasslands and savannas are vast areas of grass with few trees. The African savanna supports lions, elephants, and giraffes; the American Great Plains once hosted huge bison herds.
Coral reefs, built by tiny polyps, are underwater ecosystems. The Great Barrier Reef, the largest living structure on Earth, supports thousands of marine species.
Erosion โ wind, water, and ice wearing away rock โ shapes landscapes. The Grand Canyon was carved by the Colorado River over millions of years.
Human geography studies where and how people live: cities, cultures, economies, and interactions with the environment.
Urban areas are dense cities; suburban areas are residential zones around cities; rural areas are open countryside with farms and small towns.
Agriculture differs by region: wheat on the Great Plains, rice in Southeast Asia, coffee in Central America and East Africa.
The Great Lakes โ Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie, Ontario โ form the largest freshwater lake group in the world, bordering eight U.S. states and Ontario, Canada.
The Amazon River Basin is the largest drainage basin on Earth. The Amazon carries more water than any other river and flows through the world's largest tropical rainforest.
The Sahara Desert stretches across North Africa, covering about 3.6 million square miles. Peoples like the Tuareg have lived in and around it for thousands of years.
The Himalayas stretch across five Asian countries and influence weather patterns, river systems, and cultures for billions of people.
The Mississippi River, second-longest in North America, flows from Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico. It has been vital for transportation, agriculture, and trade for centuries.
European geography features the Alps, Scandinavian fjords, the Mediterranean coast, Eastern European plains, and the islands of Greece and the British Isles.
African geography ranges from the Sahara to the Congo Basin rainforests to East African savannas to the Cape of Good Hope at the southern tip.
Australia includes the vast arid Outback, tropical northern rainforests, the Great Barrier Reef, and temperate southeastern cities.
South America features the Andes Mountains, the Amazon Rainforest, the Pampas grasslands, and the Atacama Desert, one of Earth's driest places.
Geography shapes culture: coastal people develop fishing traditions; cold-climate people build insulated homes; desert dwellers learn to conserve water.
Population density describes how many people live in an area. Tokyo, New York, and Mumbai are densely populated; Siberia and the Sahara are nearly empty.
Borders can be natural (rivers, mountains) or political (drawn by treaty). Some are disputed, leading to conflicts that affect the people who live near them.
Earth's axial tilt causes seasons. When the Northern Hemisphere tilts toward the sun, it is summer there and winter in the Southern Hemisphere.
Renewable resources (solar, wind, timber) can be replenished. Nonrenewable resources (oil, coal, natural gas) are limited and take millions of years to form.
Deforestation destroys habitats, releases carbon dioxide, and causes erosion and flooding. Protecting forests is important for biodiversity and climate stability.