AP human geography: Unit 1
4 main properties of a map
shape (geometric shapes) size (space taken up) distance (represented distance between 2 points) direction (degree of accuracy with cardinal directions)
gall-peters projection
shows size, but not shape
geographic model
simplified version of what is on the earth
data aggregation
size of geographic units being represented on a map
cultural ecology
study of human-environment interaction
global positioning system (GPS)
system of satellites used to determine exact location on the earth
remote sensing
technique of obtaining information about objects through the study of data collected by special instruments that are not in physical contact with the objects being analyzed
place
physical/cultural attributes that give each location on the earth its individual "stamp"
node
place from where diffusion of something happens
region
places having similar characteristics
absolute location
position of an object on the global grid (latitude/longitude)
spatial interaction
process in which goods, ideas, information and people move among places
cartography
process of mapmaking
formal region
region composed of areas that have a common cultural/physical feature
perceptual region
region whose boundaries are determined by beliefs
map scale
relationship between distance on the map and the actual measurement in the real world
greenwich mean time (GMT)
baseline for time zones around the world
human geography
branch of geography studying the reason behind the location/interactions of humans on the earth
physical geography
branch of geography that has to do with things of the earth (soil/climate/plants/etc.)
simplification
cartographers process of eliminating unnecessary details on a map
great circles
cicles formed on the surface of the earth by plane routes. (the arc is the shortest distance between 2 points)
relative directions
common directions (up, down, left, right)
geographic information system (GIS)
computer program that stores geographic data and produces map to show the data
primary data
data collected directly from someone
secondary data
data gathered from someone who got it from the geographer
friction of distance
degree to which distance interferes with some interaction
lines of longitude
east-west of prime meridian
anglocentric
focused on the English culture
functional region
group of places linked together by some influence (from a central place)
map
2-D model of the earth
cardinal directions
North, South, East and West
human-environment interaction
human's impact on the environment and the environment's impact on humans
space-time compression
increasing sense of accessibility and connectivity that seems to be bringing humans in distance places closer together
site
internal physical/cultural characteristics of a place
5 themes of geography
location (where something is) human-environment interaction (humans-environment) region (spatial units that share some characteristics) place(the attributes of a spot) movement (how things move)
situation
location of a place relative to the physical/cultural characteristics around it
relative location
location of a place/object in relation to other places/objects
isoline thematic map
map displaying lines that connect points of equal value
cognitive map
map drawn from memory
reference map
map showing common features
mercator projection
map showing shapes but drastically distorting size
equal-are projection
map that maintains area, but distorts other properties
azimuthal projection
map that maintains direction, but distorts other properties
equidistant projection
map that maintains distance, but distorts other properties
conformal projection
map that maintains shape but distorts other properties
choropleth thematic map
map that shows a pattern of a variable by using various colors/degrees of shading
proportional-symbol thematic map
map that uses a symbol to display the frequency of a variable
cartogram
map that uses proportionality to show a particular variable
thematic map
map that zeroes in on one feature
robinson projection
map with slight distortions to all four properties, not just one
movement
movement on the face of the earth of things
distortion
necessary error resulting from trying to portray the earth on a flat map
lines of latitude
north-south from equator
intermediate directions
northwest, southwest, northeast, southeast
spatial perspective
outlook through which geographers identify, explain and predict the human/physical patterns in space and the interconnectedness of different spaces
distance decay
pattern in which the interaction between two places declines as the distance between the two places increases
sense of place
person's perception of that place
dot density map
thematic map that uses dots to represent the frequency of a variable