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Physical Geography

Physical geography covers the topics relating to the surface of the earth - the landforms, glaciers, rivers, climate, oceans, earth-sun interaction, hazards, and more.
Aquifers
A comprehensive overview of aquifers and information about the Ogallala Aquifer in the United States, from Geography at About.com.
Aphelion and Perihelion
An overview of the earth's orbit around the sun, including the times when it is closest to the sun and farthest from the sun, known as perihelion and aphelion, respectively.
About Lapse Rate
An overview of the atmospheric phenomenon known as lapse rate. Lapse rate explains the decrease or increase in temperature of a parcel of air that rises or lowers.
Glaciers
A comprehensive overview of glaciers. Includes the types of glaciers, how glaciers carve the land, and the importance of glaciers. From Colin Stief of Geography at About.com.
Floods and Flooding
River and coastal flooding are the most frequently occurring natural disaster and floods are increasing in occurrence more rapidly than any other disaster. This article from Geography at About.com provides an overview of flooding and floods.
Physical Geography Overview
An overview of the subject of physical geography and its various aspects from your About.com Guide to Geography.
Frequency of Earthquakes
A chart showing the number of earthquakes based on magnitude, from your About.com Guide to Geography.
Atmosphere Composition
A listing of the composition of the atmosphere of the earth, from your About.com Guide to Geography.
The Four Seasons
Lean about the start dates for each of the four seasons in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. Find out about the earth-sun interaction on the June Solstice, December Solstice, March Equinox, and September Equinox, from your About.com Guide to Geography.
Names for Water Bodies
Find out the similarities (and differences) between different types of water bodies, from your About.com Guide to Geography.
The Hydrologic Cycle
A summary of how water gets from ocean to land to river and back again, from your About.com Guide to Geography.
Erosion
Learn about water, wind, ice, and waves - the agents of erosion that wear away at the surface of the earth, from your About.com Guide to Geography.
Atacama Desert
The Atacama Desert of northern Chile is the world's second driest region (icy Antarctica is first). Although the Tropic of Capricorn passes through the region, the Atacama lies in the rain shadow of Chile's Coast Range, which squeezes out the moisture from the atmosphere.
Atmosphere, Biosphere, Hydrosphere, Lithosphere
Learn about the four spheres of the earth - the lithosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere, and atmosphere.
Avalanches
Learn about the deadly hazards of the mountains, avalanches.
California Earthquake
This page provides clear direction for locating information about California earthquakes that have just occurred or past historical California earthquakes.
December Solstice (Summer in the Southern Hemishpere)
An overview of the December solstice.
Deserts
Learn about the deserts of the world and other arid lands, from your About.com Guide to Geography.
Erosion
Discover the four key agents of erosion and their erosive powers.
Glacier Deposition and Moraines
The rock and soil picked up and transported by glaciers creates new landscapes as it is eventually deposited by melting and retreating glaciers. Learn about deposition and moraines of glaciers.
Intertidal Zone
Discover the fascinating intertidal zone, where land, ocean, and air meet.
June Solstice (Summer in the Northern Hemisphere)
An overview of the June solstice and what it means to our planet and the seasons.
Karst and Sinkholes
Dangerous sinkholes and beautiful caverns are two results of landscapes known as karst topography. Learn about these features from your About.com Guide to Geography.
Magnetic Reversal
Discover all about the magnetic reversal of the earth's poles throughout the planet's history. The poles have reversed 170 times in the past 100 million years. Find out when it will happen next!
Mars Geography
In the tradition of ancient geography, this feature describes a far-away and unfamiliar place, the planet Mars.
Modified Mercalli Scale
The 12-step scale used to measure the felt and observed intensity of earthquakes.
Names for Water Bodies
Find out the difference between a bay, a gulf, and an inlet or a stream, a creek, and a brook.
Oxbow Lakes
Discover the fascinating truth behind oxbow lakes, billabongs, and bayous.
Prepare for Tsunami
Learn how to prepare yourself and your family for a tsunami.
Preparing for Floods
Floods are the most common natural disaster. Learn more about floods, the definition of a 100-year-flood, and how to prepare.
Ring of Fire
Find out more about the arc of volcanoes which circles the Pacific Ocean.
Rivers
Rivers provide us with food, energy, recreation, transportation routes, and of course water for irrigation and for drinking. Learn all about rivers from the About.com Guide to Geography.
Soil Size Classification
From clay to gravel, each soil partical fits into its own category.
Soil
An overview of the soil of the lithosphere, from your About.com Guide to Geography.
Summer Solstice
June 21 is the summer solstice in the Northern Hemisphere and marks the beginning of summer for the earth north of the equator.
Sunrise, Sunset - The Longest Day
The summer solstice is the longest day of daylight in the year but it's not the day of the earliest sunrise or sunset - learn more about this intriguing occurence.
Terminator Line
Learn about the terminator line on the earth that separates light from darkness.
The Equator, Hemispheres, Tropic of Cancer, and Tropic of Capricorn
The facts about the key lines of latitude that relate to the position of the sun and the angle of the earth.
The Hydrologic Cycle
The sun makes the water go around - from the ocean to the air to the land.
The Physical Environment
This online physical geography textbook is an amazing resource. Its images and graphics really help to provide detailed information about the basics of physical geography.
The Rock Cycle
Discover how igneous, metamorphic, and sedimentary rocks are created and how they can be recycled as part of the rock cycle of the earth's crust.
Tides of the Earth's Oceans
An overview of the effects of lunar and solar gravity upon the earth's oceans and even its crust.
Tornado
Everything you ever wanted to know about tornadoes and tornado alley. Tornadoes are the most destructive of any local atmospheric phenomena.
Uniformitarianism
James Hutton, known as the father of geology, suggested that the earth was much older and that processes occurring in the present were the same processes that had operated in the past, and would be the processes that operate in the future. This concept became known as uniformitarianism and can be summarized by the phrase 'the present is the key to the past.'

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