Physical Geography
The natural environment is
the primary concern of physical geographers, although many physical
geographers also look at how humans have altered natural systems.
Physical geographers study Earth’s seasons, climate, atmosphere, soil, streams, landforms, and oceans. Some disciplines within physical geography include geomorphology, glaciology, pedology, hydrology, climatology, biogeography, and oceanography.
Geomorphology
is the study of landforms and the processes that shape them.
Geomorphologists investigate the nature and impact of wind, ice, rivers, erosion, earthquakes, volcanoes, living things, and other forces that shape and change the surface of the Earth.