Synopsis
Maps.com Education's Maps101 has been a leading resource for geography educators, students, and geo-enthusiasts for over 20 years, and can be found in over 3,500 k-12 level schools worldwide. Subscribe to access their Maps101 Geography News Network articles.
Episodes
-
Day of German Unity: Celebrating 25 Years
05/11/2015 Duration: 08minDAY OF GERMAN UNITY: CELEBRATING 25 YEARS "General Secretary Gorbachev, if you seek peace, if you seek prosperity for the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, if you seek liberalization: Come here to this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate! Mr. Gorbachev,tear down this wall!' " -President Ronald Reagan On November 9, 1989, the Berlin Wall fell, a symbolic end to the Cold War that paved the way for German reunification eleven months later. The “Two-Plus-Four” Treaty permitted the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) and the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) to become a united country for the first time since the end of World War II. On October 3, 1990, reunification took place and became the Day of German Unity...
-
TEXAN PRIDE: DON'T MESS WITH TEXAS
19/10/2015 Duration: 07minThey say everything is bigger in Texas. Admittedly, King Ranch, the birthplace of Texan ranching, is bigger than the state of Rhode Island. But is size the reason why Texans love their state so intensely? As the second largest state (Alaska is first) with big skies, vast oil and wind power, and a GDP that would rank 13th in the world if it were an independent country, ‘big’ plays a part in that pride. But its quirks, larger-than-life personalities and can-do spirit are also part of Texan swagger...
-
THE MONROE DOCTRINE
15/10/2015 Duration: 08min‘The American continents … are henceforth not to be considered as subjects for future colonization by any European powers.’ --President James Monroe On December 2, 1823, President James Monroe’s State of the Union address to Congress became a cornerstone of American diplomacy and Monroe’s greatest legacy. It wasn’t until 1852 that the United States’ unilateral control of the Americas became known as the Monroe Doctrine...
-
THE IMPORTANCE OF SACRED SPACES
12/10/2015 Duration: 08minIn an increasingly secular world, the importance of sacred spaces may seem negligible at best, or at worst, a source of conflict due to competing claims. However, being able to identify and understand spaces infused with religious meaning is integral to both appreciating ‘place’ historically, and comprehending the complexity of current political tensions. Much of any country’s values and landscape are underlain by an intricate bedrock of belief. On some level...
-
THE UNITED STATES: NATURAL RESOURCES
08/10/2015 Duration: 08minWithout natural resources life itself is impossible. From birth to death, natural resources, transformed for human use, feed, clothe, shelter, and transport us. Upon them we depend for every material necessity, comfort, convenience, and protection in our lives. Without abundant resources prosperity is out of reach. —Gifford Pinchot Natural resources are materials such as timber, minerals, coal, oil, or water that can be gathered or extracted from the earth for our use and economic gain. Taken as raw materials, these resources can be used to manufacture products to meet our needs and provide...
-
THE EXPANDING SAHARA
05/10/2015 Duration: 08minLocated in the northern portion of Africa, the Sahara (the Arabic word for desert) is the world’s largest hot desert. By definition, deserts receive less than 10 inches of rainfall annually, but half of the Sahara receives less than an inch of rainfall while the rest receives about 4 inches annually. Bound by the Atlantic Ocean to the west, the Mediterranean Sea to the north, and the Red Sea to the east, the Sahara has been creeping southward into the Sahel...
-
THE VALUE OF SANITATION: INDIA'S TOILET PROBLEM
02/10/2015 Duration: 07min620 million people – about half of India’s population – defecate in the open every day. In August 2014, Prime Minister Narendra Modi promised during his independence day speech that every home would have a toilet by 2019 (Mahatma Gandhi’s 150th birthday), equaling 110 million toilets in the next four years. It’s a worthy goal expected to eliminate approximately 600,000 deaths a year caused by diarrhea and cholera...
-
VALENTINE'S DAY
11/06/2015 Duration: 06minEach year many Americans celebrate a day made especially for romance—Valentine’s Day. This special day is also celebrated in Mexico, Canada, France, the United Kingdom, and Australia. Valentine’s Day has its roots in ancient Roman tradition as well as Christian tradition. The day received its name in honor of Saint Valentine, however, the exact origin of the day is not altogether clear...
-
THE OGALLALA AQUIFER
27/05/2015 Duration: 07minHidden beneath the 245,000 square miles that make up the Great Plains, resides a lake that’s one of our greatest water assets: The Ogallala Aquifer. Haven’t heard of it? Farming the plains would be unprofitable at best without it, as shown by the Dust Bowl of the 1930s. At the time, the aquifer’s existence was known, but the technology to tap into it wasn’t. more...
-
THE "LANGUAGE" OF EMOJI
06/05/2015 Duration: 06minEmoji are the symbols people use to represent emotions and ideas on their cell phones. They show up in tweets on Twitter. They are sprinkled liberally in text messages. They accompany status updates on social media sites like Facebook. There are even keyboard settings devoted wholly to typing emoji. They are like an emerging new... more
-
THE MOTHER OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT: ROSA PARKS
17/02/2015 Duration: 06minOn December 1, 1955, a 42-year old African American woman finished her job as a seamstress in a department store in Montgomery, Alabama. She waited to board the Cleveland Avenue city bus that, although it had taken her home every day, wouldn’t that day. Instead, she would be arrested, providing the spark the Civil Rights Movement needed to rally and demand change. more...
-
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND CUBA
11/02/2015 Duration: 06minOne of the last relics of the Cold War ended on December 17, 2014. U.S. President Barack Obama announced a thawing offoreign relations policy between the United States and Cuba. With this announcement, the Cold War between the United States and former Soviet-controlled communist countries was... more
-
10 FAVORITE ZOO ANIMALS
11/02/2015 Duration: 07minDo you like visiting the zoo? Many people who like zoos understand that interacting with animals makes our lives better and helps us to understand our world.Ten of our best-loved animals and fun facts about them are here.
-
WHY WE CELEBRATE MARTIN LUTHER KING DAY
16/01/2015 Duration: 09minDr. Martin Luther King Jr. once stated,"A man who won't die for something is not fit to live." Arrested over twenty times, stabbed in the chest, his house firebombed and, ultimately shot and killed, King embodied the idea that equality and the African American Civil Rights Movement were worth dying for.He was a husband and father to four children as persecution and death threats filled his days, yet his example was one of nonviolent, civil disobedience.
-
AMAZING CREATURES OF THE DEEP SEA
16/01/2015 Duration: 05minMiles below the surface of the ocean lies a dark, watery world that humans have only begun to explore. There are mountains, valleys, and animals unlike those found in shallower waters—animals that give off flashes of light or look ferocious.
-
REMEMBER THE ALAMO
16/01/2015 Duration: 09minThe battle between the Alamo garrison and Mexican President Santa Anna’s forces reads like a Shakespearian tragedy: greatly outnumbered, all the Texan defenders died. Even the men who surrendered were killed, fueling the outrage and critical mass required to swell the Texan army, become an independent republic, and in time choose to be annexed by the United States...
-
EVERGREENS: THE TREES OF CHRISTMAS
16/01/2015 Duration: 07minWhen people imagine Christmas trees, they picture pines, spruces, or firs. These varieties are the most common ones used as Christmas trees today. Christmas tree varieties are evergreens. They are called this because they stay green during the winter.
-
THE BILL OF RIGHTS
14/01/2015 Duration: 06minOn September 3, 1783, the Revolutionary War ended when representatives from the United States and Great Britain met in France to sign the Treaty of Paris. Another four years passed before the first constitution, known as the Articles of Confederation, was replaced by our current Constitution written primarily by James Madison and George Mason. This new Constitution was remarkable: it put in place a government...
-
JULIUS CAESAR AND THE RISE OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE
05/01/2015 Duration: 08minThe rise and fall of Julius Caesar is sometimes packaged like a cautionary tale for would-be dictators, the moral of the story asserting that one tyrant cannot replace democracy without getting a well-deserved stab in the back. While Caesar was indisputably a dictator, Rome suffered from a weak central government and self-interested senators prior to and during Caesar’s ascendancy, but interestingly, because he was murdered...
-
THE 'QUIET CHERNOBYL': THE ARAL SEA
05/01/2015 Duration: 04minPrior to the 1960s, the Aral Sea was the world’s fourth largest lake and approximately the size of Ireland. Fed by both the Amu Darya and Syr Darya rivers carrying snowmelt from the mountains to the southeast, the Aral Sea moderated the climate and provided a robust fishing industry that straddled the present-day border between Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. For the map savvy, that Aral Sea would be almost unrecognizable...