Influences of Geographic Environment is Ellen Churchill Semple’s influential study of how landscape, climate, and geography shape human societies, developed on the basis of Friedrich Ratzel’s anthropo-geography. Semple, a leading American geographer, explores how mountains, rivers, coasts, and deserts have influenced migration, settlement, economy, and culture.
The book is a foundational and much-debated text in the history of human geography, associated with environmental determinism — a perspective later criticized for overstating geography’s control over culture. Read critically, it remains an important document of early-twentieth-century geographic thought and the effort to connect environment with human history. It is valuable for students of geography, anthropology, and the intellectual history of the social sciences.