Option C: Extreme environments

Option C: Extreme environments

1. The characteristics of extreme environments

  • Why some places are considered to be extreme environments

  • Global-scale distribution of cold and high altitude environments (polar, glacial areas, periglacial areas, high mountains in non-polar places) and hot arid environments (hot deserts and semi-arid areas)

  • Relief and climatic characteristics that make environments extreme, including unreliability and intensity of rainfall in arid environments and the risk of flash floods

  • How relief, climate, human discomfort, inaccessibility, and remoteness present challenges for human habitation and resource development

  • Detailed examples for illustrative purposes

  • The changing distribution of extreme environments over time, including the advance and retreat of glaciers and natural desertification

2. Physical processes and landscapes

  • How physical processes create unique landscapes in extreme environments

  • Glacial processes of erosion, transport and deposition, and landscape features in glaciated areas, including cirques/corries, lakes, pyramidal peaks/horns, Arête, glacial troughs; lateral, medial and terminal moraine and erratics

  • Periglacial processes of freeze-thaw, solifluction and frost heave, and periglacial landscape features, including permafrost, thermokarst, patterned ground and pingos

  • Physical and chemical weathering in hot arid environments, and erosion, transportation and deposition by wind and water

  • Hot, arid landscape features, including dunes, wadis, rock pedestals, mesas and buttes

3. Managing extreme environments

  • The varying power of different stakeholders to extract economic value from extreme environments

  • Agricultural opportunities and challenges in arid areas, including the distinction between aridity and infertility, irrigation access, salinization risk and land ownership

  • Human and physical opportunities and challenges for mineral extraction in cold environments, including inaccessibility, permafrost and resource nationalism

  • Case study of one cold environment to illustrate the issues

  • Human and physical opportunities and challenges for mineral extraction in arid environments, including inaccessibility and climatic and political factors

  • Case study of one arid environment to illustrate the issues

  • Opportunities and challenges for tourism in extreme environments

  • Detailed examples illustrating the involvement of local and global stakeholders

4. Extreme environments futures

  • Future possibilities for managing extreme environments and their communities

  • The causes, acceleration, consequences and management of desertification, including land use, conflict and climate change

  • One case study illustrating the human and physical dimensions of desertification

  • Increasing competition for access to resources in extreme environments, including the role of indigenous groups, civil society organizations, transnational corporations (TNCs) and militia groups

  • One case study to highlight the issues

  • New technology and sustainable development in extreme environments, including greater use of solar power and desalination

  • The impacts and management of global climate change in extreme environments, including adaptation by local populations

Synthesis (Sy), Evaluation (Ev) and Skills (Sk) opportunities

  • How places and people in extreme environments are affected by spatial interactions with other places and people [Sy]

  • The varying spatial scale of the processes and challenges associated with different kinds of extreme environment [Sy/Ev]

  • Varying perspectives on how and why extreme environments are managed [Ev]

  • How glacial systems and climatic data are best represented graphically [Sk]

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