sábado, 14 de marzo de 2015

Chinese workers at the railroad construction

Here you have a short video about Chinese workers in the railrod construction. 2015 marks the 150th anniversary since the arrival of the first Chinese workers at the United States.





viernes, 6 de marzo de 2015

Asian American

The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) defines "Asians" as people having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the Indian subcontinent including, for example, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam.

According to the US Census Bureau, on the 2010 Census, the Asian population category includes people who indicated their race(s) as “Asian” or reported entries such as “Asian Indian,” “Chinese,” “Filipino,” “Korean,” “Japanese,” and “Vietnamese” or provided other detailed Asian responses.

In 2011, the population of Asians, including those of more than one race, was estimated at 18.2 million in the U.S. population.

In 2010, those who identified themselves only as Asianconstituted approximately 4.8 percent of the American population—14.7 million individuals.
Jerry Jang, co-founder of Yahoo.

The three largest Asian groups in the United States in 2011 were Chinese (4 million)(except Taiwanese descent),Filipinos (3.4 million), and Asian Indians (3.2 million). These were followed by Vietnamese (1.9 million)Koreans (1.7 million) and Japanese (1.3 million).
The Census Bureau projects that by the year 2050, there will be more than 40.6 million Asians living in the United States, comprising 9.2 percent of the total U.S. population.
Jeremy Lin, Los Angeles Lakers basketball player.
The Asian population is represented throughout the country. States with the largest Asian populations (including those with more than one race) in 2011 were California (5.8 million)and New York (1.7 million)Hawaii had the largest concentration or percentage of the total population as Asians (57% of Hawaiian population reported being of Asian descent(including those of more than one race)).
Asians have a long history in the United States:
Ever since Chinese sought out the "Gold Mountain" in the California gold rush, Asians have been coming to America in significant numbers. Once America opened its doors—although at times halfheartedly or reluctantly—to Asianimmigration, Americans of Asian descent experienced lives as diverse as their backgrounds. Many live in communities with such names as Chinatown, Koreatown, Little Tokyo, and Little Saigon. From western railroads to New York City's Chinatown, from Alaskan canneries to hospitals in New York and New Jersey, from California's Silicon Valley assembly lines to high-technology laboratories of Route 128 in Massachusetts—people of Asian descent have contributed much to the building of society and the development of culture in America.
Chinese workers working in the railroad.
Chinese and Filipino mariners of the Spanish galleons jumped ship at Acapulco during the 1600s, and this may have initiated the first immigration toward what would become the United States. Filipinos made their way to present-day Louisiana and established settlements in the Barataria Bay area. The first wave of migration began in the mid-nineteenth century with the arrival of 195 Chinese contract laborers in Hawaii and more than 20 thousand Chinese in California. Gold is what drew Chinese to California in 1848, and work in the sugar plantations attracted Chinese contract laborers to Hawaii beginning in 1851, thanks largely to the efforts of the Hawaiian Sugar Planters' Association. The Chinese were followed by 149 Japanese laborers shipped to Hawaii in 1868 and dozens of Japanese seeking their fortunes in California to work in the Wakamatsu Tea and Silk Colony. Large numbers of Japanese laborers, contracted under the Irwin Convention, came to Hawaii in 1885 and continued to do so until 1894. The newcomers were welcomed coldly in other parts. The 1878 ruling in the case of Ah Yup determined the ineligibility of Chinese for citizenship. In 1894 the circuit court in Massachusetts confirmed the ineligibility of the Japanese for U.S. citizenship; this finding did not, however, prevent Shinsei Kaneko from becoming the first to be naturalized in California in 1896.

My sources:
http://www.cdc.gov/minorityhealth/populations/REMP/asian.html
http://eas-ref.press.jhu.edu/view?aid=384&from=search&query=asian%20american&link=search%3Freturn%3D1%26query%3Dasian%2520american%26section%3Ddocument%26doctype%3Dall


Geography of Asia

Asia
The border between Europe and Asia is debated. Most geographers define Asia’s western border as a line that follows the Ural Mountains, the Caucasus Mountains and the Caspian and Black Seas. Asia is bordered by the Arctic, Pacific and the Indian Oceans. Asia can be divided into five physical regions: mountain systems, plateaus, plains, steppes and deserts.

Mountain Systems

The Himalaya mountains extend for about 2,500 kilometers, separating the Indian subcontinent from the rest of Asia. The Indian subcontinent is still crashing northward into Asia, and the Himalayas are growing about 5 centimeters (2 inches) every year.

Himalayas Mountains
The Himalayas cover more than 612,000 square kilometers through the northern states of India and making up most of the terrain of Nepal and Bhutan. The Himalayas include the highest mountain summit in the world, Mount Everest, which stands at 8,850 meters.

The Tien Shan mountain system stretches for about 2,400 kilometers, straddling the border between Kyrgyzstan and China.

The Ural Mountains run for approximately 2,500 kilometers in an indirect north-south line from Russia to Kazakhstan. The Ural Mountains are some of the world’s oldest, at 250 million to 300 million years old.

Plateaus 

Asia is home to many plateaus, areas of relatively level high ground. The Iranian plateau covers more than 3.6 million square kilometers, encompassing most of Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan.

The Tibetan Plateau is usually considered the largest and highest area ever to exist in the history of Earth. Known as the “Rooftop of the World,” the plateau covers an area about half the size of the contiguous United States and averages more than 5,000 meters above sea level. The Tibetan Plateau is extremely important to the world’s water cycle because of its tremendous number of glaciers. These glaciers contain the largest volume of ice outside the poles. The ice and snow from these glaciers feed Asia’s largest rivers. Approximately 2 billion people depend on the rivers fed by the plateau’s glaciers. 

Plains, Steppes, and Deserts

The West Siberian Plain, located in central Russia, is considered one of the world’s largest areas of continuous flatland. It extends from north to south about 2,400 kilometers and from west to east about 1,900 kilometers. With more than 50 percent of its area at less than 100 meters above sea level, the plain contains some of the world’s largest swamps and flood plains.

Central Asia is dominated by a steppe landscape, a large area of flat, unforested grassland. Mongolia can be divided into different steppe zones: the mountain forest steppe, the arid steppe, and the desert steppe. These zones transition from the country’s mountainous region in the north to the Gobi Desert on the southern border with China. 

Rub' al Khali Desert


The Rub’ al Khali
 desert, considered the world’s largest sand sea, covers an area larger than France across Saudi Arabia, Oman, the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen. It holds roughly half as much sand as Africa’s Sahara desert, even though it is 15 times smaller in size.

Freshwater

Lake Baikal, located in southern Russia, is the deepest lake in the world, reaching a depth of 1,620 meters (5,315 feet). The lake contains 20 percent of the world’s unfrozen freshwater, making it the largest reservoir on Earth. It is also the world’s oldest lake, at 25 million years old. 
Yangtze River
The Yangtze is the longest river in Asia and the third longest in the world (behind the Amazon of South America and the Nile of Africa). The Tigris and Euphrates Rivers begin in the highlands of eastern Turkey and flow through Syria and Iraq, joining in the city of Qurna, Iraq, before emptying into the Persian Gulf. The land between the two rivers, known as Mesopotamia, was the center of the earliest civilizations, including Sumer and the Akkadian Empire.

Saltwater

The Persian Gulf has an area of more than 234,000 square kilometers. It borders Iran, Oman, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, and Iraq. The gulf is subject to high rates of evaporation, making it shallow and extremely salty. The seabed beneath the Persian Gulf contains an estimated 50 percent of the world’s oil reserves. The countries that border the gulf have engaged in a number of disputes over this rich resource.

The Sea of Okhotsk covers 1.5 million square kilometers between the Russian mainland and the Kamchatka Peninsula. The sea is largely frozen between October and March. Large ice floes make navigation in winter almost impossible.

The Bay of Bengal is the largest bay in the world, covering almost 2.2 million square kilometers and bordering Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka, and Burma. Many large rivers, including the Ganges and Brahmaputra, empty into the bay. The briny wetlands formed by the Ganges-Brahmaputra on the Bay of Bengal is the largest delta in the world.
Bay of Bengal


Bibliography:
http://education.nationalgeographic.com/education/encyclopedia/asia/?ar_a=1
http://education.nationalgeographic.com/education/encyclopedia/north-america-physical-geography/?ar_a=1

America and Asia's populations

About 316 Million people (2013) are living in America. This number includes also high amounts of immigrants: 39 Million Afro-Americans, 50.5 Million Americans with origin in Latin America, ca. 14.7 Million Americans with origin in Asia and 3 Million Americans with origin in India.
This means 30 inhabitants per square kilometer.

When we think of Americans the picture that comes into our minds is a picture of a stereotype. People think of others in stereotypes because they do not understand well the culture and the people. They put them into classifications thinking everybody being of that culture needs to be as they picture them in their heads.


So, what does a typical American look like?

In our heads it is an overweight guy with a gun in his hands and of course some kind of junk food. We link restaurants like McDonald’s or Burger King with the American culture and, furthermore, an excessive national pride (American flag).
I want to emphasize this is not the way every American citizen does look like. We are talking about stereotypes! 


The Asian population can be divided into six Asian regions as followed:
Eastern Asia – 1,527 billion people
South Asia – 1,438 billion people
Southeastern Asia – 558 million of people
Middle East – 348 million of people
Central Asia – 87 million of people
Northern Asia – 2,798 billion of people


Forecasts predict that the Asian population will rise to 5,2 billion people until 2050. Reasons for this immense growth is, on the one hand, the high increase in birthrate in countries like e.g. India and, on the other hand, the increase in life expectancy. Particularly countries like Japan (82 years), Singapore (82 years), Taiwan (78 years), South Korea (79 years) and Thailand (72 years) are countries with highest life expectancy. This attributes to better nutrition, better hygiene as well as an ample medical care in the last centuries.

Asia is not only the most heavily populated continent, it also includes the most metropolises in the world e.g. Peking, Delhi, Istanbul, Jakarta, Mumbai, Shanghai, Manila or Tokyo.

Referring to the stereotypes I only depict the, in my opinion, most common one – Chinese.

What does a typical Chinese stereotype look like ?

Eating rice all day, always photographing every place they are (mostly selfies nowadays), being very good in studies (especially in Mathematics!) and defending oneself by doing Kung Fu. 









World's population statistics

Geography of America

Asia is the largest continent of the world. It covers 30% of the Earth’s land area and 60% of the total population are living in Asia.
North America is the third-largest continent in the world. It extends from the tiny Aleutian Islands in the northwest to the islands of Panama in the south. In the north, the continent stretches halfway around the world.
The following text will focus on the most important geographical highlights of North America and Aisa.

North America
Rocky Mountains
North America can be divided into five physical regions: the mountainous west, the Great Plains, the Canadian Shield, the varied eastern region and the Caribbean. Within these regions are all the major types of biomes in the world. Some diverse biomes represented in North America include desert, grassland, tundra and coral reefs.
Western Region
Young mountains rise in the west. The most popular mountains of this region are probably the Rockies, North America’s largest chain. They stretch from the province of British Columbia, Canada, to the U.S. state of New Mexico. The Rocky Mountains are part of a system of the parallel mountain ranges, known as the Cordilleras. A cordillera is a long series of mountain ranges. The Sierra Madre mountain system are also part of the Cordilleras.
The Earth’s youngest mountains are in the cascade Range of the U.S. states of Washington, Oregon and California. Some of them began to form only about a million years ago. Those mountains include rain forest.

Desert
Chihuanhuan Desert
The three major desert regions of North America (Sonoran, Mojave, Chihuanhuan) are all in the American southwest and northern Mexico.
North America also has the deposits of oil and natural gas on the continent. Most of these are located offshore, in the Arctic and Pacific Oceans.
Great Plains
The Great Plains lie in the middle of the continent. The grain grown in this region is also called the “Breadbasket of North America” because it feeds a large part of the world. The animals living in the Great Plains are bison, prairie dogs and grasshoppers.
The Canandian Shiel is a raised but realtively flatplateu which extends over eastern, central and northwestern Canada. It is characterized by a rocky landscape pocked by an astounding number of lakes. The tundra is a biome common to the Canadian Shield.

Canadian Shield

The Canadian Shield is a raised but relatively flatplateau. It extends over eastern, central, and northwestern Canada. The Canadian Shield is characterized by a rocky landscape pocked by an astounding number of lakes.

Eastern Region

This varied region includes the Appalachian Mountains and the Atlantic coastal plain. North America’s older mountain ranges, including the Appalachians, rise near the east coast of the United States and Canada. These areas have been mined for rich deposits of coal and other minerals for hundreds of years.

Wetland areas are a biome of the eastern region and consist of areas of land whose soil is saturated with permanent or seasonal moisture. The Florida Everglades is the largest wetland system in the United States, covering more than 11,137 square kilometers (4,300 square miles) of southern Florida. 
Everglades National Park


The Everglades is a biologically diverse region and contains several bordering ecosystems. Alligators nest in the sawgrass, while wading birds such as egrets, herons, spoonbills, and ibises make their breeding grounds in other wetland tree species, such as cypress and mangrove.

Caribbean Region

The Caribbean Region includes more than 7,000 islands, islets, reefs, and cays. The region’s islands and smaller islets are varied in their topography; some have relatively flat and sandy terrain while others are rugged, mountainous, and volcanic.

The coral reefs and cays of the Caribbean Sea are among the most spectacular biomes in North America. Some coral reefs surround islands, such as the Bahamas, Antigua, and Barbados. Others are found off the Florida Keys, a chain of cays—small islands situated on a coral reef platform—near the southern coast of the U.S. state of Florida. 

Natural Wonders


Yellowstone National Park
North America’s varied landscape features many natural wonders. It has deep canyons, such as Copper Canyon in the Mexican state of Chihuahua. Denali, the continent’s highest peak, stands at 6,194 meters (20,320 feet) within Denali National Park and Preserve in the U.S. state of Alaska. Yellowstone National Park, in the U.S. states of Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho, has some of the world’s most active geysers. Canada’s Bay of Fundy has the greatest tidal range in the world. The Great Lakes form the planet’s largest area of freshwater. The Mississippi River, at 3,730 kilometers (2,320 miles) long, is one of the longest river systems in the world and drains all or parts of 31 U.S. states.

Bibliography: 
http://education.nationalgeographic.com/education/encyclopedia/asia/?ar_a=1
http://education.nationalgeographic.com/education/encyclopedia/north-america-physical-geography/?ar_a=1

Introduction to our blog !

Hi everyone !
We are Janice, Luisa and Jesús, students of Translation and Interpreting at University Pablo de Olavide, and in this blog we are going to talk about differents aspects of America and Asia. We hope it will be useful for all of you !
Have fun !