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  • Even though lots of maps help us understand  our geographical space, there's one map  

  • that some geographers would say is the most  important to understand all life on Earth:  

  • the map of the world's precipitation

  • We can think of precipitation as the final  flourish in the hydrological cycle that  

  • circulates water molecules between the  four Earth systems. It's all the rain,  

  • snow, sleet, hail or any liquid or solid  that falls from clouds in the atmosphere

  • And we need water for so many parts  of our lives: agriculture, industry,  

  • transportation, recreation, and not least  for all the flora and fauna that live here

  • Water is the universal solvent, which  means it can dissolve more substances  

  • than any other liquid and we almost  never find completely pure water.  

  • That's pretty important, because as  water moves through the water cycle,  

  • it transports both vital nutrients and  harmful pollutants across spaces and places.

  • So using a map of precipitation helps us  track water on Earth and reveals potential  

  • consequences of differing access to waterLike if we compare our precipitation map with the  

  • map of population distribution, we can understand  a simple but powerful pattern of human geography:   

  • where there is water, there are people

  • But it gets a little more complicated than  that, because where there are people and  

  • limited resources, there's often conflict  and bigger geographical questions at stake

  • I'm Alizé Carrère and this  is Crash Course Geography.

  • [INTRO]

  • We started our journey into physical  geography by looking at the big,  

  • big picture to reveal the geographic  patterns and processes that create  

  • Earth's environments and  support all living things

  • And we've learned that the spheroid shape,  

  • rotation, revolution, and tilt of the Earth  cause insolation, air temperature, pressure,  

  • and wind to form worldwide patterns  that strongly depend on latitude.

  • Ultimately, precipitation comes  from clouds in the atmosphere,  

  • which are complex structures that  change based on many of those patterns.  

  • So precipitation varies a lot between different  places, especially different latitudes

  • Looking at our map, there are  areas with a lot of precipitation,  

  • like the island we call Borneo. The air here near  the equator is hotter and has a higher dew point,  

  • the temperature when the air is saturated with  water vapor and condensation is imminent

  • But areas like what we call the Svalbard  islands in the Arctic Ocean get very  

  • little precipitation because the air  at those latitudes is cold and dry

  • A different kind of precipitation variability  can happen within a place that spans similar  

  • latitudes. Like there's a region that makes  up a large chunk of the continental interior  

  • of the US and Canada, often called  the Great Plains or the Prairies

  • Because the Great Plains sit  deep within the interior,  

  • far from oceans, a phenomenon  called the continental effect causes  

  • huge temperature fluctuations with  scorching summers and frigid winters

  • In addition, the Rocky Mountains, which are west  of the Great Plains, form a barrier to the warm,  

  • moist winds blowing in from the PacificBasically, as the winds hit the side of the  

  • mountains, the air is forced to riseAs it rises, the air expands and cools  

  • enough that the water vapor molecules can  condense to form clouds and precipitation

  •   The resulting rain or snow (or fog or whatever!)  

  • is called orographic precipitation, which got its  name fromoros” -- a Greek word for mountain.

  • Then, as the air descends the  other side of the mountains,  

  • it gets warmer as the air molecules are  compressed together, and any leftover water  

  • droplets evaporate. So we say the side of the  mountains not facing the winds -- like where  

  • the Great Plains are -- is in a warm, dry area  called the rain shadow of the Rocky Mountains

  • Orographic precipitation patterns  can be found on mountains worldwide.  

  • In Argentina, the Patagonia desert lies  in the rain shadow of the Andes Mountains,  

  • while the Trans-Himalayan region of Tibet  and Central Asia lies in the rain shadow  

  • of the Himalaya Mountains. The Great Plains straddle the  

  • 98th meridian. So there's precipitation  sometimes... it's just unpredictable

  • The result is a steppe or semi-arid  climate which is too dry to support forest,  

  • but too moist to be a desert., 

  • The dryness can be linked to some combination of  the continental effect, the rain shadow location,  

  • and subtropical high pressure systems in  the atmosphere. The unpredictability comes  

  • from local conditions and the constantly flowing  atmospheric and ocean circulation. So, basically,  

  • rainfall amounts can change dramatically from  one year or season or month to the next

  • A year with lots of rain could be followed by  several years of below average precipitation.  

  • So drought can be a major, recurring  problem for people, animals, and plants.

  • In fact, at one point the Great Plains  was called the Great American Desert,  

  • even though it's technically a stretch  of grasslands between forests to the  

  • east and deserts to the west. By  thinking about the physical space,  

  • we learn more about how our perception  of the perceived space has changed

  • It wasn't until the inventions  of barbed wire, the steel plow,  

  • well-drilling techniques, and  the railroad solved the region's  

  • unique spatial problems that it became  a place where European people settled

  • Over long periods of time, grasslands produce  excellent soils, making them extremely productive  

  • farmlands -- but also prone to severe soil  erosion from overfarming and overgrazing

  • So the combination of mass settling and  farming, unpredictable precipitation,  

  • and high temperatures led to  devastation in this physical space.  

  • One of the most significant droughts in the last  century was the Dust Bowl, which ravaged the  

  • Great Plains for nearly a decade from 1930 until  the fall of 1939, when the rains finally came

  • So now our idea of the Great Plains as a place  is forever tied to hardship and even lack of  

  • opportunity, not just precipitation patterns  like the rainfall effect. All because of the  

  • physical geography of the space layered with the  human geography of our lived experiences there

  • On the other side of the Rockies  and east of the Sierra Nevadas,  

  • there are also vast stretches of semi-arid  regions, with some true deserts in the southwest.  

  • Like in the Great Plains, precipitation is  rather unevenly distributed, so the Colorado  

  • River is actually the region's largest water  source, dubbed the "lifeline of the southwest." 

  • Actually ninety percent of the surface water in  

  • the Colorado River comes from  snow in the Rocky Mountains,  

  • which melts, flows down a network of smaller  tributary streams, and reaches the main river

  • The challenges of relying on water  from one source like a river,  

  • instead of from widespread rainfallinvolve both who needs the water and  

  • where they are relative to the sourceManaging water resources is a spatial problem

  • For example, the biggest water-users are farmsfactories, and towns, but they aren't all on  

  • the riverbanks, so they have to find ways to  transport the water they need.And those that  

  • live near the upstream parts of the Colorado  River can use a ton of water if unregulated,  

  • leaving less for anyone who lives downstream

  • And the Colorado River is well, a river. So  as it winds from its source to its mouth,  

  • it's unaware of any political boundaries, like  those from counties, Native American tribal land,  

  • or even international boundaries. But the  humans that have made this semi-arid region  

  • their home generally use all these political  boundaries for decision making about water.

  • Understanding why precipitation is unevenly  distributed, how drought can change seasonally,  

  • and how people use water are key parts of  geography. And the intersection between  

  • these physical geography processes and  human geography decision-making can be  

  • the source of a lot of tension -- especially  when it comes to environmental policies.

  • For example, Native Americans have used  the Colorado River's water and managed  

  • its resources for thousands of yearsBut the modern legal doctrine that governs  

  • water rights in the West -- which goes back  to the Gold Rush of the 1840s and 50s in some  

  • places -- is theprior appropriation doctrine.”  This doctrine allocates rights based on who  

  • started using the water first...except  traditional Native American claims

  • Then in 1922 the seven states  of the Colorado River Basin  

  • drew up the Colorado River Compact  on how to divide the waters, because  

  • seasonal precipitation alone wouldn't provide  enough water for everyone that lived there

  • But they overestimated the flow of the  river and didn't account for how the  

  • amount of water varies year-to-year. So  each state was allocated more water than  

  • actually exists -- a problem that's led  to intense legal battles between states

  • Like California is a downstream  user but also a very powerful state,  

  • and for decades was using more water  than it was allocated. So in 2003,  

  • after threats that their water would be cut  off, California agreed to reduce its use of  

  • Colorado River water over the next 14 years  to allow the upstream states their share

  • The other big problem was that the river's  natural flow had to be physically moved to  

  • suit certain human wants and needswhich made things even less fair

  • Like two huge dams -- the Hoover dam on the  Arizona-Nevada border and the Glen Canyon dam  

  • in Arizona --  were built in the 1930s and 60s  to store and hold back water in reservoirs

  • Lake Mead, the reservoir for the Hoover damsupplies water to 25 million people in California,  

  • Arizona, and Nevada, and generates  hydroelectricity for the region.  

  • But all that water still has to be  divided between different needs

  • And since the 1950s, explosive  urban growth in upstream states,  

  • like the growth of cities like Phoenix  and Las Vegas, meant skyrocketing demand  

  • for water there -- and, as a consequence, less  water for farmers and other rural communities.

  • Basically, early miscalculations and  mismanagement has created a water  

  • crisis that affects 40 million people  and 5.5 million acres of farmland.

  • As of 2021, privatizing water rights is being  proposed as a new solution. Private investors  

  • would buy water rights, and cities, statesand individual farms could buy water from them,  

  • even across state lines. This way the market  would decide whether water was more valuable  

  • serving urban or rural populations, redefining  the century-old rules for sharing the river

  • So yes, this would turn the river water into  a commodity that could be bought and sold.  

  • Private investors would redraw the map of water  distribution in the West and make a profit.

  • But while water management enters a new phase  with big players from Wall Street staking a claim,  

  • Native American tribes are still working to obtain  

  • their water rights that they  were finally awarded in 1908.

  • There is no substitute for water. Today we  mainly focused on one region with one kind  

  • of precipitation pattern, but we still saw how  studying precipitation opens up lots of deeper  

  • questions in geography, from what makes a region  habitable to political struggles over resources

  • Some of the most serious geopolitical  issues in the Middle East, North Africa,  

  • South Asia, and the Western US  relate to control over water.

  • Like water shortages affect public healthreduce agricultural productivity, and  

  • damage ecological systems on which we depend.   So, really, that map of the Earth's precipitation,  

  • and where and how much water falls from  the sky, is the foundation of a bunch  

  • of big geographical questions: who should  control water? Is water a basic human right?  

  • And how have humans altered the environment  to get the water we need -- and at what cost?  

  • As geographers, we'll keep looking for new  answers in the stories and patterns of the Earth.

  • Like next time when we'll look at cyclonic  systems that bring dramatic weather and spatial  

  • implications affecting human activities like  where we build our homes and choose to live.

  • Many maps and borders represent modern  geopolitical divisions that have often  

  • been decided without the consultation, permissionor 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 is filmed at the  

  • Team Sandoval Pierce Studio and was made with  the help of all these nice people. If you want  

  • to help keep all Crash Course free for everyoneforever, you can join our community on Patreon

Even though lots of maps help us understand  our geographical space, there's one map  

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