GVII-80
PHOTOGRAMMETRIC ENGINEERING
of Human Geography (7). In this study he
described Peru as having two broad nat
ural regions: the Maritime Andes and the
Eastern Andes. Within these regions he
described the dominant “topographic
types” 1 and their relationship to agricul
ture, settlement, pastoral life, and com
munications between groups. These topo
graphic types represented such recurring
features as high plateaus, basins, canyons,
snow-covered mountains, etc. He used
three basic principles. The first is one of the
fundamental tenets of the science of geog
raphy, and may be called the principal of
relationships. The physical elements of the
earth are related to each other and to social
forces which affect the land, permitting cor
relations to he made between the land and
human activity. For example, in appraising
the damage done by a forest fire the relief,
soil, vegetation cover and the climate are
all related, and they in turn are related to
Fig. 1.—Regional diagram representing the deep
canyoned country of southern Peru (4). The dark hatchures
represent the canyon type, where settlements are located
on the only agricultural land, the open diagonal crosshatch
represents the plateau type, used for pasture, and the close
diagonal crosshatch represents the mountain type. (From
Bowman’s “The Andes of Southern Peru.”)
several techniques to illustrate these
relationships, the most effective of which
was the “regional diagram,” as shown in
Figure 1, a composite sketch map repre
senting a typical situation, showing the
topographic types and how they combined
with other factors to affect man’s use of the
land from place to place in the region.
Bowman’s classifications were based on
1 The term “topographic type,” “natural
land type,” “landscape type” and “terrain
type” are used synonymously in this paper.
the economic value of the timber and the
watershed. These relationships permit a
classification of terrain 2 according to its
physical and economic values.
The second principle was first expressed
by Bowman himself (6). A given composi
tion of the physical elements of the earth is
repeated essentially from place to place over a
region, with the result that types of natural
2 The term “terrain” is used in its broadest
sense in this paper to include the entirety of the
physical and cultural landscape.