Academic Year |
2024Year |
School/Graduate School |
School of Letters |
Lecture Code |
BH214001 |
Subject Classification |
Specialized Education |
Subject Name |
地理学特論C |
Subject Name (Katakana) |
チリガクトクロンC |
Subject Name in English |
Special Lecture on Geography C |
Instructor |
HIRANO JUNPEI |
Instructor (Katakana) |
ヒラノ ジュンペイ |
Campus |
Higashi-Hiroshima |
Semester/Term |
2nd-Year, First Semester, OutOfTerm(1st) |
Days, Periods, and Classrooms |
(O1) Inte:See the bulletin board for detail. |
Lesson Style |
Lecture |
Lesson Style (More Details) |
|
Mainly lectures, heavy use of blackboard writing |
Credits |
2.0 |
Class Hours/Week |
|
Language of Instruction |
J
:
Japanese |
Course Level |
3
:
Undergraduate High-Intermediate
|
Course Area(Area) |
23
:
Arts and Humanities |
Course Area(Discipline) |
12
:
Geography |
Eligible Students |
|
Keywords |
Quaternary, climate change, proxy data, climate reconstruction, Little Ice Age, Little Climatic Optimum |
Special Subject for Teacher Education |
|
Special Subject |
|
Class Status within Educational Program (Applicable only to targeted subjects for undergraduate students) | |
---|
Criterion referenced Evaluation (Applicable only to targeted subjects for undergraduate students) | Geography, Archaeology, and Cultural Heritage (Abilities and Skills) ・Acquisition of the research methods of Geography, Archaeology and Cultural Heritage |
Class Objectives /Class Outline |
Students will learn about climate formation and its relationship with daily life in order to be able to discuss physical geography from a bird’s-eye view. |
Class Schedule |
lesson1 Guidance, what is a “climate system” lesson2C haracteristics of climate change during the Quaternary period (approximately 2.6 million years) lesson3 Glacial/interglacial cycles and their factors lesson4 Climatic environment of the last ice age (1) lesson5 Climatic environment of the last ice age (2) lesson6 Transition from glacial to post-glacial period lesson7 Stable climate for past 10,000 years lesson8 Climate change over the past 2,000 years lesson9 Climate during the Medieval Warm Period (Little Climatic Optimum)
lesson10 Climate of Little Ice Age lesson11 Attempts to reconstruct climate from ancient documentary materials: Reconstructing climate based on cherry blossom flowering records lesson12 Attempts to reconstruct climate from ancient documentary materials: Reconstructing climate based on lake freezing/break-up records lesson13 Attempts to reconstruct climate from ancient documentary materials: Reconstructing climate using diary weather records from Edo period lesson14 Reconstructing climate disasters in history: Case study of typhoon course estimation
lesson15 Summary
These lectures will explain the characteristics of climate change and the causes of change during the Quaternary period (approximately 2.6 million years), which is the era in which humans evolved and spread across the Earth. Additionally, students will learn about the methods to reconstruct past climates, for which no meteorological observations are available, by using various proxy data. |
Text/Reference Books,etc. |
Textbooks are not specified.
References: Nakagawa, T., 100,000 years of History of Humanity and Climate, Tokyo: Kodansha Bluebacks. Le Roy Ladurie, E. (Inagaki, F., trans.), Abrégé d'histoire du climat du Moyen Âge à nos jours [Abridged History of the Climate from the Middle Ages to Modern Times], Tokyo: Fujiwara Shoten.
References other than those listed above will be introduced during the course.
|
PC or AV used in Class,etc. |
|
(More Details) |
PowerPoint will be used in addition to handouts. |
Learning techniques to be incorporated |
|
Suggestions on Preparation and Review |
Instructions will be given during the course. |
Requirements |
|
Grading Method |
Quizzes will be given at the end of each day of the intensive lecture, and students will be evaluated based on their total score. |
Practical Experience |
|
Summary of Practical Experience and Class Contents based on it |
|
Message |
|
Other |
Class improvement surveys are conducted for all class subjects; therefore, please cooperate by filling out the survey. Instructors will provide comments on the responses and use them for future improvement. |
Please fill in the class improvement questionnaire which is carried out on all classes. Instructors will reflect on your feedback and utilize the information for improving their teaching. |