This is space. No, I don’t mean the part filled with stars
and satellites. This image of the world is letting us see
part of geographic space. The Earth is covered in features and relationships
that we can measure and study in a variety of ways to better understand our environments. For example, if I were to zoom in to your
community, I might measure the space by counting the buildings to get a sense of how big it
is. But this is your community, so you know where
the place to catch up with a neighbor is, like an eclectic coffee shop or walking the
sculpture park. I only see the physical buildings, while you
understand the importance of each building. We’re looking at the space in two different
ways. But there are more ways to discuss space,
and they each add a new layer of understanding -- from measuring it, to defining it, to understanding
the relationship between places. Just as all historians study events in time,
based on what's going on or what's normal for a time period, all geographers study events
in space. No matter the topic, we end up contextualizing
places or human-environment interactions based on the space they exist in. I’m Alizé Carrère and this is Crash Course
Geography. Intro In geography, we ask questions to understand
what is where, why it’s there, and how it’s changing. So when we’re trying to interpret why glaciers
melt or disease outbreaks happen in certain places, we want to both measure space (to
get the “lay of the land” if you will), and try to understand the significance space
has to what’s happening. As geographers, we can think about space in
four broad categories that emphasize different aspects and use a suite of tools and techniques
to help us with measuring and understanding our world. In its simplest form, we can think of space
as a container, like a box or an extra-large Tupperware container for delicious banana
bread. We want to know where stuff is -- basically,
what’s inside or outside the container. The Earth is like a stage, and everything
from cool rock formations to political protests happen on that stage. Studying space as a container helps us answer
the question “what is where?”, by measuring and locating physical features or borders
or boundaries. To do this, geographers and other people who
work with distances and points, like surveyors, use a coordinate reference system. Like overlaying a square grid on the globe. Even our phones can be used to tell us what
is where. When we open Google Maps on our phones, the
phone connects to a Global Positioning System or GPS, which pinpoints the location of an
object on the ground using radio from satellites. When a receiver on Earth -- like our phones
-- receives a radio wave from three or more satellites, the phone can translate those
signals into a precise location, and know where we are. These days all the satellites launched by
the US, China, Russia, the EU, India, and Japan are called the Global Navigation Satellite
System. While it's great to know where things are,
as geographers we want to go beyond that. Even our phones tell us more than just where
the sculpture park is. Once we know where things are in space, we
can understand how they’re related, or their spatial relationships. In fact, humans are hardwired to think about
spatial relationships and how we’re related to the space container around us. To describe those spatial relationships, we
need to recognize topological space, which measures and analyzes how the features in
space are arranged and connect to each other. This term comes from the word topology, which
refers to how the pieces of something are related or arranged. We also see topological space in action every
time we ask our phones to route us somewhere. We’re really asking Google Maps to look
at how our beginning and ending locations are related and find the most efficient connection
based on what’s physically in the area. Spatial analysis is a blend of geography and
math that identifies and analyzes those patterns and relationships in space using a range of
techniques including imaging technology, statistics, and geometry. To see those spatial patterns, and understand
how space changes over time, sometimes it helps to zoom out and stand back. Remote sensing, or studying something without
physically contacting it, is an entire subfield of geography that lets us do just that. Photogrammetrists a
nd other remote sensing professionals compile and analyze images from satellites, airplanes,
or drones that have sensors that record energy reflected from the Earth’s surface. The reflected energy is sensed by a device
that records the wavelength as a number and turns that number into a pixel in an image. Remote sensing has been particularly helpful
in Antarctica, which is incredibly hard to study in person. Covered in ice and snow, this frigid continent
has been one of the least mapped areas on Earth. And for good reason. Antarctica is considered the coldest place
on Earth and the windiest. Conditions are so extreme that hiking around
and recording the terrain in a ground-based mapping effort is nearly impossible. So in 1997, researchers collaborated with
NASA and the Canadian Space Agency to use remote sensing satellites with radar capabilities
known as Radarsat to scan the surface of Antarctica. They generated accurate images of the surface
ice and snow on Antarctica by measuring the echo of radio waves sent from a RADAR satellite. With this data, we can start by defining the
boundaries of features in Antarctica, like the location of large cracks in the ice called
crevasses. We’re defining the space, or container,
that is this polar continent. But definitions of any kind are really just
the initial building blocks. In Antarctica, we can use that information
to analyze our relationship to those features. Crevasse zones are dangerous to cross and
difficult to see from the ground, so knowing where they’re located can help create safe
travel routes. This can save time and lives when trying to
navigate this dangerous terrain. But our spatial relationships are more than
just routes. The radar dataset is also used to measure
how quickly glaciers are moving, which gives us insight into the physics of glaciers and
lets us better predict how glaciers change. We can build a more complex understanding
of a space when we ask not just where is the crevasse but how is it changing? or where
is that ice moving? Now containers and topology are informative,
but they don’t let us talk about the more subjective things we know about a space. In geography we can also talk about socially
constructed spaces, or those spaces we create and give meaning to as communities. Like that coffee shop or sculpture park. In fact, the socially constructed space doesn’t
even have to be physical. The way we develop and define virtual spaces
-- like the fan communities we form and participate in online -- is a whole sub-field of geography. But let's stay in the physical realm, in - for
example - Harbin, China. Each January, blocks of ice from the Songhua
River that flows through the city are carved into sparkling sculptures as part of the annual
Harbin International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival. Originally, ice lanterns were mostly used
at night on the river by fishermen. They gradually became an artform and, eventually,
a major social and cultural event. Now the wonder of the Ice and Snow Festival
is synonymous with Harbin. By studying socially constructed spaces, we
learn how space is carved out and a place, or location with meaning, is created and can
become sites for social, political, or economic activity. Individuals, not just communities, can also
create meaning in space. We study individually perceived space to incorporate
the idea of place and see how the perception of a space can change person to person or
culture to culture. Like a teenage girl living in Harbin might
hold a mental map of her neighborhood that includes points of interest to her, like the
curb she almost twisted her ankle on while jogging. That’s her perception of that space, just
like we all have our own perceptions of our individual spaces. And we can see how the perception of individuals
or groups has changed over time. Today, Harbin is the 8th largest city in China. But its name was originally a Manchu word
meaning “a place for drying fishing nets” which hints at how past inhabitants perceived
and used this space. Any space can be studied through any of these
four lenses: as a container, topologically, socially, or how we individually perceive
it. Let’s go to the Thought Bubble. In January 2010, a magnitude 7.0 earthquake
shook the nations of Haiti and the Dominican Republic creating massive damage and killing
hundreds of thousands of people. But things could still get worse. Relief efforts in Haiti were delayed because
aid workers didn’t know where to go or how to get there. Clear maps of neighborhoods and remote regions
of the island before the quake just didn’t exist, so international aid workers had no
sense of space and no fast way of learning. But the locals did know the area -- what was
there, how it was organized, and what it meant for their communities. So that collective knowledge -- or perceived
space -- was put to work. In two weeks, Haiti went from no map to a
complete map in the first crowdsourced mapping effort for humanitarian purposes. A team of mappers organized people around
the world to help digitize photos, which means tracing images to create 2D shapes and attaching
coordinates that can be plotted on a map. These humanitarians input aerial and satellite
images into a mapping platform called OpenStreetMap. With OpenStreetMap, volunteers can look at
space as a container and use those images to trace buildings, parks, roads and more
to create a basic digital map. That map can then be used by anyone in the
world with access to OpenStreetMap. In Haiti, those maps meant relief workers
could see where buildings should be and could use that to help identify where people might
be trapped. Now they could find efficient routes to points
they needed to get to and engage with the topology, or organization, of the space. The global effort to map Haiti was such a
success because it brought together those who had technology to digitize the building
boundaries and roads, and those who knew the significance of those boundaries and roads. With crowdsourcing, the sense of space could
be complete. Thanks, Thought Bubble! Since 2010, communities around the world have
worked within OpenStreetMap digitizing their buildings, roads, and other features. Local citizens imbue the map with meaning,
like which of these buildings are houses, or where there are important community gathering
places, hospitals, and businesses. Local groups and humanitarians can then create
the maps they need to achieve their goals -- from identifying areas at risk for disease
spread, to identifying safe areas for persecuted groups, to helping locate people quickly after
a natural disaster. Because anyone can update the map as spatial
features change, the data is always fresh and ready to be used. Basically, anyone can be a geographer and
create the maps their community needs. Space in all its forms is an integral part
of our lives. We navigate space every day, rely on fresh
geographic data to get from place to place or give meaning to familiar and unfamiliar
spaces without much thought. As geographers, we formalize that process. We take in spatial data from satellites, photos,
radar, and personal observation and create digital data that allow us to locate buildings,
route around traffic or physical features efficiently, and communicate the meaning communities
give their spaces. We focus on space explicitly to better understand
and explain the world around us. Many maps and borders represent modern geopolitical
divisions that have often been decided without the consultation, permission, or recognition
of the land's original inhabitants. Many geographical place names also don't reflect
the Indigenous or Aboriginal peoples languages. So we at Crash Course want to acknowledge
these peoples’ traditional and ongoing relationship with that land and all the physical and human
geographical elements of it. We encourage you to learn about the history
of the place you call home through resources like native-land.ca and by engaging with your
local Indigenous and Aboriginal nations through the websites and resources they provide. Thanks for watching this episode of Crash
Course Geography which was made with the help of all these nice people. If you would like to help keep all Crash Course
free for everyone, forever, please consider joining our community on Patreon.