Geographical features affect the development of civilization. Explore these mountains, lakes, rivers and forest tours to see how these features form the world we know today
Geographical features are features of the earth created by people or nature. Natural geographical features include topography and ecosystems. For example, the type of terrain, the physical factors of the environment are natural geographical features. By contrast, human settlements and other forms of engineering are considered to be a kind of artificial geographical features. Biodiversity in ecosystems is the difference in creatures of any origin, including land, ocean and other aquatic ecosystems. Organisms continue to establish a series of relationships with other elements that make up the environment and ecosystems describe everything that exists between organisms and the environment.
Throughout the world history, civilization has developed and destroyed. This is due to the geographical characteristics of the country or region. Geographic features can benefit the region, but it can also cause catastrophic events. These geographical features include mountains, oceans, volcanoes and so on. The geographical feature that has a positive and negative influence on the country and region becomes the ocean. The ocean like the Pacific can provide seafood to the region to help civilization develop extra food.
A zone is a group of geographic information. A region is a geographic region defined by one or more different features. A region can be based on physical characteristics (such as watersheds), political boundaries (county, country or continent), culture or religion, or other categorized geographical areas. This field is formal, functional or emotional. Formal areas are also called homogeneous or uniform areas. Entities within a formal area share one or more common characteristics, such as country residents. The functional area is the area fixed by focus. For example, the customer service area of the restaurant's delivery service, or the school district of the elementary school. Autonomous areas (also called popular areas or perceived areas) are geographical areas that exist as part of cultural or ethnic identity and therefore do not meet political or formal region boundaries.