Southern European countries. Geographical location and composition of the territory

Municipal State Educational Institution Basic Educational School in Ramonovo Settlement

Public lesson

by geography on the topic:

“Countries of Southern Europe.

Italy"

Prepared by:

geography teacher

first qualification category

Elkanova L.Kh.

2015

Demonstration of the presentation “Countries of Southern Europe. Italy" slide 1.

The purpose of the lesson: name and show the countries of Southern Europe and their capitals on the political map; describe the geographical location, climate, inland waters of Italy, flora and fauna, population, industrial development and attractions of the country. develop feelings of will and independence (development of initiative, self-confidence, perseverance, the ability to overcome difficulties, achieve the intended goal, the ability to control oneself, endurance, self-control, the ability to act independently)Slide 2.

Lesson type: study of new educational material.

Type of lesson: lesson is a lecture.

Teaching methods and techniques: dialogic method.

Tasks:

Educational:

    to introduce students to all the countries of Southern Europe;

    to form knowledge about the features of the nature and development of Italy.

Developing:

    learn to identify geographic objects from the atlas (countries and their capitals);

    develop the communication skills of students through the use of information technology;

Educational:

    education of cognitive interest among students in geography; instill love for the subject.

Equipment:

    interactive board,

    multimedia presentation,

    projector, computer,

    World map,

    map of Europe.

During the classes:

    Organizing time.

    Interview.

Let's remember what we learned in the last lesson.

Express survey. Test (Program SMART notebook ). Slide 3. By moving objects around the interactive whiteboard, you will have to give the correct answer. So, let's begin.

    Learning new material.

The countries of Southern Europe are distinguished by their location on large peninsulas - the Iberian, Apennine and Balkan, deeply protruding into the Mediterranean Sea.slide 4. The largest states of this part of Europe are Italy, Spain, Portugal and Greece.Slide 5. In addition to them, in Southern Europe there are several of the smallest, "dwarf" states in the world.slide 6.

The countries of Southern Europe have much in common in nature and in the economic activity of the population.

Italy is one of the oldest countries in the world, distinguished by its rich history and typically Mediterranean nature. Known for its boot-like shape. It occupies the Apennine Peninsula, large islands in the Mediterranean Sea - Sicily and Sardinia, as well as part of the mainland.Slide 7.

Italy , official name -Italian Republic - stateinSouthern Europe, in the centerMediterranean. The capital of Italy is the cityRome . Borders withFrance in the northwest, withSwitzerland and Austria - in the north andSlovenia - in the north-east. It also has internal borders withthe Vatican andSan Marino . Slide 7.

The origin of the word Italia is not exactly known. According to the most common point of view, the term came from Greece, and means"country calves ». The bull was a symbol of the peoples who inhabited southern Italy, and was often depicted heading the Roman She-Wolf.

Mountains stretch across almost the entire territory of the country. The northern part is occupied by the largest mountain system in all of Europe and Italy - the Alps.slide 8. Their mountain peaks on the northern border reach almost 5 thousand meters. (Mount Blanc - 4807 m).Slide 9 . By the way, in Italy this mountain in Italy is called Monte Bianco. This is an area of ​​young folding at the boundary of lithospheric plates. It coincides with the Euro-Asian seismic belt. Earthquakes and volcanic eruptions occur here. The most famous of the volcanoes is Vesuvius.slide 10. Watch the video and answer what you saw.Slide 11 (Vesuvius 1).

Report of Katipova Farida. Slide 11 (Vesuvius 2)

Mount Etna is located on the island of Sicily.slide 12. Earthquakes are most frequent in Central and Southern Italy. Watch the video and answer what you saw.

The Apennines are inferior in height to the Alps and do not exceed 3000 m above sea level.slide 13. They don't have permanent snow.

There are few lowlands in Italy, they stretch in a narrow strip along the coasts. The largest - the Padan Plain - is located along the valley of the Po River.. slide 14. This is the main granary of the country, where fruit orchards and vineyards, grain crops, sugar beets are everywhere.slide 15.

Italy is relatively poor in minerals, with the exception of mercury ore and sulfur. There are small deposits of polymetallic ores. But there are many different building materials - marble, granite, volcanic tuffs.slide 16.

The great length of the country from north to south, the protection from the north by high mountains and the influence of the warm and non-freezing sea determine the climate of the country. The further south, the warmer it gets. The Padan Plain has a warm temperate climate, with hot summers but cold and foggy winters.slide 17.

Much of the country has a Mediterranean climate with long, hot summers and warm, wet winters. The average January temperature is above 0⁰С. In winter it often rains, the sky is covered with clouds. Snow on the Apennine Peninsula falls very rarely.

Now let's take a lookvideo report , which was prepared for us by Afrasimova Madina.slide 18.

Population . In terms of population in foreign Europe, Italy is second only to Germany.slide 19. The main population is Italians, their language belongs to the Romance group. The highest population density is in the north of the country, where there are many cities, and around Naples. Relatively rare population in the mountains. Many Italians live and work in neighboring Switzerland and Germany. More than half of the population lives in cities.slide 20.

Italy is an industrial country. Most of the population is employed in factories and plants.Slide 21. Since there are not enough own minerals, imported raw materials are mostly used. The country produces a variety of cars, among which the production of cars stands out, in their manufacture Italy occupies one of the first places in the world.slide 22. Many factories refining oil into fuel and chemical products - plastics, synthetic fibers, fabrics from them, yarn, varnishes and paints. slide 23. Almost all oil is imported from abroad, mainly from Southwest Asia and North Africa. Many industrial enterprises are located on the sea coast. Modern ships are also built here. Italian motorcycles and scooters are also known. Italy is the birthplace of scooters.

Italy is called the "main garden" of Europe, so diverse are the grown fruits - apples, pears, peaches, apricots, cherries, figs.slide 24. In the southern part of the country, and especially in Sicily, plantations of oranges, tangerines, lemons, vineyards are everywhere.Slide 25 . Italy is second only to Spain in harvesting olives.

Video "Agriculture in Sicily" slide 26.

High temperatures in summer, warm, wet winters favor the cultivation of a wide variety of crops. Cereals can produce two crops a year, but dry summers require artificial irrigation in many places. The main grain crop is wheat. slide 27. Everyone knows the traditional Italian dish made from wheat flour - pasta, of which there are several dozen types.slide 28. On the irrigated lands of the Padana Plain, large areas are occupied by rice and vegetable crops.

A large number of sunny days, beautiful nature, warm sea, an abundance of historical monuments attract millions of tourists to Italy from around the world.slide 29. In Rome, a city with almost three thousand years of history, buildings and ruins of buildings built a very long time ago have been preserved. Part of the city is occupied by the "dwarf" state of the Vatican, where the head of the Catholic Church is located.

Coliseum or Flavian amphitheater - amphitheater, architectural monument ancient rome, the most famous and one of the most grandiose structures ancient world that have survived to our time. Is in Rome. slide 30.

Video "Colosseum" slide 31.

    Consolidation.

So, you got acquainted with the countries of Southern Europe. Particularly with Italy. And now let's check the knowledge gained on this country(Handout).

We continue to fix. You need to answer some interesting questions. slide 32.

    Summary of the lesson.

Italy…- The cradle of civilization, which gave rise to the existence of all countries of Western Europe, their languages ​​and national cultures. Not a single era has done without the active participation of Italy: it is worth remembering at least the Roman Empire, which conquered half the world more than three thousand years ago. Or the Renaissance, without which we would not have seen the world in its usual form. A great contribution to world culture was made by Michelangelo, Dante Alighieri, Leonardo da Vinci, Petrarch - and all of them are natives of this fertile region.slide 33.

    Homework. §72, write down the questions at the end of the paragraph.

Sources:

    Internet resources;

    Textbook "Geography of continents and oceans", Grade 7, Korinskaya V.A., Dushina I.V., Shchenev V.A.slide 34.

List of countries in southern Europe. Tourism: capitals, cities and resorts. Maps of foreign states of the Southern Europe region.

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The sunniest, most cheerful and fertile region of the Old World, Southern Europe seems to have been created by the Creator exclusively for the tireless enjoyment of life. Absolutely everything that the soul and body needs is harmoniously combined in its open spaces: a wonderful climate, a warm sea and wonderful beaches - for any color and texture: pebble, white sand, and rocky, delicious, and most importantly, healthy cuisine, on whose ingredients they acquire a healthy blush even for slender young ladies, a variety of wines (also for every color and taste), and finally - an impressive number of sights and cultural objects, as well as (where without it!) Exciting and, importantly, high-quality shopping. In a word, there would be a desire - to realize anything is possible in Southern Europe.

It is easy to remember the countries of the region by reaffirming the rule: this includes everything related to the “southern shores”, primarily the coast of the Mediterranean Sea.

These are the states located on the Iberian and Apennine peninsulas: Portugal, Spain, Andorra and Italy, Vatican, San Marino, respectively, plus the owners of their own access to the sea Monaco and Greece neighboring them, the blessed Mediterranean islands of Malta and Cyprus and the countries of the Balkan Peninsula : Croatia, Montenegro, Serbia, Albania, Macedonia, etc.

From a tourist point of view, Southern Europe is the most resort region of the “civilized” abroad, without focusing on the Arab surroundings or tropical exoticism. A high-quality beach holiday in a sedately noble European setting with a large share of spiritual food in the form of a rich “excursion”. Among other things, all the conditions for the “exchange of experience” are created here - thanks to a single Schengen visa, it costs nothing to combine a vacation somewhere on the Cote d'Azur with an excursion in the footsteps (and works) of da Vinci or a good time on the Alpine heights. As for the pricing policy, here Southern Europe offers simply massive coverage: if you want, go to the popular Greek resort for a couple of hundred EUR “from the nose”, or if you want, go to the pompous openwork palace on the Croisette. In this sense, South European beaches compare favorably with exotic ones - the shock of all five senses, of course, is not the same, but tourists with any scale of spending can afford to splash around in foreign territorial waters.

Somewhere in the Mediterranean

What else is good about Southern Europe is the climate that is pleasant for the domestic sense of touch. On the one hand, there are no sudden changes in the weather - summers are traditionally hot, winters are moderately cool. On the other hand, the longed-for warmth in the midst of the Russian winter (say, +18 ° C on the Italian "heel" in January) and the real Mediterranean summer, as opposed to the restless northern cyclones - with air trembling from the heat, cicadas torn in every way, piercing blue of the sea and sky and soothing warm evenings somewhere on the terrace of a fish restaurant in Cyprus.

And of course, one cannot fail to mention the mouth-watering dishes of southern European cuisines, the mere sight of which makes even the staunchest adherents of gastronomic asceticism cloud their minds. All these soft cheeses, olives and new wine, juicy tomatoes and fresh greens, a deafening variety of fish and seafood, an Edenic amount of ripe fruits, sweets, cakes and tartlets ... In general, you already understood that in Southern Europe you should definitely go into everything heavy, despite the conventions and despite the treacherously crawling to the next "top ten" arrow of the scales!

Table 4 - Nordic countries

Northern Europe has a favorable economic and geographical position, which is determined by the following traits : demarcation of the countries of the region into Western and Eastern Europe; access to the seas of the Atlantic Ocean: the Baltic, Northern, Norwegian and two seas of the Arctic Ocean - Greenland and Barents; location at the intersection of important sea and air routes from Europe to North America; land proximity to Russia, which offers the prospect of close contacts and a huge sales market, as well as maritime proximity to the Baltic countries, influence their political and economic situation; neighborhood on the southern borders with highly developed EU countries (three countries of the region - Denmark, Sweden and Finland - are members of the EU).

There are many similarities in the historical development, geographical location, language and culture of the peoples of the Nordic countries. All countries are members UN: Denmark, Iceland, Norway - members of NATO; Since 1814, Sweden has adhered to the principle of non-participation (neutrality) in military-political blocs and military conflicts in foreign policy.

Natural conditions and resources. most characteristic feature of the geographical location of the Nordic countries is their location near the sea, which greatly influenced both the nature and the economy of the region. Most of Finnoscandinavia (the area that covers the Scandinavian Peninsula and Finland) is located within the Baltic Shield, so fuel minerals there is no. Stocks oil on the shelf of the North Sea (Norwegian sector) - 1.2 billion tons, natural gas - 1995 billion m 3. Finland has significant peat reserves (25 million tons). Sweden belongs to the most wealthy raw uranium countries in Europe. The crystalline rocks of the Baltic Shield are rich in iron ore with iron content from 25 to 40% (Sweden), copper and lead (Finland).

Mountain rivers are the source hydropower resources . The countries of the region are sufficiently provided with fresh water. The great wealth that is called "green gold" here is forest. Natural and recreational resources very peculiar, especially in Iceland - a country of geysers and active volcanoes, located near the Arctic Circle. Features of the natural resource potential of the Nordic countries led to the development of industries of international specialization in them, in particular those related to the use of marine (shipbuilding, fish processing), forestry (timber processing, pulp and paper industry), mineral resources (fuel and energy, metallurgical industries).


Population.

By peculiarities of population reproduction countries of the region belong to the 1st type. Growth rate of the population are positive, but minimal: from 0.2% (in Denmark) and 0.3% (in Finland) to 1.1% (in Iceland). The region has one of the highest in the world life expectancy : in Sweden - 73 years (men) and 79 years (women), in Iceland - 76 years (men) and 81 years (women). The proportion of children in the total population is constantly decreasing (19%), while the proportion of older people is increasing (16%). In terms of number, women predominate over men (51 and 49%, respectively). The peoples of northern Europe mostly belong to the northern group of the big caucasian race . In the north of Scandinavia, in Lapland, the Saami live, who are classified as transitional. laponoid race, which absorbed elements of the Caucasoid and Mongoloid races.

Ethnic composition largely homogeneous. The inhabitants of the region belong to two large language families - Indo-European and Uralic. By religious signs all countries belong to the Protestant branch of Christianity, dominated by Lutheranism. Traditionally, religion has a significant impact on social and political life, since the countries of Northern Europe belong to the clerical, and only citizens of the Protestant faith have the right to hold public positions in them.

Population placement extremely uneven, which is primarily due to the natural conditions of the region. The average population density is the lowest in Europe - from 10 to 5 people / km 2. Northern Europe - urbanized region , the proportion of the urban population ranges from 63% in Finland to 92% in Iceland. Human Resources make up over 13 million people. The labor resources of the Nordic countries are traditionally characterized by a high level of education and vocational training. Accordingly, the cost of labor is quite high.

Features of economic development and general characteristics of the economy.

The Nordic countries are one of the most economically developed in the world. They formed a special model of socio-economic development (“general welfare society”, the so-called “Scandinavian socialism”), defined by the following traits : high standard of living, lack of sharp contrasts between rich and poor; a significant level of taxes (55% of profits); the average housing area is 400 m 2, Sweden ranks 1st in the world in terms of housing per capita (445 apartments for every 1000 people); 504 cars per 1,000 inhabitants (2 cars per family), up to 500 televisions and 681 telephones; high social security: officially the working week is 40 hours, in practice the average is 37 hours, paid leave is 5 weeks, expenses for children under 16 are paid, loans are provided for apartments.

Highly developed healthcare system: there are an average of 25 doctors per 10,000 people. Low level unemployment, which is 5.3% on average in the region. The countries of Northern Europe account for about 1% of the population and 3% of the GDP and industrial output of developed countries, but in terms of GDP per capita, they belong to the 15 most developed countries in the world. All countries in the region have a positive increase in production (from 4.8% per year in Finland to 0.7% in Norway) and insignificant indicators of average annual inflation. The Scandinavian countries have a very high standard of living.

With a relatively small population, the Nordic countries are characterized by a high level of industrial development and intensive agriculture. The sectoral structure of their national economies is fully in line with modern structure the economies of other highly developed countries (the share of agriculture and mining in the structure of GNP is from 2 to 4%, only in Iceland it reaches 15% due to the intensive development of fishing and sheep breeding); manufacturing and construction on average for the region account for 28% of GNP; the service sector - 67%, since a shift took place in the structure of the GNP of the Nordic countries, similar to structural changes in the world economy in general: the share of the service sector in the GNP increased, the share of agriculture decreased, and the importance of the latest high-tech industries increased. The share of R&D expenditures in the structure of GDP is constantly increasing and amounts to 3.3% in Sweden, 2.4% in Finland, 1.8% in Denmark and Norway, and 1.4% in Iceland. Sweden has become the world leader in recent years in terms of the share of R&D spending in GDP, ahead of the US (2.5%) and Japan (2.7%), while Finland ranked fifth.

AT MGRT countries of the region represented by individual sectors of the fuel and energy complex (oil and hydropower), non-ferrous metallurgy; aluminum, copper, mechanical engineering (production of ships, automobiles, electrical products and communications), a highly developed timber industry complex (production of sawn timber, pulp, paper), food industries (fish processing, meat processing, dairy and butter and cheese).

AT agriculture Intensive animal husbandry predominates (dairy and beef cattle breeding and pig breeding). In areas located beyond the Arctic Circle, reindeer are bred, and in Iceland and the Faroe Islands, sheep. Agriculture (mainly in the southern regions of the region) is represented by fodder crops; potatoes, sugar beets, wheat, barley and rye are grown. Fishing and maritime merchant shipping have long been of great importance in the life of countries.

Industry.

The countries of the region are dominated by manufacturing industry with a significant share of the power industry, the extraction of minerals and the development of forests (except for Denmark and Iceland). In the world division of labor, the main branches of specialization are energy, metallurgy, timber processing, and mechanical engineering.

Agriculture- one of the most productive sectors of the economy of the countries of the region. Agricultural labor productivity high in all countries. According to statistics, one Danish farmer can feed 150 people (American and English - 60, German and French - up to 40 people). In the region's agriculture, there is a pronounced livestock direction, which accounts for 70-80% of agricultural production. crop production is of secondary importance.

Transport.

The countries of the region and their regions are interconnected (except for Iceland) by all means of transport, which form a complex transport network. Sea transport - main in the region. Railway transport ranks 2nd in terms of cargo turnover and plays a major role in domestic long-distance transport in Sweden and Finland.

Lake transport developed in Sweden and Finland, where the lakes are connected by canals and have access to the sea. Motor transport creates significant competition for rail transport. Air Transport developed, in international air transportation an important role is played by CAC - the association of airlines of the Scandinavian countries. Directly from North Sea offshore platforms underwater pipelines oil is transported to the UK and natural gas to Germany.

The countries of the region are quite active subjects foreign economic relations. They work out 2 % industrial products of developed countries and give 5% of their exports. The main trading partners are the countries of the European Union and the USA. The foreign economic interests of the countries of the region also reach Ukraine: significant volumes of its exports go to Finland and Sweden. Norway and Denmark, and the largest amount of imports to Ukraine - from Finland, Denmark, Sweden. Nordic countries have significant development resources tourist and recreational activities .

Southern Europe includes 8 countries and one dependent territory - Gibraltar (possession of Great Britain) (table). feature region is the location here of the smallest state-the city of the Vatican, whose territory is 44 hectares, and the oldest republic in the world - San Marino

Table 5 - Countries of Southern Europe

Country Capital Area, thousand km Population, million people / km 2 Population density, persons / km 2 GNP per capita, USD (2000)
Andorra Andorra la Vella 0,467 0,07
Vatican Vatican 0,00044 0,001 -
Greece Athens 132,0 10,4
Gibraltar (UK) Gibraltar 0,006 0,03
Spain Madrid 504,7 39,2
Italy Rome 301,3 57,2
Malta Valletta 0,3 0,37
Portugal Lisbon 92,3 10,8
San Marino San Marino 0,061 0,027
Total 1031,1 118,1 Medium - 115 Medium - 175000

important feature of the economic and geographical position of the countries of Southern Europe , located on the peninsulas and islands of the Mediterranean Sea, is that they are all on the main sea routes from Europe to Asia, Africa and Australia, and Spain and Portugal - also to Central and South America. All this, since the time of the great geographical discoveries, has affected the development of the region, the life of the countries of which is closely connected with the sea. No less significant is the fact that the region is located between Central Europe and the Arab countries of North Africa, which have multilateral ties with Europe. The former metropolises of Portugal, Italy and Spain still retain influence on some African countries. All countries (except the Vatican) are members of the UN, the OECD, and the largest are members of NATO and the European Union. Malta is a member of the Commonwealth of Nations led by Great Britain.

Natural conditions and resources.

The region is located on the Mediterranean peninsulas- Iberian, Apennine and Balkan. Only Italy is part of mainland Europe. The Mediterranean Sea largely determined the similarity of the natural conditions of the region. There is an acute shortage of fuel in the region useful fossils. There is almost no oil here, very little natural gas and coal. However, the rich are deposits of various metals, especially colored ones: bauxite(Greece belongs to the top three European leaders), mercury, copper, polymetals(Spain, Italy), tungsten(Portugal). Huge reserves building materials - marble, tufa, granite, cement raw materials, clay.

underdeveloped in southern European countries river network. Large arrays forests survived only in the Pyrenees and the Alps. The average forest cover of the region is 32%. Natural and recreational resources are extremely rich. These are warm seas, many kilometers of sandy beaches, lush vegetation, picturesque landscapes, numerous sea and mountain resorts, as well as areas favorable for mountaineering and skiing, etc. There are 14 national parks in the region. The unique natural resource potential of the region has contributed to the significant development of the agricultural sector and tourism and recreational activities in its countries.

Population.

Traditionally, Southern Europe is characterized by a high birth rate, but the natural population growth is low: from 0.1% per year in Italy to 0.4-0.5% in Greece, Portugal and 0.8% in Malta. Women account for 51% of the region's population. The majority of the population belongs to the southern (Mediterranean) branch of e caucasoid race. During the era of the Roman Empire, most of them were Romanized, and now peoples belonging to the Roman group predominate here. Indo-European language family(Portuguese, Spaniards, Galicians, Catalans, Italians, Sardinians, Romansh). Exception are: Greeks(Greek group of the Indo-European family); Albanians(Albanian group of the Indo-European family), represented in Italy; Gibraltar (Germanic group of the Indo-European family); Maltese(Semitic group of the Semitic-Hamitic language family).

Consider that Maltese is a dialectal form of Arabic; Turks(Turkic group of the Altaic language family) - there are many of them in Greece; Basques(in the rank of a separate family) - live in the historical region of the Basque Country in northern Spain. Composition of the population in the countries of the region is mostly homogeneous. High indicators of mono-ethnicity characteristic of Portugal (99.5% - Portuguese), Italy and Greece (98% of Italians and Greeks, respectively), and only in Spain a significant weight (almost 30%) of national minorities: Catalans (18%), Galicians (8%), Basques (2.5%), etc. Most of the population - Christians . Christianity is represented by two branches: Catholicism(west and center of the region); Orthodoxy(East of the region, Greece). In Southern Europe there is the spiritual and administrative center of the Roman Catholic Church - the Vatican, which exists in the IV century. Part of the Turks, Albanians, Greeks - Muslims.

Population posted uneven. highest density- in fertile valleys and coastal lowlands, the smallest - in the mountains (Alps, Pyrenees), in some areas up to 1 person / km 2. Level urbanization in the region is much lower than in other parts of Europe: only in Spain and Malta, up to 90% of the population lives in cities, and, for example, in Greece and Italy - more than 60%, in Portugal - 36%. Human Resources make up about 51 million people. In general, 30% of the active population is employed in industry, 15% - in agriculture, 53% - in service industry. AT recent times in Southern Europe for the harvest season of fruits and vegetables, many employees come from the East and South of Eastern Europe who cannot find work in their own countries.

Features of economic development and general characteristics of the economy.

The countries of the region still lag economically behind the highly developed states of Europe. Although Portugal, Spain, Greece and Italy are members of the EU, but all of them, except Italy, lag behind the leaders in many socio-economic indicators. Italy is the economic leader of the region, belongs to highly developed industrial and agricultural countries, with a clear trend towards the formation of a post-industrial type of economy. At the same time, contrasts in the development of many industries and production, in the social sphere, in the socio-economic conditions of the North and South, are still significant in the country.

Italy lags behind many highly developed countries in terms of scientific and technological development. Ahead of some countries of Western Europe in terms of net income from tourism, it is inferior to them in terms of the scale and intensity of international trade and credit and financial transactions. Spain. It is the second country in the region in terms of socio-economic development. In the Spanish economy, a significant role is played by the public sector, which accounts for up to 30% of the country's GDP. The state carries out economic programming, controls the railways, the coal industry, a significant part of shipbuilding and ferrous metallurgy.

In the second half of the 80s. XX century. Portugal experienced significant economic growth. The average GDP growth during this period was one of the highest in the EU and amounted to 4.5-4.8% per year, in 2000 the GNP was 159 billion dollars. Greece has a larger GNP than Portugal (181.9 billion in 2000). The country's industry is significantly monopolized by large local and foreign capital (mainly the United States, Germany, France and Switzerland). Up to 200 companies receive over 50% of all profits. Greece has rather high inflation rates for EU countries (3.4% per year). Government measures to reduce it (cutting state subsidies, freezing wages, etc.) predetermine social instability.

AT MGRT countries of the region are represented individual branches of mechanical engineering (production of automobiles, household appliances, technological equipment for the light and food industries), furniture industry, production of building products and equipment, light industry sectors (fruit and vegetable canning, oilseed - production of olive oil, winemaking, pasta, etc.) . Agriculture is dominated by branches of agriculture - the cultivation of various subtropical crops: citrus fruits, wood oils, grapes, vegetables, fruits, essential oil plants, etc.

Due to the insufficient forage base, livestock breeding is dominated by sheep breeding and, in small volumes, beef cattle breeding. The countries of the region are actively developing merchant shipping and ship repair. They are the undisputed leaders in the development of international tourism. Warm sea, Mediterranean climate, rich subtropical vegetation, numerous monuments of ancient culture and architecture are the main factors due to which Southern Europe is a favorite place for recreation and entertainment for many holidaymakers in the world, the largest tourist center.

5. General characteristics of the countries of Eastern (Central) Europe

The countries of Eastern (Central) Europe as a socio-political and economic integrity began to single out in the 90s of the XX century. This is due to the collapse of the former USSR and the socialist system, the formation of independent states. The region covers 10 countries (Table 6).

The economic and geographical position of Eastern Europe is distinguished by the following features:

Land surveying in the west with highly developed countries, and in the east and southeast - with Russia and the countries of Southeast Europe - potential markets for Eastern Europe;

Passage through the region of trans-European transport routes of the meridional and latitudinal directions.

Over the past 10 years in EGP(economic and geographical position) of the region, the following changes:

The collapse of the USSR, the formation of the CIS and new countries;

German unification;

The collapse of Czechoslovakia, as a result of which two independent states were formed: the Czech Republic and Slovakia;

The appearance on the southern borders of "unstable" in relation to the military-political state of the neighbors - the Balkan countries, Yugoslavia.

The video tutorial allows you to get interesting and detailed information about the countries of Southern Europe. From the lesson you will learn about the composition of Southern Europe, the characteristics of the countries of the region, their geographical position, nature, climate, place in this subregion. The teacher will tell you in detail about the main country of Southern Europe - Italy. In addition, the lesson provides interesting information about a tiny country - the Vatican.

Topic: Regional characteristics of the world. Foreign Europe

Lesson:Southern Europe

Rice. 1. Map of the subregions of Europe. Southern Europe highlighted in green ()

Southern Europe- cultural and geographical region, which includes states located on the southern peninsular and insular parts of the region.

Compound:

1. Spain.

2. Andorra.

3. Portugal.

4. Italy.

5. Vatican.

6. San Marino.

7. Greece.

8. Croatia.

9. Montenegro.

10. Serbia.

11. Albania.

12. Slovenia.

13. Bosnia and Herzegovina.

14. Macedonia.

15. Malta.

16. Sometimes Cyprus is referred to as Southern Europe.

Southern Europe is washed by the waters of the Mediterranean Sea.

The climate in most of southern Europe is subtropical Mediterranean.

Almost the entire territory of Southern Europe is located within hard-leaved evergreen forests and shrubs.

The population of the region exceeds 160 million people.

Southern European countries with the largest population:

1. Italy (61 million people).

2. Spain (47 million people).

3. Portugal and Greece (11 million people each).

At the same time, the population of the Vatican is less than 1000 people, and the population density is almost 2000 people. per sq. km.

The most numerous peoples of Southern Europe:

1. Italians.

2. Spaniards.

3. Portuguese.

The religious composition of the region is diverse. In general, the southwestern countries of the region profess Catholicism, the southeastern countries - Orthodoxy, Albania and partly in Bosnia and Herzegovina - Islam.

Rice. 2. Map of the religious denominations of Europe (blue - Catholicism, purple - Protestantism, pink - Orthodoxy, yellow - Islam). ()

According to the form of government, Spain, Andorra, the Vatican are monarchies.

The most powerful economies in the region are Italy and Spain.

All the countries of Southern Europe are characterized by the modern type of population reproduction.

The highest level of urbanization is in Spain (91%) and Malta (89%).

In most countries, the mining industry, agriculture, mountain pastoral animal husbandry, the production of machinery and instruments, fabrics, leather, the cultivation of grapes and citrus fruits are widespread. Tourism is very common. Spain and Italy are world leaders in tourism. The main branch of specialization, in addition to international tourism, is agriculture, in particular, this area is rich in grapes, olives, quite high performance in the cultivation of cereals and legumes (Spain - 22.6 million tons, Italy - 20.8 million tons), as well as vegetables and fruits (Spain - 11.5 million tons, Italy - 14.5 million tons). Despite the predominance of agriculture, there are also industrial areas, in particular, the cities of Genoa, Turin and Milan are the main industrial cities of Italy. It should be noted that they are located mainly in the north, closer to the countries of Western Europe.

Italy. Population - 61 million people (4th place in foreign Europe). Capital - Rome.

The full name is the Italian Republic. It borders France in the northwest, Switzerland and Austria in the north, and Slovenia in the northeast. It also has internal borders with the Vatican and San Marino. The country occupies the Apennine Peninsula, the Padan Plain, the southern slopes of the Alps, the islands of Sicily, Sardinia and a number of small islands.

Italy has a variety of minerals, but their deposits are for the most part small, dispersed over the territory, and often lie inconveniently for development. Italy is a developed industrial and agricultural country. It is characterized by a combination of highly developed industry in the north and backward agriculture in the southern regions. The economy is dominated by powerful industrial and banking monopolies. In agriculture, especially in the south, the survivals of feudalism are strong and backward forms of agriculture dominate. Much land still belongs to large landowners. Peasants rent tiny plots and pay for it up to half of the harvest. Italy is poor in coal and iron ore, but in its bowels there is a lot of mercury, pyrites, gas, marble, and sulfur. About 40% of the electricity consumed by the Italian industry is provided by hydroelectric power stations. The most powerful of them are built on the northern rivers. Italy became the first country in the world to make extensive use of groundwater heat for electricity production. Several nuclear power plants have been built. The leading place in the industry is occupied by mechanical engineering. Italian factories produce cars, motorcycles, aircraft, and ships.

Over the past twenty years, 6 million Italians have left in search of work in other countries. The army of the unemployed is constantly replenished by ruined peasants. In Italian agriculture, the leading place belongs to agriculture. Dairy and meat animal husbandry is developed only in the northern regions. The most common cereals are wheat and corn.

Grapes are grown everywhere. The area occupied by vineyards is larger here than in any other country in the world. Italy exports a lot of wine, as well as oranges, lemons, and vegetables. There are many large industrial cities in the north. The most significant of them is Milan. It is the economic capital of Italy. Industrial districts surround the city in a continuous ring. The plants and factories of Milan are owned by several trusts that control a significant part of the country's industry.

On the coast of the Ligurian Sea, in Northern Italy, there is the largest seaport in the country - Genoa. Genoa is a large industrial city. Here are the country's largest shipyards, oil refineries, metallurgical and machine-building plants.

Of all the developed countries, Italy has the sharpest territorial contrasts in the level of industrialization. In Southern Italy, less than 15% of the economically active population is employed in industry, and about 40% in the Northwest. The vast majority of the most advanced science-intensive industries are also concentrated here.

The regional policy pursued by the Italian government and the EU is aimed at eliminating the economic backwardness of a number of central and southern regions of the country. The industrialization carried out in these areas involves the construction of small light and food industries in small and medium-sized towns in Central and Southern Italy. There is an accelerated development of coastal industrial centers (Ravenna, Taranto, Cagliari in Sardinia, etc.) based on the use of imported raw materials, in particular oil.

In the structure of Italian industry, there is a constant increase in the share of the manufacturing industry - the basis of Italian industry. The leading place in the manufacturing industry is occupied by the machine-building complex, whose share exceeds 35%. These include: general engineering; production of vehicles; production of electrical and electronic equipment; metalworking and production of metal products.

There is some lagging behind Italy from other industrial countries in terms of scientific potential, so the country in the MGRT specializes in the production of machinery and equipment of medium and low science intensity, supplying a fairly wide range of engineering products to the world market. In particular, it is one of the largest manufacturers of agricultural machinery, electrical household, packaging and food equipment, machine tools, textile machinery, rolling stock and other vehicles.

Italy is one of the world's largest producers and exporters of consumer goods of high quality and exquisite design.

Fuel and energy complex. Italy is extremely poor in energy sources and has an unfavorable energy balance. On average, only 17% of needs are covered by own resources. Almost 70% of the energy balance comes from oil. According to this indicator, Italy is comparable among post-industrial countries only with Japan: about 15% - for natural gas, 7 - 8% - for coal, hydro- and geothermal energy. Own oil production is small - 1.5 million tons per year. Italy buys 98% of all oil consumed abroad (over 75 million tons). Oil comes from Saudi Arabia, Libya, Russia. Italy has the largest oil refining industry in Western Europe in terms of installed capacity (200 million tons), but its utilization rate is very low. Gas is imported from Russia, Algeria, the Netherlands. Italy buys about 80% of solid fuel. Hard coal is imported from the USA and South Africa.

Over 3/4 of electricity is generated at thermal power plants, which use mainly fuel oil. Therefore, electricity is expensive, there is a large import of electricity from France. After the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, it was decided to stop the operation of existing nuclear power plants and not build new ones. The main goals of the state energy program are to save energy consumption and reduce oil imports.

Ferrous metallurgy of Italy works on imported raw materials. Own production is insignificant - 185 thousand tons per year. Coking coal is imported entirely from abroad, mainly from the USA. Italy is a major exporter of scrap metal, as well as ores of alloying metals.

The import of raw materials for the industry predetermined the placement of the largest metallurgical plants on the sea coast in Genoa, Naples, Piombino, Taranto (the last, the largest in the EU, with a capacity of 10 million tons of steel per year).

On the world market, Italy specializes in the production of thin, cold-rolled steel and steel pipes. The main products of non-ferrous metallurgy are aluminum, zinc, lead and mercury.

The country ranks second in the EU and sixth in the world in metal rolling, accounting for 40% of ferrous metal production in the EU.

The Italian chemical industry specializes in the production of petrochemicals, polymers (especially polyethylene, polypropylene) and synthetic fibers.

The industry is highly monopolized, dominated by large firms. ENI ranks first in Europe in the production of acrylic fibers, second in the production of plastics, and third in the production of fertilizers. "Montedison" provides 1/4 of the production of chemical fertilizers in the country. "SNIA" specializes in the production of chemical fibers, plastics, dyes, plant protection products, medicines.

Italy ranks fifth in the world in drug production.

The oldest and most important region of the chemical industry is the North-West. Due to the aggravation of the ecological situation, the lack of free space, and difficulties with power supply, this region specializes in the production of fine chemicals. Major centers are: Milan, Turin, Mantua, Savona, Novara, Genoa.

Northeast Italy specializes in the production of bulk petrochemicals, fertilizers, synthetic rubber (Venice, Porto Marghera, Ravenna).

Profile of Central Italy - inorganic chemistry (Rosignano, Follonica, Piombino, Terni and others).

Southern Italy specializes in the production of organic synthesis products, mineral fertilizers (Brenzi, Augusta, Gele, Torto Torres and others).

Mechanical engineering is the leading branch of Italian industry. It employs 2/5 of all industrial workers, creates 1/3 of the total value of industrial output and 1/3 of the country's exports.

The industry is characterized by a high share of transport engineering in production and exports. Italy is one of the world's leading car manufacturers. The largest automobile company is Fiat (Italian car factory in Turin). It is diversified and produces locomotives and wagons, tractors, marine and aircraft engines, road transport vehicles, machine tools, and robots. The capital of Fiat is Turin, where the headquarters and the largest Mirafiori factory are located; automobile plants have also been built in Milan, Naples, Bolzano, and Modena. The company has its branches in many countries of the world. In the 1960s participated in the construction of the giant plant VAZ in Togliatti. Fiat is one of the top ten largest car manufacturers, accounting for 5.3% of world production.

Rice. 4. Car "FIAT" 1899. ()

Ferrari is known for making racing cars.

The international specialization of Italy is the production of not only cars, but also motorcycles, scooters, mopeds and bicycles.

Shipbuilding is a crisis branch of transport engineering; the tonnage of ships launched annually does not exceed 250 - 350 thousand barrels. reg. t. Shipbuilding centers: Monofalcone, Genoa, Trieste, Taranto.

Diverse products manufactured by the electrical industry - refrigerators, washing machines, televisions. The industry is highly concentrated in Milan, its suburbs and in neighboring cities - Varese, Como and Bergamo.

The production of products in electronics is growing. Italy produces personal computers, electronic components.

Light industry was developed in Italy. The country is one of the world's largest producers and exporters of cotton and woolen fabrics, clothing and footwear, furniture, jewelry and faience, etc. Italy ranks second in the world after China in the production of footwear. Italy is famous for its designer houses.

Rice. 5. Giorgio Armani - Italian fashion designer ()

Services sector. Tourism plays a leading role in the industry banking. Tourism is the most important source of income. More than 50 million tourists visit Italy every year. More than 3/4 of the total turnover of the Italian tourism business falls on three cities: Rome, Venice and Florence. Almost all tourists arriving in Rome visit the unique state of the Vatican. So-called shopping tourism is also developing, attracting wholesalers of Italian small and medium-sized enterprises, as well as individual consumers of Italian clothing and footwear.

In Italy, all types of transport are well developed. More than 90% of passengers and 80% of cargo are transported by cars. The main transport artery of the country is the "freeway of the sun", connecting Turin and Milan through Bologna and Florence with Rome. In the external transport of goods, maritime transport prevails; 80 - 90% of imported goods are delivered by sea. The largest ports are Genoa (handling 50 million tons per year) and Trieste (35 million tons per year). The country's main coastal port is Naples.

Agriculture is dominated by crop production. The main crops are wheat, corn, rice (1st place in terms of collection in Europe; over 1 million tons per year), sugar beet. Italy is one of the world's largest and Europe's leading producers of citrus fruits (over 3.3 million tons per year), tomatoes (over 5.5 million tons), grapes (about 10 million tons per year; over 90% is processed into wine) , olives. Floriculture and poultry farming are developed.

Vatican located on the Vatican Hill in the northwestern part of Rome, a few hundred meters from the Tiber. The Vatican is surrounded on all sides by Italian territory. The Vatican has a non-profit planned economy. Sources of income - primarily donations from Catholics around the world. Part of the funds is tourism (sale of postage stamps, Vatican euro coins, souvenirs, fees for visiting museums). Most of the workforce (museum attendants, gardeners, janitors, and so on) are Italian citizens.

Almost the entire population of the Vatican is subjects of the Holy See (citizenship of the Vatican does not exist).

The status of the Vatican in international law is an auxiliary sovereign territory of the Holy See, the seat of the highest spiritual leadership of the Roman Catholic Church. The sovereignty of the Vatican is not independent (national), but stems from the sovereignty of the Holy See. In other words, its source is not the population of the Vatican, but the papacy.

Homework

Topic 6, Item 3

1. What are the features of the geographical location of Southern Europe?

2. Tell us about the economy of Italy.

Bibliography

Main

1. Geography. A basic level of. 10-11 cells: Textbook for educational institutions / A.P. Kuznetsov, E.V. Kim. - 3rd ed., stereotype. - M.: Bustard, 2012. - 367 p.

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Additional

1. Economic and social geography of Russia: Textbook for universities / Ed. prof. A.T. Khrushchev. - M.: Bustard, 2001. - 672 p.: ill., cart.: tsv. incl.

Encyclopedias, dictionaries, reference books and statistical collections

1. Geography: a guide for high school students and university applicants. - 2nd ed., corrected. and dorab. - M.: AST-PRESS SCHOOL, 2008. - 656 p.

Literature for preparing for the GIA and the Unified State Examination

1. Thematic control in geography. Economic and social geography of the world. Grade 10 / E.M. Ambartsumova. - M.: Intellect-Centre, 2009. - 80 p.

2. The most complete edition of typical options for real USE assignments: 2010. Geography / Comp. Yu.A. Solovyov. - M.: Astrel, 2010. - 221 p.

3. The optimal bank of tasks for preparing students. Unified State Exam 2012. Geography: Textbook / Comp. EM. Ambartsumova, S.E. Dyukov. - M.: Intellect-Centre, 2012. - 256 p.

4. The most complete edition of typical options for real USE assignments: 2010. Geography / Comp. Yu.A. Solovyov. - M.: AST: Astrel, 2010. - 223 p.

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8. Study guide for geography. Tests and practical tasks in geography / I.A. Rodionov. - M.: Moscow Lyceum, 1996. - 48 p.

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12. USE 2010. Geography: thematic training tasks / O.V. Chicherina, Yu.A. Solovyov. - M.: Eksmo, 2009. - 144 p.

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14. USE 2011. Geography: Standard exam options: 31 options / Ed. V.V. Barabanova. - M.: National Education, 2010. - 280 p.

Materials on the Internet

1. Federal Institute of Pedagogical Measurements ().

2. Federal portal Russian Education ().

The peninsulas are elongated along the meridian and are far advanced into the waters of the Mediterranean Sea. Their outskirts are only 1.3-44 km separated from the huge massifs of Asia and Africa by narrow straits - the Dardanelles, the Bosphorus, Gibraltar (Fig. 101). The territory is fenced off from continental Europe by a barrier of high mountains. All countries are characterized by mountainous terrain. Features of the geographical location played a significant role in the history of Southern Europe. They determine the different sizes and multiplicity of countries, the diversity of cultures and religions of the peoples inhabiting them.

Rice. 101. Strait of Gibraltar

Natural conditions and resources. The territory is part of the modern active belt of the lithosphere - the Alpine-Himalayan, which determines its high seismicity. At the intersection of the faults that broke the block of the island Sicily, there is a volcano Etna.

Etna is a stratovolcano. Its giant cone (base - 40 60 km, height - 3290 m) is "molded" from more than 200 cones and craters. Eruptions occur continuously. Several craters located along the same line "work" at the same time. The center of the eruptions is moving, and, at times, new craters grow on the slopes right before our eyes. Of these, lava flows are rushing at speeds up to 80 km / h.

The relief of each of the peninsulas is peculiar.

Most of the most massive peninsula - the Iberian - is occupied by the most extensive country in the region - Spain (503 thousand km 2). Its relief is dominated by plateaus, dissected by deep gorges (Fig. 102). In the north and south of the peninsula they are framed by mountain ranges: the highest point of the country in the Andalusian mountains - 3482 m; in the Pyrenees - the peak of Aneto (3404 m).

Vesuvius volcano(Fig. 103)

Portugal is located in the west of the peninsula. Hilly plains of its territory descends to the low coast of the Atlantic Ocean.

The second largest country in the region - Italy (301 thousand km 2) - occupies the Apennine Peninsula and the southern slopes of the Alps. Across the entire peninsula stretch the limestone Apennine Mountains (the highest point is 2914 m). Earthquakes are frequent in the Apennines; there is the only active volcano Vesuvius in mainland Europe (Fig. 103). The chain of the Alps, located perpendicular to the Apennines, from the north protects the fertile lands of the vast Padana lowland. The lowland is composed of river alluvium By(652 km) - the largest in the country. The peaks of the Alps are covered with glaciers. Descending along loose slopes, they feed numerous landslides with melt water.

The highest point of Greece, which occupies the mountainous Balkan Peninsula, is the mythological Olympus (2917 m). In the limestones and sandstones that make up the mountains, karst processes are actively taking place.

Numerous small islands are scattered in the Aegean and Mediterranean Seas - rocky and impregnable (Fig. 104).

Rice. 104 Cyprus

The Mediterranean climate of the region in summer is formed by tropical air masses; so it's hot everywhere- up to +23 ... +28 ° С - and dry.

In Sicily, the absolute maximum is +45 °C. The hot breath of Africa especially often reaches this island. From the south and southeast, a strong wind blows from the hot Sahara - sirocco. It carries heat and a huge amount of dust.

In winter, westerly transport brings humid temperate air from the Atlantic. Winters are warm(+5… +12 °С). They differ in the highest humidity in Italy: 600-1000 mm of precipitation falls here annually, and up to 1000-3000 mm high in the mountains and on the western slopes. In Spain and Greece the climate is drier: 300-600 mm of precipitation per year. Due to low rainfall, hot summers and high permeability of surface rocks, there are no large rivers in the region.

Little natural vegetation has survived in Southern Europe. In the north of the peninsulas and in the mountains there are unique forests of oak (cork and stone) and pine with an undergrowth of evergreen shrubs. They occupy about 10% of the territory on the Iberian Peninsula and 20% on the Apennine. Rocks are most often covered with impenetrable maquis.

The countries of Southern Europe do not have large reserves of mineral raw materials. In Spain, Italy, Greece there are ore minerals: chromium, copper, polymetallic, mercury. But due to its geographical position, the region is extremely rich in agro-climatic resources, its natural and recreational potential is great and diverse.

Population. The total population of the region is more than 120 million people. The most populated country is Italy (more than 60 million). All countries are characterized by the first type of population reproduction. Average life expectancy is approaching 80 years. The population density - more than 100 people / km 2 - is close to the average European one. In the microstates of the Vatican and Malta, it exceeds 1000 people/km2 and is one of the highest in the world. Among large countries, Italy is the most densely populated - about 200 people / km 2 (especially the Padana and coastal lowlands). The population is much rarer in the central arid and mountainous regions of Spain and in the Italian Alps. In Italy, Spain and Greece, more than 70% of the population are city dwellers. A significant part of them live in small towns, many of which were founded in antiquity.

The population is racially and ethnically homogeneous. The vast majority of it belongs to the Mediterranean (southern) branch of the Caucasoid race. The peoples of the Romanesque group of the Indo-European family dominate, whose language was formed on the basis of Latin - Spaniards, Portuguese, Catalans, Galicians, Italians. Greeks form a special group of this language family.

For centuries, emigration prevailed over immigration in the countries of Southern Europe. In the era of the great geographical discoveries, there was a mass emigration to overseas possessions. Then - to the USA, Canada, the countries of Latin America and Australia (XIX and XX centuries) and the countries of Western and Northern Europe (second half of the XX century). Internal migrations were intensive: from underdeveloped agricultural regions to large industrial regions and centers, from villages to cities. Now the situation is reversed: immigration exceeds emigration. Immigrants from North Africa, Eastern Europe and the Middle East flocked to the countries of the region in search of work and a better life. The fight against illegal immigration is one of the most acute problems of the countries of the region.

The countries of Southern Europe are predominantly single-ethnic. In Italy, Greece, Portugal, Malta, the main nations make up 95-98%. The most multinational of the southern European countries is Spain (the Spaniards make up 70%). Almost all believers from among the Romanesque peoples are Catholics. Here is the state of the Vatican with the residence of the Pope - the spiritual leader of all Catholics in the world. Orthodoxy prevails in the east of the region. It is practiced by more than 90% of Greeks. Turks and people from North Africa practice Islam.

Economy. The level of socio-economic development of the countries of the region is comparable to the average level for the EU. In terms of GDP per capita, they are among the top 30 countries in the world. countries are well endowed with labor and certain types of mineral resources, but they feel a shortage of their own fuel and energy resources. On the formation of the structure industry influenced practically complete absence in the region of oil and natural gas. Energy needs are met by oil and gas coming from Northern Europe, Russia, North Africa and the Middle East. The main part of electricity is produced at thermal power plants. In Spain, about 25% of electricity is generated by nuclear power plants. Much attention is paid to the use of renewable energy sources. In Italy and Spain, the role of hydropower is great. Solar energy is being developed. The missing part of the electricity is purchased in neighboring Germany and France. In the port cities of Italy, Spain, Greece, where imported oil is delivered, powerful oil refining and petrochemistry . This is where the main businesses are located. ferrous metallurgy also dependent on imported raw materials. Italy and Spain are respectively 2nd and 4th in the EU in terms of steel production. Electrometallurgy prevails and, as a result, the steel produced is of high quality.

The leading industry of the largest countries in the region is mechanical engineering. Its basis is the production of vehicles: cars and trucks, marine vessels. Electronics and electrical engineering, instrument making are developing at high rates. Brands of Italian refrigerators and washing machines, computers of the Olivetti company are world famous. Italy has a high level of machine tool development. Rich raw material reserves contribute to the development of production building materials . A significant part of Fig. 105. The production of pasta products (tiles, marble, cement) is exported. In the economies of the countries of the region, the role of light and food industry. The countries are major producers of cotton and woolen fabrics, knitwear, clothing and footwear, furniture, and jewelry. The food industry specializes in the production of pasta (Fig. 105), olive oil, grape wines, canned vegetables and fruits, and juices.

Rice. 106 Pasta production

The concentration of industries on the sea coasts is in conflict with their use by the tourism industry. Therefore, much attention is paid to the environmental culture of industrial production: the construction of treatment facilities, the use of low-waste technologies.

Favorable climate and artificial irrigation allow growing in agriculture Southern European countries have the widest range of cultures in the world. And the presence of a vast European market in the neighborhood contributes to large volumes of their production. The main crops are olive trees(Fig. 106) and grapes.

A variety of vegetables and fruits are grown everywhere: tomatoes, peaches, apricots, cherries. Subtropical crops - figs, citrus fruits - are exported in large volumes. Cereals (wheat, barley, rice), legumes and melons are produced mainly for their own needs. Of the industrial crops, sugar beets, tobacco and cotton are of the greatest importance. In the region the main branches of animal husbandry are represented: breeding of large and small (sheep, goats) cattle, pigs, poultry. Sheep are pastured on natural pastures. The fertile lowlands, primarily the Padanskaya, are characterized by intensive stall farming. Here, as well as in suburban areas, dairy farming, pig breeding and poultry farming are concentrated.

The development of agriculture is constrained by an acute shortage of land resources. Mountain slopes are terraced for agriculture. The development of animal husbandry is limited by the lack of a forage base for cattle and competition from highly specialized farms in Western and Northern Europe.

Transport. The peninsular position of the countries influenced the development of their transport systems. In international and domestic transportation, the role of maritime transport. All countries have a large merchant fleet, part of which is leased. The charter of sea vessels is especially developed in Greece. Ferry service is constantly expanding between the Mediterranean countries. Automotive and iron roads connect all the major settlements. Through the tunnels built in the mountains, communications with the continental regions of Europe are carried out.

Italy is located at the crossroads of many international routes. Therefore, in external - more than 70% of cargo turnover - and in domestic (coastal) cargo transportation, the role of maritime transport is exceptionally large. In the domestic transportation of goods and passengers, the leading position is occupied by road transport. The main highway - the "freeway of the Sun" - connects Turin and Milan with the southernmost city of the peninsula - Reggio di Calabria.

Rice. 107. Architectural monuments of the cities of Southern Europe: 1 - Colosseum in Rome;

2 - Acropolis of Athens

Foreign economic relations. The countries of Southern Europe are characterized by a wide and varied foreign trade. They export machinery and equipment, textile products, clothing and footwear, grape wine, olive oil and citrus. The value of exports to Italy and Spain is 20% of the GDP of these countries. Imports are dominated by energy resources, mineral raw materials, engineering products, meat and dairy products, and grain. The main foreign trade partners are the EU countries. Natural, historical and cultural attractions of the countries of Southern Europe annually attract more than 100 million tourists from all over the world (Fig. 107). The development of the service sector is focused on their service.

In Italy, the industrial North is far ahead in its development of the predominantly agrarian South. The largest industrial centers are located in the North - Milan, Turin, Genoa, - forming a kind of "industrial triangle". More than 2/5 of all industrial products are produced here, the most modern industries are concentrated: automotive, electronics, and the chemical industry.

The south specializes in the production of agricultural, mainly crop products. In recent years, large oil refineries and metallurgical plants have emerged in port cities on the basis of imported raw materials.

Bibliography

1. Geography grade 9 / Textbook for grade 9 institutions of general secondary education with the Russian language of instruction / Edited by N. V. Naumenko/ Minsk "People's Asveta" 2011