Social Studies: Latin America: Geography and Cultures
Exploring landforms, regions, people, and traditions
Social Studies: Latin America: Geography and Cultures
Exploring landforms, regions, people, and traditions
Social Studies - Grade 6-8
- 1
Latin America includes Mexico, Central America, the Caribbean, and most of South America. Explain why the region is called Latin America.
Think about the languages spoken in many countries in the region.
The region is called Latin America because many countries there were colonized by Spain, Portugal, or France, whose languages developed from Latin. Spanish, Portuguese, and French are common languages in the region. - 2
Identify the mountain range that runs along the western edge of South America, and explain one way it affects life in nearby areas.
The Andes Mountains run along the western edge of South America. They affect life by creating highland climates, making transportation more difficult, and influencing where people farm and build cities. - 3
The Amazon River Basin contains the Amazon River and the world's largest tropical rainforest. Describe two reasons this region is important.
Think about plants, animals, water, and climate.
The Amazon River Basin is important because it has great biodiversity and provides habitat for many plants and animals. It also helps regulate climate by storing carbon and producing moisture that affects rainfall. - 4
Compare an island country in the Caribbean with a landlocked country in South America. How might access to the ocean affect trade and daily life?
Landlocked means a country has no coastline.
An island country in the Caribbean depends heavily on ocean travel, ports, fishing, and tourism. A landlocked country in South America may have more challenges shipping goods overseas because it must use roads, railroads, or agreements with neighboring countries to reach ports. - 5
Mexico has deserts, mountains, plateaus, and coastal plains. Explain how having many physical regions can affect the economy of a country.
Having many physical regions can support different economic activities. Deserts may have mining, mountains may attract tourism or limit farming, plateaus may support cities and agriculture, and coasts may support fishing, ports, and trade. - 6
Look at the idea of cultural diffusion. Give one example of how Indigenous, European, and African influences have blended in Latin American culture.
Cultural diffusion means the spread and mixing of cultural ideas.
One example of cultural diffusion is Latin American music, which can include Indigenous instruments, European melodies or languages, and African rhythms. Food, religion, dance, and celebrations also show blended cultural influences. - 7
Many people in Brazil speak Portuguese, while most other Latin American countries speak Spanish. Explain the historical reason for this difference.
Brazil speaks Portuguese because Portugal colonized Brazil. Most other parts of Latin America were colonized by Spain, so Spanish became the main language in those countries. - 8
Define the term urbanization and explain one reason many people move from rural areas to cities in Latin America.
Urban areas are cities and large towns.
Urbanization is the growth of cities as more people move to urban areas. Many people move to cities to find jobs, schools, health care, transportation, and other services. - 9
The Panama Canal connects the Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean. Explain why this canal is important for world trade.
The Panama Canal is important because ships can travel between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans without going around the southern tip of South America. This saves time, fuel, and money for international trade. - 10
Choose one major climate zone in Latin America, such as tropical rainforest, desert, highland, or savanna. Describe how that climate can affect housing, clothing, or jobs.
Connect the climate to everyday choices people make.
In a tropical rainforest climate, people may build homes to handle heavy rain and humidity, wear lightweight clothing, and work in farming, forestry, river transportation, or tourism. Climate affects the materials people use and the activities that are practical. - 11
Explain how elevation can change climate in Latin America, especially in the Andes Mountains.
Elevation can make places cooler even when they are near the equator. In the Andes Mountains, higher areas often have colder temperatures than nearby lowlands, which affects crops, clothing, and settlement patterns. - 12
Many Latin American cities were built near coasts, rivers, or fertile valleys. Explain why these locations were useful for settlement.
Think about what people need to survive and trade.
Coasts and rivers made transportation, trade, fishing, and access to water easier. Fertile valleys were useful because they supported farming and provided food for growing communities. - 13
Describe one way tourism can benefit a Latin American country and one challenge tourism can create.
Tourism can benefit a country by creating jobs and bringing money to hotels, restaurants, guides, and local businesses. A challenge is that heavy tourism can damage natural areas, increase prices, or put pressure on water, roads, and historic sites. - 14
The Caribbean is made up of many islands with different histories and languages. Explain why the Caribbean has such cultural diversity.
Think about migration, colonization, and the movement of people.
The Caribbean has cultural diversity because Indigenous peoples, European colonizers, enslaved Africans, and later immigrants all contributed to the region's cultures. Different islands were colonized by different European powers, which also shaped language, religion, food, and customs. - 15
A government wants to protect a rainforest while also allowing people to earn a living. Suggest one policy that could help balance environmental protection and economic needs.
A balanced policy should protect nature and support people.
One helpful policy is to support sustainable forestry, ecotourism, or farming methods that use land without destroying large areas of rainforest. The government could also create protected areas and provide jobs that reward conservation.