AP Human Geography Everything

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Why would a company practice maquiladora strategies?

cheap labor (day of work=minimum wage per hor in US) -favorable tax breaks -Lax environmental regulations -it's close to markets at minimal cost

What were Great Britain's resources that allowed for the start of the industrial revolution?

coal, iron ore + water power

Livestock Ranching

commercial grazing of livestock over extensive area

excess vote

concentrates opposition supporters into a few districts

agrarian

concerning farms, farmers, or the use of land

Basic Services with examples

create goods to be distributed outside of the community -big industries -Paper Mill -USAA insurance -QVC

Genetically Modified Crops (3rd A.R.)

crop species modified by genetic engineering to produce higher crop yields and increase resistance to drought, cold, heat, toxins, plant pests, and disease

What has irrigation improvements increased (positives of 3rd A.R.)?

crop yields aka more crops

How do you measure population change?

crude birth rate, crude death rate, natural increase rate

milpa

cultivation of crops in tropical forest clearings in which forest vegetation has been removed by cutting and burning

What's uneven development caused by?

cumulative causation

Why are districts redrawn every 10 years?

due to movement of the population and growth

Multiplier Effect (Agglomeration)

each new firm added will lead to the further development of infrastructure + linkages

Electoral College

each state is allotted a number of votes in a Presidential election based on their population Louisiana has 6, Michigan has 16, California has 55

Types of push and pull factors

economic conditions, political circumstances, armed conflict and civil war, environmental conditions, culture and traditions, technological advances

Colonialism

effort by one country to establish settlements and to impose its political, economic and cultural principles on such territory

Regional Identity

emotional attachment to the group of people and places associated with a particular culture region

What replaced communal farming systems during the second A.R.?

enclosed land run by individuals replaced it

What did other cities grow to become besides agricultural villages?

established marketplaces

Irredentism

ethnic annexation

What does shifting cultivation use?

"Slash + Burn" Interillage

What is Deglomeration?

"unclumping" of factories b/c/o neg. effects + higher costs associated w/ industrial overcrowding

Population Density

# of ppl. that occupy an area of land, how we measure population

Equation for Electoral College

# of representatives in the House + 2 Senators = # of Electoral votes your state has

Doubling Time

# of years until the pop. doubles

What's the formula for RNI?

(CBR-CDR)/10

What did Britain need in order to fuel the industrial revolution?

*Capital (money) flow from other countries* -Other countries like *China, India and the US* gave them money that they would use to fund I.R. developments

What are some examples of Megalopolises?

*Fusing of DC and Boston*, Great Lakes Region, The Texas Triangle, German Ruhr, Randstad in the Netherlands, Japan's Tokaides

Describe countries in the CORE area of Wallenstein's World Systems Theory (with examples)

*High Income* -High use of Tech -High percent of tertiary activities -High levels of education by the majority of the population *Examples: OECD countries G8*

What are the final decisions for location based?

-Distance -Respective Weights -Final weight of the finished product -Material (Resource) or Market (Finished Product) oritented

Describe Low Growth Countries

-Educated Work Force -May need immigrant labor -More women in workforce -gov expenditures on elderly -Extra income

What ideas, concepts or standards were developed in the 2nd A.R.?

-Enclosure Systems (my land, your land) -Crop Rotation

Examples of Landlocked Countries

-Ex: Switzerland or Bolivia

Describe High Growth Countries

-Expanding Work Force -Youthful and Creative -Gov. Expenditures for Youth (ex: schools)

How did Islam diffuse?

-Expansion -Hierarchal along trade routes -Relocation- 39 countries -Hearth was middle east/Mecca

How does Political Geography relate to Political Unrest?

-Explains physical + cultural factors that underline political unrest

What's the current opinion on Environmental Determinism?

-Fallen out of favor -Considered a racist + imperialist theory -Not based on scientific research

How have *more developed country* farmers fixed the *overproduction* problem where they produce more food than needed (Green Revolution)?

-Farmers are encouraged to plant less -Gov. pays farmers when prices are low -gov. sells/donates surplus to other countries

Components of Culture

-Female v. Male -White v. Black -Gay v. Straight -Urban v. Rural

Physical Features of Cultural Hearths

-Fertile Land -Near a River Valley -Mild/Tropical Climates

Describe Unitary Systems

-Few internal cultural differences -Strong sense of national unity -Small states

What assumptions was Christaller's Central Place Theory built on?

-Flat land surface -a uniformly distributed rural population -equal transportation methods throughout

What are some assumptions about Von Thuen's model?

-Flat terrain -No significant transportation barriers -surrounded by unoccupied forest -Uniform soil

Why did Great Britain start the Industrial Revolution?

-Flow of Capital, mercantilism allowed for an increased capital flow -2nd Ag. Rev. -cottage industries had already developed -Their resources: coal, iron ore + water power

Examples of Cultural Trait

-Food + Shelter -Religion -Relationships to family + others -Language -Education -Security/Protection -Political + Social Organization -Creative Expression

What techniques and tools were developed in the 3rd A.R.?

-Genetically Modified Crops -Fertilizers and Chemical Farming -Irrigation Techniques -Pesticides

How have *lower developed country* farmers fixed the *expensive tech (tractors, irrigation)* problem?

-Grow expert crops (coffee, sugar, cocaine, opium) to raise money -Many countries join drug trade

How does one increase food supply?

-Prevent desertification, preserve land -Spread G. Rev., Increase Productivity -Identify new food sources -Aquaculture -Increase exports from other countries

Agricultural Density

-Ratio of # of farmers to the amount of arable land

Economic Downsides to the Green Revolution

-Reduced amount of labor needed, it cut jobs -Strains are often prone to viruses and pest infections leading to crop failure -Many G. Rev. crops are not farmable in dry Africa -Local Famers have a much more difficult time purchasing more expensive seeds

What increased because of the neolithic revolution?

-Reliable food supply -Human Population

Why did Louisiana lose a district in 2011?

-Relocation of people due to Hurricane Katrina -LA had very little population growth from 2000-2010

How are modern suburbs segregated?

-Residents are separated from commercial and manufacturing activities

What does *Level 4* of cities, *Dependent Centers*, consist of?

-Resort, Retirement + Residential Centers (Florida) -Manufacturing Centers -Industrial and Military Centers (Baucher City, LA) -Mining and industrial centers

Describe Early European States

-Roman Empire collapses -estates owned by competing kings, dukes, nobles -neighboring estates unify under a king -England, France, Spain

The 3 Types of CBD retail services

-Shops with a high threshold -Shops with long range -Shops that serve people who work in the CBD

Benefits of Agglomeration

-Similar or interrelated companies nearby -Pools of skilled *(electritian, plumber)* + ordinary *(factory)* labor -Capital -Infrastructure -Multiplier Effect

Describe Hunter-Gatherers

-Simple stone tools and weapons -Men- Hunt + Women- Gather

What were the challenging social, economic and cultural factors in Shock Cities?

-Slums -Hazardous Pollution Levels -Deadly Fires -The growth of urban prostitution -Exploitation of children

Describe Stage 5 of the Epidemiological Transition: Return of Infectious Diseases

-Speculative - return to stage one Malaria, TB, SARS, AIDS -Due to: Poverty World-wide travel Evolution of Microbes

Describe Stage 1 of Rostow's Stages of Development- The Traditional Society

-Subsistence economy *based on farming* -Trade is through *bartering*

Globalization

A set of processes that are increasing interactions, deepening relationships, and heightening interdependence without regard to country borders. -What happens at the global affects the local, but it also affects the individual, regional, and national. Similarly, the processes at these scales influence the global -Ex: Mcdonalds going worldwide

What's the Hexagonal Spatial Pattern?

A pattern that shows higher-order central places that contain economic functions with high thresholds and high ranges that require large populations to serve groups of lower-order central places that exist around them.

Refugees

A person who has been forced to leave their country in order to escape war, persecution, or natural disaster

Enclave

A piece of territory completely surrounded by another territory of which it is not a part

Zone of In Situ Accretion

A region transitioning towards maturity and development that is a mix of middle-income and lower-income families and make-shift housing

Habit

A repetitive act performed by a particular individual

Informal sector w/ example

A sector of the economy that is not regulated or taxed by the state -cash only, as bank accounts can be traced -ex: markets in NOLA

Demographic Transition Model

A sequence of demographic changes in which a country moves from high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates through time.

urban hierarchy

A system of cities consisting of various levels with few cities at the top level and increasingly more settlements on each lower level. The position of a city within the hierarchy is determined by the types of central place functions it provides.

Colony

A territory that is legally tied to a sovereign state rather than completely independent.

Epidemic

A widespread outbreak of an infectious disease within an area

Advantages and Disadvantages of Fragmented Borders

A: Access to different areas, more opportunity to discuss things, more countries to "deal with" you D: Difficult to communicate + defend

Advantages and Disadvantages of Perforated Borders

A: Another country is dependent upon you D: Another country is taking parts of "your" land Ex: South Africa to Lesotho

Advantages and Disadvantages of Compact Borders

A: Easy Defense + Communication D: Easy to Invade

Advantages and Disadvantages of Protruded/Prorupt Borders

A: Increases access to natural resources such as water D: Difficult to control the elongated portion Ex: Thailand

Advantages and Disadvantages of Elongated Borders

A: More access to water D: Difficult to communicate + defend Ex: Chile, Vietnam

Why did the US fight with Afghanistan?

Afg. is accused of state-sponsored terrorism by the US (9/11)

Where is pastoralism located?

Africa, Middle East + Central Asia

Ethic Conflict: Bosnians vs. Serbs (Bosnia-Herzigovina) 1992-1995

After the break up of Yugoslavia in 1992, the Serbians (Slavic/Eastern Orthodox) began an ethnic cleansing of the Bosnians (Muslims).

How did the Green Revolution begin?

Agricultural experiments in the 1940s that were funded by US charities to find ways of improving Mexico's wheat grain production capabilities to reduce hunger in that region

What's the most common African occupation?

Agriculture

What is the 3rd A.R. characterized by?

Agriculture became an industry -biotechnology -The Green Revolution

Describe Stage 2 of Rostow's Stages of Development- Preconditions for Takeoff

Agriculture becomes mechanized -a single industry begins to dominate -savings, investments, entrepreneurs, transport infrastructure emerge

What is the percentage of workers in agriculture, industry + services in LDCs like Afghanistan?

Agriculture- 20% Industry (factories)- 25.6% Services- 54.4%

What is the percentage of workers in agriculture, industry + services in MDCs like Australia?

Agriculture- 3.6% Industry (factories)- 21.1% Services- 75% (2009 EST.)

Examples of Exclaves

Alaska, W. Berlin (W. Germany), Kalingrad

Who developed the least cost theory?

Alfred Weber

Where does most of Africa's population live?

Along South-facing Atlantic coast

What were most cities in the early 1900s?

American or European industrial cities that grew during the industrial rev. (*INDUSTRIAL CITY*)

The Effect of 9/11 on America

Americans recognized terrorism as a threat + begins "War on Terror"

Examples of Folk Culture

Amish, Mauri People, Papua New Guinea, Bat Hunting in Australia, Digeridoo

extensive agriculture

An agricultural system characterized by low inputs of labor per unit land area.

Food Desert

An area in a developed country where healthy food is difficult to obtain

livestock ranching

An extensive commercial agricultural activity that involves the raising of livestock over vast geographic spaces typically located in semi-arid climates like the American West.

What are states on an international level?

An independent political unit occupying a defined, permanently populated territory, having full control over its internal foreign affairs

city

An urban settlement that has been legally incorporated into an independent, self-governing unit.

Micropolitan Statistical Area

An urbanized area of between 10,000 and 50,000 inhabitants, the county in which it is found, and adjacent counties tied to the city.

Example of supranationalism

Arab League and European Union

When did Specialization occur with cities?

As cities began to focus on goods over when they had a comparative advantage

What places on Earth have the most people?

Asia (China, India)

Where is intensive subsistence agriculture practiced?

Asia: India, China + S/East Asia

Examples of big and little states

B- Russia L- Monaco

Why was most of Europe late to the industrial revolution?

B/c/o revolution and strife (french revolution, Napoleonic Wars)

Give an example of a Metropolitan Statistical Area

Baton Rouge and the surrounding areas (Gonzales, Denham Springs, Brusly, Port Allen)

Why has the US become less industrialized?

Because land, labor and capital are more desirable in LDCs

Why did production increase greatly in the US in the late 1800s and early 1900s?

Because of fordism (assembly line)

Examples of Megacities

Beijing, Cairo, Mexico City, Jakarta

Ethnocentrism

Belief in the superiority of one's nation or ethnic group. They should be treated better than anyone else

environmental determinism

Belief that human behavior, individually + collectively, is strongly affected by, even controlled or determined by, the phys. environment -Geographers argued that the natural env. merely serves to limit the range of choices available to a culture

Animism

Belief that objects, such as plants and stones, or natural events, like thunderstorms and earthquakes, have a discrete spirit and conscious life.

examples of relic boundaries

Berlin Wall/ the Great Wall of China

Where in the UK was iron production centralization?

Birmingham

What are the 3 ways real estate developers and banks profited off of Ghettoization?

Blockbusting, Racial Steering, Redlining

What are the BRICS countries? (semi-periphery)

Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa

New Industrial Division of Labor

Breaks up the manufacturing process by having various pieces of a product made in various countries + then assembling the pieces in another country

Two Types of Manufacturing

Bulk gaining, Bulk Losing

What are the OECD G8 countries? (Core countries)

Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, UK, US (Core) -Mexico recently admitted (semi-periphery)

What has agribusiness increased (positives of 3rd A.R.)?

Cash crop productivity

Environmental Modification

Changes in the ecosystem resulting from human activities such as the use of pesticides, soil erosion, desertification.

An example of a positional boundary dispute

Chile- Argentina

What is the main MDC that invests in Africa?

China

examples of subsequent boundaries

China and Vietnam/ Germany and Poland/ Northern Ireland and Ireland

What countries have strong economies?

China, Germany, Japan

What main countries make up East Asia?

China, Japan, Korean Peninsula, + Taiwan

Examples of Universalizing Religions

Christianity, Islam, Buddhism

What were Greco-Roman Urban Hearths?

Cities that were *the center of political control over conquered regions* and were often built in a planned, grid-like pattern

Primate City

Cities with *primacy* that are more than 2 times the size of the next largest city and exert political, social and economic dominance

Examples of Quinary Activities

Coach Picou, President of US, Dr. Westbrook

Agribusiness

Commercial agriculture characterized by the integration of different steps in the food-processing industry, usually through ownership by large corporations.

mixed crop and livestock farming

Commercial farming characterized by integration of crops and livestock; most of the crops are fed to animals rather than consumed directly by humans.

Causes of Popular Culture

Communication Tech., Travel Tech., Globalization

Different Types of Borders

Compact, Prorupt, Elongated, Fragmented, Perforated

Essential Elements of A Map

Compass Rose, Titles/Labels, Scale, Grid (Lat/Long), Key/Legend, Inset, Symbols, Colors

What are the 2 basic properties of Population Distribution?

Concentration- how those things are dispersed in an area Density- Amount of something in an area

How did hinduism diffuse?

Contagious Diffusion - India Relocation Diffusion- Eastern Europe, N. America -immigrated to the US for a better life, brought their culture with it

Imperialism

Control of territory already occupied and organized by an indigenous society.

3rd World Countries

Countries with economies based on primary activities ex: Niger, Haiti

Folk Culture Region

Cultural norms traditionally practiced by a small, homogenous, rural group living in relative isolation

Two types of movement

Cyclic and Periodic

Why are dairy farms much closer to cities than grain farms?

Dairy expires much more quickly

First Agricultural Revolution *(NEOLITHIC)*

Dating back 10,000 years, the First Agricultural Revolution achieved plant domestication and animal domestication

Carl Sauer

Defined the concept of cultural landscape as the fundamental unit of geographical analysis.

desertification

Degradation of land, especially in semiarid areas, primarily because of human actions like excessive crop planting, animal grazing, and tree cutting.

Site

Describing a location of a place based on its internal physical + cultural characteristics, based on internal things -Humans have the ability to modify the characteristics of site

Population Distribution

Description of locations on Earth's surface where populations live

Rank-Size Rule

In a model urban hierarchy, the idea that the population of a city or town will be inversely proportional to its rank in the hierarchy

Where do the wealthier Europeans live? Why?

In the inner rings of the upper-class sector. It's because central location provides proximity to the best shops, food and cultural facilities

What main countries make up South Asia?

India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka

What is agglomeration?

Industries will clump together for mutual advantage -reduces costs, saves more

Quaternary Activities

Information, research, management

What was the crop innovation from Southwest Asia? What was that crop's diffusion route?

Integration of seed agriculture w/ domestication of herd animals -Route: To Europe, N/Africa + to N/Western India + Indus River Area

What is the key to development?

International trade

Since NYC has pan-regional influence, how far does it reach?

Into the 2 other centers of economic control, 1. Europe/Africa/Middle East and 2. Asia/Oceania

Cultural Imperialism

Invasion of a culture into another with the intent of dominating the invaded culture politically, economically, and/or socially.

Foreign Direct Investment w/ examples of major organizations that practice it

Investment made by a foreign company in the economy of another country, a loan Exs.: World Bank + International Monetary Fund (IMF)

Spatial Perspective

Invites consideration of the relationship between humans + the physical world

Green Revolution

Involved the practice of using higher yield seeds + expanded use of fertilizers to increase production

An example of a resource boundary dispute

Iraq invasion of Kuwait

Is altering our env. good or bad?

It depends, it's good for recycling, electric cars giving back clean water to the environment. However, air pollution through plants and cars, and deforestation negatively affect the env.

How did the 2nd Agricultural Revolution start?

It started due to technology from the Industrial Revolution (Steel Plows)

How has industrialization changed in the US?

It's become more efficient -use of robots has increased (cars) -*focused more on manufacturing computers*

Why does NYC have so much pan-regional influence?

It's home to powerful media outlets, financial institutions, global corporations headquarters, Wall Street and political organizations like the U.N.

Dairy Farming and Labor

It's labor intensive and expensive

What's an important trend in modern urbanization?

Its diffusion to less developed parts of the world

Positives of Primate Cities

Its large agglomeration of economic activity -Large market for goods and services

Why was heartland poised to rule the world?

Its large landmass

What main countries make up Southeast Asia?

Java, Sumatra, Borneo, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Indonesia

Symbols

Jesus in Rio, Wash. Monument, Statue of Liberty

Who are the United nations peacekeepers?

Korea, Rwanda, Bosnia

What are some places that have been divisive for if they're a state or not?

Korea, Taiwan (China considered it part of China), the poles, Sealand

What percent of people in MDCs and LDCs live in urban areas?

L- 2/5 M- 3/4

Example of High Land Values due to Agglomeration -Give reasons why

Land in San Francisco is very high -Silicon valley has 1/4 of all US capital -it's a very compact and small city

Satellites

Landsat- satellites above the Earth that scan the Earth in 16 days

Climate Region

Large areas of the Earth that share similar climate

What puts a *high* number of *opportunity-seekers* into already *strained places*?

Large migration streams of *young adults moving from rural to urban areas*

When did the Industrial Revolution diffuse to regions w/out coal?

Late 1800s

What places are the exceptions for High Land with no people?

Latin Am. + Africa

How was the united nations created?

League of Nations failed

Folk Culture

Limited to a smaller region/group of people -Usually isolated groups that have had long-lasting culture traits that haven't changed substantially over long periods

What are the social factors of the Human Development Index?

Literacy Rate, level of education, life expectancy

Where in the UK was textile production centralizatized?

Liverpool + Manchester

Hotelling's Model

Location of an industry cannot be understood without reference to other industries of the same kind. -Locational interdependence

Five Themes of Geography

Location, Place, Human-Environment Interaction, Movement, Region

What were the powerful cities in the urban banana?

London, Paris, Constantinople, Venice, Cairo, Nanking, Hanchow and Osaka

Wallerstein's Model

Looks at the world as a capitalistic system of interlocking states connected through competition Three parts: Core, Semi-periphery, Periphery -countries inside the circles are core or MDCs, outside are semi-p/periphery or LDCs

High-tech corridor (technopole) w/ examples

Places where technology and computer industries agglomerate. Example: Silicon Valley, Tokyo, Seattle (Microsoft, Amazon)

Urban Hearth Areas

Places where urbanization first developed

Reference Maps

Political Maps, Physical Maps, Road Maps, Plat Maps, Locator Maps, Thematic Maps, Choropleth Maps, Isoline Maps, Graduated Symbol Map, Dot Distribution Map, Cartogram

What does agriculture outpace in the Green Revolution/3rd Agricultural Revolution (positives of 3rd A.R.)?

Population

Thomas Malthus Theory

Population would outpace food supply. (poor suffer = have fewer children. war, disease, famine are greater the population reduces.

Example of Subsistence agriculture

Potato Famine in Ireland

Developmentalism

Predicts that all countries will eventually reach the highest level of development (*ROSTOW*)

plantation agriculture

Production system based on a large estate owned by an individual, family, or corporation and organized to produce a cash crop.

Planar Projection

Projection of the world on a flat surface

Conical Projection

Projection on a cone -large landmasses east to west

Polar or Azimuthal Projection

Purpose: Airline Pilots Strengths: straightest direction Distortion: Shows the poles

Conic Projection

Purpose: General use in midlat. countries Strengths: Lines of long. converge, Lines of lat. are curved, size + shape are both close to reality Distortion: Direction isn't constant, on a world map, long. lines converge at only 1 pole

Peters Projection

Purpose: spatial distributions related to area Strengths: sizes of land masses are accurate Distortion: shapes are inaccurate, especially near the poles

ethnicity

Refers to a group of people who share a common ancestry + cultural traditions of a particular homeland or hearth

Movement

Refers to the mobility of people, goods + ideas across the surface of the planet

Sequent Occupancy

Refers to the sequential imprints of occupants, whose impacts are layered one on top of the other.

What common traits might the most populous places on Earth exhibit?

Relatively calm compared to other countries (weather) -Agriculture -Most are Pro-Natalist -Lack of sex ed -Many countries only want boys (more ppl, more possible boys)

What besides the Electoral College is based on population?

Representation in the House of Representatives

Describe the 1st Agricultural Revolution in East Asia. (Yellow River Valley) 1. What was domesticated?

Rice and Chicken

What do supporters and critics think about gentrification?

S- a great solution to recharging a city's inner core that was suffering due to suburbanization C- only increasing uneven development by pushing lower-income families from their homes

Small + Large Scale

S- a large area w/out much detail L- a small area w/ much more detail

What are the secondary industrial regions?

S/East Asia, North Africa, Mexico, Brazil

Differences between subsistence and commercial agriculture

S: C: -Intensive -Extensive -Labor Intensive -Capital Intensive -Higher % of Farmers -Low % of Farmers

grain

Seed of a cereal grass

Rostow's Stages of Development

Seeks to explain and predict countries' patterns of economic development by explaining five stages which all countries move through as they improve their economic development

Truck Farming

Sell directly to consumers + consumers who can freeze the vegetable. Mostly in Southeast

quinary activities

Service sector industries that require a high level of specialized knowledge or technical skill. Examples include scientific research and high-level management.

Plat Maps

Show + label property lines and details of land ownership -Reference Map

Road Maps

Show highways + streets -Reference Map

Physical Maps

Show natural features, mountains, plateaus, water features, etc. -Reference Map

Thematic Maps

Show spatial aspects of info or phenomenon -Reference Map

Choropleth Map

Shows volume, distribution, and location of spatial data by using shades of the same color -Reference Map

What do many people fear about popular culture?

Some people believe the fast diffusion is threatening local or regional distinctiveness -causes cultural homogeneity

What was domesticated in Sub-Saharan/West Africa during the first agricultural revolution?

Sorghum, Yams, Millet + Rice were domesticated

Tribal Religions

Special forms of ethnic religions distinguished by their small size, their unique identity with localized culture groups not yet fully absorbed into modern society, and their close ties to nature.

What was the crop innovation from South Mexico? What was that crop's diffusion route?

Squash + Corn -Route: Throughout W. Hemisphere

What was the crop innovation from North Peru? What was that crop's diffusion route?

Squash, Cotton and Beans -Route: Throughout W. Hemisphere

Negatives of Primate Cities

Unequal economic and/or resource development -unequal distribution of wealth and/or power -Brain Drain- there comes a point where there aren't enough jobs, so intellectuals leave

Who does gentrification in inner cities attract?

Upper-middle-class people who work downtown and those who seek proximity to facilities, especially without kids

Examples of Enclaves

Vatican City, San Marino, Lesotho

How did seed planting begin?

W/ cutting stems off of another plant or dividing the roots

What are the 3 Major Locations Models?

Weber's Model, Hotelling's Model, Losch's Model

What was the crop innovation from Western Asia? What was that crop's diffusion route?

Wheat + Barley -Route: To S/West Asia

debt-for-nature swap

When agencies such as the World Bank make a deal with third world countries that they will cancel their debt if the country will set aside a certain amount of their natural resources.

When does a city demonstrate a high degree of *centrality*?

When it dominates economic, political or cultural functions more than one would expect based on its population size

What did Carl Sauer assert about cultural landscapes?

Whenever a human culture exists, a cultural landscape exists as the culture's unique "fingerprint" on their space

Least Cost Theory

Where something is located depends on *transportation costs* (both raw materials to the factory + finished goods to market), *labor costs and agglomeration costs* -Optimum location will be found *where the costs of all 3 are at their lowest*

What are some reasons for population growth decline?

Women's Rights, Contraceptive Use, Education, Gov. Policy

What's an example of a major organization that helps with development through international trade?

World Trade Organization

India in terms of population

World's 2nd most populous country, contains 3/4 of South Asia's population

Hinduism

World's oldest religion -4000+ years old

Has the 3rd A.R./ Green Rev. allowed for new food source inventions by scientists?

Yes

Can plants now grow at faster rates even in poor soil? How?

Yes, recent innovations have allowed

Young Turks vs. Armenians Ethnic Conflicts 1915-1919

Young Turks (muslims), part of the Ottoman Empire in Turkey, began to exterminate the Armenians (Christianity) -In the 4 year genocide, 2 million were murdered

Perifericos

Zones of squatter settlements on periphery of Latin American cities. A large number of migrants from rural areas end up in perifericos

antecedent boundary

a boundary line established before the area in question is well populated Ex: US-Canadian 1846

consequent (ethnographic) boundary

a boundary line that coincides with some cultural divide, such as religion, language, linguistics, ethnic, or economic

subsequent boundary

a boundary line that is established after the area in question has been settled

relic boundary

a boundary that no longer functions but is marked by some landscape features

Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA)

a central city of at least 50,000 people and urban areas linked to it

dairy farming

a farm that produces milk or milk products, and are usually around big urban areas

Population Pyramid

a graphical illustration that shows the distribution of various age groups in a population

Society

a group that shares a geographic region, a sense of identity, and a culture

non-material culture

a group's way of thinking (beliefs, values) and doing (patterns of behavior, language, gestures, etc.)

creole language

a language that began as a pidgin language but was later adopted as the mother tongue by a people in a place of the mother tongue

collective farm

a large government-controlled farm formed by combining many small farms

urban banana

a line of cities in the 1500s that most cities found themselves in were trade-centers that extended from London to Tokyo

Megalopolis

a massive urban "blob" of integrating metropolitan areas where boundaries are difficult to find

Von Thuen's Model

a model of land use that showed how market processes could determine how land in different locations would be used -different distances to the city maximize profits

feedlot

a plot of land on which livestock are fattened for market

Feedlot

a plot of land on which livestock/animals are fattened before they're slaughtered for market

Gentrification

a process, wherein older, urban zones are "rediscovered and renovated"

Compromise Projection

a projection onto a cylinder

Culture Region

a region defined by similar cultural traits and cultural landscape features -the people here often share a similar regional identity

Cultural Trait

a single attribute of a culture

GPS (global positioning system)

a system that accurately determines the precise position of something on Earth

frontiers

a tangible geographic area that's uninhabited by ppl. seeking to live outside of organized society -provide area of separation

subsistance agriculture

a type of farming in which farmers grow just enough food to provide for themselves and their families. survival only, no surplus -near total self-sufficiency

Culture Complex

a unique combination of culture traits for a particular culture group, no two countries have the same

What did countries w/out coal *(late 1800s)* need for the Industrial Revolution to come to them?

access to railroad -Flow of capital

Terrorism

actions by groups operating outside gov. rather than to those of official gov. agencies -Targets civilians

Bulk-gaining industry

add weight or bulk during the manufacturing process -Beverage making

What makes people more interconnected?

advances in communication and transportation tech

Primary Activities

agriculture, gathering industries, extractive industries

Federalism

allocates strong power to units of local government within the country

What is Mesopotamia?

an ancient city-state

Region

an area of the earth's surface with similar characteristics -Political, Physical, Cultural, Economic

planned economy

an economic system directed by government agencies

map projections

are used to show the curved surface of the Earth on a flat surface. Distribution can appear in size, distance, shape or area

Where is livestock ranching practiced?

arid or semi-arid regions

3 types of Population Density

arithmetic, physiological, agricultural

How do right-to-work laws draw industry into a certain area?

ask mr. moore, I don't know the answer yet

Fordism

assembly line production of identical commodities by a rigidly controlled and specialized labor force for generalized mass markets -named after Henry Ford

Why did Osama declare war w/ the US in 1996?

b/c/o US support of Saudi Arabia and Israel

Why are consumer and business services attached to CBDs?

because of its accessibility

Why are frontiers becoming attractive?

becoming more attractive to states for agriculture and mining

What are some issues that developing countries need help with to help their economy?

better schools, more advanced technology, a need to diversify their economy

examples of cottage industries

breaking bad, baking cakes at home, regular lemonade stands *(happen often, as if it was just a one-time occurrence it wouldn't be an industry)* -Apple + Google started as a cottage industry, in a person's basement

How do you limit Russia's expansion?

by colonizing around it

How was the rural-to-urban migration pattern and diffusion of city growth triggered?

by the European Industrial Revolution

Where are wet areas with high precipitation mostly located?

by the equator

demographic transition

change in a population from high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates

Micro-loan w/ example from class

small-business loan often used to buy equipment or operate a business example: The Peru video where the guy in Harlem invested small amounts in the pottery lady, this allowed her business to stay afloat

What has hinduism affected in modern day?

social, economic, artistic, and philosophical elements of society

Where has the US population shifted?

south ward + west ward

Describe Ancient States

sovereign state that comprises a town + the surrounding countryside, built walls to define boundaries

Special Economic Zones w/ an example

specific area within a country in which tax incentives and less stringent environmental regulations are implemented to attract foreign business and investment -Louisiana and the Movie Industry

Rate of Urbanization

speed at which the population is becoming urban

expansion diffusion

spread of a characteristic from a central node or a hearth through various means -Spread of Religion

wasted vote

spreads opposition supporters across many districts but in the minority

Weber's Model

states the optimum location of a manufacturing firm is explained in terms of cost minimization -least cost theory

economic geography

study of how people support themselves w/ the spatial patterns of *production*, *distribution* + *consumption* of goods + services, and the variation of economic activities over the Earth's surface

What regions dislocate the most refugees?

subsaharan Africa, Southeast Asia, N Africa, S/West Asia, South Asia, Europe

Multiple Nuclei Model (late 1940s, Harris and Ullman)

suggests that growth occurs independently around several major focal points (CBD)

Stimulus Diffusion

takes a part of an idea and spreads that idea to create an innovative product Ex: Rap Music

Supranationalism

tendency for a country to give up political power to a higher authority in order to accomplish a common objective

What are examples of labor intensive industries?

textile, apparel

Time Distance

the amount of time it takes for a person, an idea, or a product to travel- How has this changed?

Distribution

the arrangement of a feature in space

Rimland Theory

the belief of Nicholas Spykman that domination of the coastal fringes of Eurasia would provide a base for world conquest -whoever controls the Rimland controls the world

Central Business District (CBD)

the core of a city's economy, all North American cities have one

What did the Green Revolution Increase?

the crop output possible on every farm

paddy rice farming

the cultivation of rice on a paddy, or small flooded field enclosed by mud dikes, practiced in the humid areas of the Far East.

aquaculture

the cultivation of seafood

Agriculture

the deliberate tending of crops and livestock in order to produce food and fiber

relocation diffusion

the diffusion of a characteristic as people move from place to place -spread of Spanish to South America

Urban Sprawl

the diffusion of urban land use and lifestyle into formerly non-urban, often agricultural land. Led to the growth of edge cities

Connectivity

the directness of routes linking pairs of places

Economic Sector

the dividing of the country's population based upon the economic area in which that population is employed -*primary, secondary, tertiary, quaternary, quinary*

Friction of Distance

the effect of distance on the interaction between places

Cultural Ecology

the geographic study of human-environment relationships

Urbanization

the growth and diffusion of city landscapes and urban lifestyles

Rimland

the land around the edge of of a country or continent

Situation

the location of a place relative to other places

Industry

the manufacturing of goods in a factory

Threshold

the minimum number of people needed to fuel a particular function's existence in a central place

Transhumance

the movement of herds according to seasonal rhythms, warmer, lowland areas in winter + cooler, highland areas in summer

What led to demographic transitions related to the 2nd Agricultural Revolution? How?

the pattern of industrial and urban growth -it supplied more workers to the factories, which improved food supplies to support the increasing population

Activity Spaces

the places we travel to routinely in our rounds of daily activity

forestry

the planting, growing, and harvesting of trees

development

the process of improving the material condition of a state

Industrial Revolution

the process of technological change that started in the late 1700s that transformed how goods were produced and obtained by the people

Seed Planting

the production of plants through annual planting of seeds

scale

the relationship between the portion of Earth being studied and Earth as a whole

What does physiological density provide insights into?

the relationship between the size of a population and the availability of resources in a region

Accessibility

the relative ease with which a destination may be reached from some other place -North Korea has barely any

cultural nationalism

the resistance by a group of people against cultural imperialism + cultural convergence

Where does most of the money from mixed crop and livestock farming come from?

the sale of animal products

activity spaces

the space within which daily activity occurs

Hierarchical Diffusion

the spread of a feature or trend from one key person or node of authority or power to other persons or places Ex: Clothing Trends, Shaq and Gold bond

Cultural Geography

the study of people's lifestyles, their creations, and their relationships to the Earth and the supernatural.

Physical Geography

the study of physical features of the earth's surface

Human Environment Interaction

the study of the interrelationship between people and their physical environment -How do people relate to their physical world? -Use the env., change the env., accept the env.

Political Geography

the study of the organization and distribution of political phenomena, including their impact on other spatial components of society and culture

Political Ecology

the study of the relationships between political, economic and social factors with environmental issues and changes

Culture

the total of knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors shared by and passed on by members of a group

What is position of the urban hierarchy determined by?

the types of central place functions it provides.

adaptive strategies

the unique way in which each culture uses its particular physical environment

cultural landscape

the visible imprint of human activity and culture on the landscape -Ex: buildings, art, music

Psychological Distance

the way people view distance- "It's only 30 mins away" "It's in Timbuktu!"

What does succession migration cause?

the zone in transition- just outside the CBD that never becomes developed

What observations led to Holt's development of the Sector Model?

there were urban landuse zones of growth based on transportation routes and linear features

How do industries get money to fund themselves in the first place?

they borrow money to establish new factories

How do industries reduce labor costs?

they find areas where cheap, non-union labor is, as it maximizes profits that would be lost with high labor

How do industries reduce transportation costs?

they find where cost to transport materials + product is lowest

secondary activities

those parts of the economy involved in the processing of raw materials derived from primary activities and in altering or combining materials to produce commodities of enhanced utility and value -manufacturing, construction, and power generation

tertiary activities

those parts of the economy that fulfill the exchange function, that provide market availability of commodities, and the bring together consumers and providers of services -wholesale and retail trade, associated transportation and governmental services

How did Christianity spread in the Roman Empire?

through roads and the military

What's the primary function of Industrial Cities?

to *make and distribute manufactured goods*

Why did Halford Mackinder develop the Heartland theory?

to justify European colonization during the 19th century

Why did Osama move to Afghanistan?

to oppose the soviet-installed gov.

Where is shifting cultivation found?

tropical rain forests

What must factories be in order to get funding from banks?

trustworthy

central places

urban centers that provide services to their surrounding market area (the "hinterland")

uneven development

urban development that is not spread equally among a city's areas, leaving some areas richly developed and others continually poor and decrepit

Shock cities

urban places experiencing infrastructural challenges related to massive and rapid urbanization including the influx of urban in-migrants

Isoline Maps

use lines that connect points of equal value to depict variations in the data across space -Reference Map

Zoning Ordinances

used by the gov. to prevent the mixing of land uses

Location Triangle

used to determine the best place to locate a manufacturing plant based on Weber's model -Point 1: Market -Point 2: Resource 1 -Point 3: Resource 2 *all equal distances to center*

Ethnic Group

used to refer to a group that shares a language, customs, and a common heritage

graduated symbol map

uses symbols of different sizes to indicate different amounts of something. Map key is used to determine the amount -Reference Map

cartogram

volume of one phenomena or item that can be illustrated by size -Reference Map

What are wages like in labor intensive industries?

wages and compensation of labor is a high percentage of total expenses

How do we understand economic geography?

we use types of activities + organization to understand patterns

What crop dominates intensive subsistence?

wet or lowland rice

Blockbusting

when agents used racism to "bust up" a block by bringing in a minority family into a predominately white neighborhood and then profiting from all the turnover

Redlining

when banks would refuse to get loans to certain minority-occupied neighborhoods that were "red-lined"

commodification of labor

when factory owners looked at workers as objects with price tags, rather than as people, they became less important in the grand scheme of things

Pastoralism

when herders follow their herds from pasture to pasture

Deindustrialization

when industrial factories leave an area, they take the economic base with them leaving the old areas in heavy unemployment and an unstable economy

cumulative causation

when money flows to areas of greatest profit rather than to those of greatest need

Racial Steering

when real estate agents direct prospective homeowners toward or away from certain neighborhoods based on their race

Assimilation

when the original traits of the weaker culture are completely replaced by the dominant

How do you protect soil from erosion?

with ridge tillage

Why do women work more hours than men in most countries?

women are paid less for equal amounts of work than men

Has food production been expanding faster than population recently?

yes

Is a state a country?

yes

Urban Realms Model

explains suburban regions that were functionally tied to mixed-use, suburban downtowns with relative independence from CBDs. (Think: if you live in an area that has everything you need and want, how often do you leave that area?)

What are the two types of subsistence agriculture?

extensive, intensive

What were some industrial revolution innovations?

factories, mass produced goods, steam engine, trucks and cars

What does Agribusiness include?

farms, processing plants, packages, fertilizer labs, and distributors

examples of adaptive strategies

food, clothing, shelter, and defense.

Maquiladoras

foreign-owned assembly companies located in the US--Mexico border region

Culture Realm

formed through the fusing together of culture regions that share enough in common to be merged together -no fixed boundaries

plant domestication

genetic modification of a plant such that its reproductive success depends on human intervention

animal domestication

genetic modification of an animal such that it is rendered more amenable to human control

What was Megalopolis named after?

geographer Jean Guttman

What does redrawing district borders possibly lead to?

gerrymandering

Is a leading power a single state or group of states?

group, ex: European Union

Sub Culture

groups that share a specific identification, apart from a society's majority, even as the members exist within a larger society

Ghettoization

growth of areas of concentrated poverty in urban places

Suburbanization

growth of suburban neighborhood and commuter families

overfishing

harvesting fish to the point that species are depleted and the value of the fishery reduced

What does *Level 2* of cities, *Command and Control Centers*, consist of? Give an example.

headquarters of large corporations, business services, educational, medical and public institutions Ex: Silicon Valley and Seattle in the tech. industry

What does the core of Eurasia equal?

heartland (lots of resources)

Location

highlights how the geographical position of people and things on Earth's surface affects what happens and why -helps to establish the context within which events + processes are situated

Jihad

holy war

concentration

how closely things are related to 1 another in a space (clustered or dispersed)

Linear Distance

how far across the earth a person, an idea, or a product travels

How high a threshold is for a service depends on what?

how unique and special it is

Locator Maps

illustrations used in books and advertisements to show specific locations mentioned in the text -Reference Map

Mental Maps

image or picture of the way space is organized as determined by an individual's perception, impression, and knowledge of that space -based on their "sense of place"

Spatial Competition

implies that central places compete with each other for customers

Where are unitary systems common?

in European countries

How did urbanization grow during the Industrial Revolution? Why?

in a snowball process, as growth of urban jobs provided attractive opportunities to rural people who struggled

Where must a factory establish itself if it wants to get funding from banks?

in an area where banks are willing to give money to them

When is grain farming concentrated?

in planting + harvesting times

Material Culture

includes jewelry, art, buildings, clothing, weapons

Zone of Maturity

includes services and infrastructural developments

Infrastructure

includes services that support economic activities. It provides for transportation, communication, education, and other external needs of a company

What did mercantilism allow for?

increased capital flow

Is the number and percent of people living in urban areas in LDCs increasing or decreasing?

increasing

How high were the demands for food during the 2nd A.R. (Agricultural Revolution)?

incredibly large

shifting cultivation

involves farming large plots of land until nutrients are depleted and then moved on

Intensive Subsistence

involves the efficient use of a small parcel of land in order to maximize crop yield -large amounts of human labor + fertilizers

What does the combination of rain and heat do to the environment?

it rapidly depletes nutrients from the soil, not allowing for agriculture

What has the US economy become based on after it became less industrialized?

it's become based on *service industries* such as sales, telecommunications and banking

What's more important for a modern city in today's infrastructure, *its location* or *its prominence in global communications*? Give examples of cities like this.

its prominence Ex: London, NY, Tokyo

When was industry and manufacturing at their height in the U.S.?

late 1800s and early 1900s

When did the 3rd A.R. occur?

latter half of 20th century

What does *Level 1* of cities, *World Cities*, consist of?

law, banking, insurance, accounting, and advertising (all concentrated in *large numbers*)

stacked vote

links distant areas of like-minded voters through oddly shaped boundaries

Why do India and Pakistan fight over Kashmir?

majority is Muslim, and land was given to India b/c of their help w/ Pakistan rebels -they want access to their water for their high populations, Indus River -

gerrymandering

manipulating districts to empower or discriminate against groups of people

Losch's Model

manufacturing plants choose locations where they can maximize profit

Secondary Activities

manufacturing, processing, construction, power production

Popular Culture

mass culture that diffuses rapidly

What type of goods do most of America rely on?

mass-produced goods

What are groups that still hunt and gather today?

massai, tribes on southern islands, areas in Central Asia

life expectancy

measures the average number of years a person will live

When did the Industrial Revolution begin?

mid 1700s, Doubling Rate decreases b/c/o tech

Nomadic herding/pastoralism

migration but controlled movement of livestock solely dependent on natural forage

What does dairy farming produce?

milk, butter, cheese

capital

money for investment

Why did most of Asia, the Middle East + Africa enter the industrial revolution in the mid 20th century?

more powerful countries like the US wanted their oil

Intercontinental/International Migration

movement across international borders, but not continents

Periodic Movement

movement away from home for a longer period (ex. migrant labor, transhumance, military service)

Cyclic Movement

movement away from home for a short period (ex. commuting, seasonal movement, nomadism)

Voluntary Migration

movement in which people relocate in response to perceived opportunity; not forced.

What does *Level 3* of cities, *Specialized Producer- Service Centers*, consist of? Give an example.

narrow and highly specialized variety of services -Orlando makes most of its money on theme parks (Universal, Disney)

What do *land* industries encompass?

natural and human resources

Where does mixed and livestock farming usually take place?

near urban areas

Backwash effect

negative effects that happen when other areas suffer out migration of talented people to technopoles *(Brain Drain)*

What did the neolithic revolution create a divide between?

nomads + settled ppl.

acculturalation

occurs when 2 cultures come into contact w/ one another + the "weaker" (politically or w/ less mainstream acceptance) of the 2 adopts traits from the dominant culture

cultural homogeneity

occurs when cultures become the same, or uniform, and local diversity is decreased

Transculturation

occurs when two cultures of just about equal power or influence meet and exchange ideas or traits without the domination seen in acculturation and assimilation

What does asking locational questions mean?

often means look at the the reciprocal relationship between humans + environments

What's China's biggest solution to stopping large population growth?

one child policy

superimposed boundary

one forced on existing cultural landscapes

What is urbanization in less-developed countries focused on?

one or two cities rather than being spread evenly throughout

Where is dairy farming located?

outside of urban areas

succession migration

pattern of inflow of new migrants to the CBD in the concentric model and the pushing of existing inhabitants outward into other rings

What are suburban houses usually built for? Why would others be excluded?

people of a single social class, with others excluded by virtue of cost, size or labor

Are the boundaries of culture region perceptual or formal?

perceptual

How often did terror attacks occur against Americans in the 90s?

periodically

Describe Physical and Cultural aspects of Landlocked boundaries

physical: Desert, mountains, water Cultural: Geometric (38th Parallel), Religious

unitary system

places most power in the hands of central gov. officials

Intertillage

practice of mixing different seeds and seedlings in the same swidden

Bid-Rent Curve

predicts that land prices and population density decline as distance from the CBD increases

Gravity Model

predicts that the *optimal location* of a service is directly related to the *number of people in the area* and inversely related to the *distance people need to access it*

Robinson Projection

purpose: general strengths: no more distortion, oval​ shape is like the globe Distortion: area, shape, size + directions are all slightly distorted

Mercator Projection

purpose: navigation strengths: directions are accurate, lines of latitude + longitude meet at right angles distortion: distance between lines o/ longitude appear constant. Land masses near the poles appear large

Pan-Regional Influence

reach that extends beyond the city's own region into the other centers of economic control. (NYC)

Types of Diffusion

relocation, expansion, hierarchical, contagious, stimulus

Bulk-Losing Industry

remove weight or bulk during the manufacturing process -metals, steel

Vegetative Planting

reproduction of plants by direct cloning from existing plants

right-to-work laws

requires "open shop", workers don't have to join the union as a condition of employment

Tertiary Activities

retail and wholesale trade, personal and professional services

Edge Cities w/ Baton Rouge Examples

self-sufficient, urban villages that often develop at highway exits and are part of a larger, metropolitan complex (Dutchtown/Gonzales/Denham Springs)

What does understanding the regional geography of a place allow us to make?

sense of much of the info. we have about places

Non-Basic Services with examples

serve the community -schools -grocery stores -doctors -DMV -restaurants

1st World Countries

service based economy, free market, high productivity, high living standard

What's domesticated in pastoralism?

sheep, goats, camels, cattle, horses, yaks

Dot Distribution Map

shows specific location and distribution of something across the territory of a map -Reference Map

Landuse Model

shows the different ways that ppl. use the land that's available to them

Gender Equity Index

shows the disparity between the rights of men and women.

Flow Line Maps

shows the movement of people, goods or ideas

Sector Model (1930s, Holt)

similar land uses and socioeconomic groups clumped in geometric sectors radiated outward from the CBD

Export processing zones

small areas with exceptional investment and trading conditions that governments create to stimulate and attract foreign investment

Forced Migration

Human migration flows in which the movers have no choice but to relocate.

Where and when did the second agricultural revolution begin?

In West Europe in the 1600s

How are the 5 activities connected?

Transportation and Communication

An example of a functional boundary dispute

US-Mexico

suitcase farm

In American commercial grain agriculture, a farm on which no one lives; planting and harvesting is done by hired migratory crews.

Describe Stage 2 of the Epidemiological Transition: Age of Receding Pandemics

*Improvements in public health* (e.g. water, sewage) & nutrition -*Infant mortality rate declines* -Pandemics - widespread disease declines -*Increased life expectancy* Developing countries in *late 1700s* -Cholera

What were the 3 characteristics of Louis Wirth's (30s) idea of a city?

*Large size*- ppl. can only know small % of the people living there *High population density*-each person plays a specific role and encourages people to compete for survival in limited space *Social Hetereogenous*- has greater freedom but may feel lonely and isolated

Describe countries in the PERIPHERY area of Wallenstein's World Systems Theory

*Low Income* -Low use of tech -High % of primary activities -Low levels of education by majority of population

Describe the relationships between the percent of primary, secondary and tertiary sector workers and the 5 levels of Rostow's Development theory.

*Traditional* P- Vast Majority, S- Very Few, T- Few *PCs Takeoff* P- Vast majority, S- Few, T- Very Few *Takeoff* P- Declining, S- Rapid Growth, T- Few *Drive to Maturity* P- Few, S- Stable, T- Growing rapidly *High Mass Consumption* P- Very Few, S- Declining, T- Vast majority

Describe Stage 3 of the Epidemiological Transition: Age of Degenerate and Human-made Diseases

*Urbanization & continued improvements in public health & nutrition* -Death from polio, measles declines -Life expectancy 50> *Rise of Man-made diseases* -Smoking & Fattier diet -Rising cancer & heart disease (~50%)

Urban System

*interdependent* set of urban settlements within a specified region. exist in a *spider-web* of interacting parts

Squatter Settlements

*makeshift housing* on land *not legally owned* or rented by *urban migrants*, usually in unoccupied open spaces within or on the outskirts of a rapidly growing city. contains *few or no services*

World Cities

*powerful* cities that control a disproportionately *high level* of the *world's economic, political, and cultural activities* with *high level of centrality* and *pan-regional influence*

Describe Stage 4 of the Epidemiological Transition: Age of Delayed Degenerative Disease

-*Improved health care, diet, medicine & education* -Heart disease & cancer prevented or delayed -Life expectancy >65

How did established marketplaces spread?

-*Westward* throughout the Mediterranean region -*Eastward* through *overland* + *caravan trade routes* to *India, China and Japan*

Different ways of viewing the same environment

-A body of water -Mountains

What were the common Urban Hearth Area qualities?

-A dependable water supply -A long growing season -Domesticated plants and animals -Plenty of building materials -System of writing records

Location: Where is it?

-Absolute Location -Relative Location -Hemisphere -Equator- divides n + s hemispheres -Prime Meridian- divides e + w hemispheres -Latitude -Equator -Longitude -Prime Meridian

How have *more developed country* farmers fixed the *difficult to sustain land* problem where they produce more food than needed?

-Adopted sustainable agriculture

What happens when you go further from a city agriculturally? (Von Thuen)

-Agriculture expands

What is there to praise about the Green Revolution?

-Agriculture now outpaces population -Nitrogen-based fertilizers increase farm productivity -Scientists continue to invent new food sources -Higher productivity reduces dependency on imports in places such as China + India -New irrigation have increased crop yields -Agribusiness has increased cash crop productivity

Common Traits of Ecumene

-Almost 90% of all ppl. live north of the equator -More than 1/2 of all ppl. live on about 5% of the land -Most people live in areas close to sea level -2/3 of the world's pop is concentrated within 300 miles of the ocean

Describe Stage 3: Moderate Growth

-Brought about by cultural changes -characterized by a sudden CBR drop -there's still growth, just not as fast as 2

Describe Stage 2: High Growth

-Brought about by the Industrial Rev. -CDR plummets while the CBR remains the same as in Stage 1 -Allowed to spread LDRs by the med. revolution (20th century)

Examples of Primate Cities

-Buenos Aires -Argentina is 10x the size of the 2nd largest city, Rosario -Tokyo has 24.5 million more ppl. than the 2nd largest in Japan, Yokohama

Describe Stage 4: Declining Growth

-CBR=CDR -Brought about by aging population, education= family planning -Zero Population Growth -Low TFR

Describe Stage 5: Negative Growth

-CDR>CBR b/c/o aging population -RNI is less than 0 -Much of Europe is entering this stage

Examples of Political Geography

-Characteristics of political entities -Problems in defining jurisdictions -The significance of fragmentation of political power

What are the environmental factors in *land* industries?

-Climate -Cultural facilities -low cost energies

Disadvantages of Agglomeration

-Congestion -High Land Values -Pollution- depending on the industry -Increased government regulation

Describe Osama Bin Laden

-Created and Funded Al Qadea -Killed May 2, 2011

Examples of Devolution

-Czechoslovakia breaking into Czech Republic and Slovakia -Yugoslavia breaks up into several countries -London ceding power to Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales

Examples of Agglomeration

-Dalton, Georgia- 19 of 20 US top carpet makers -Wall Street- Banks all close to Stock Market -Silicon Valley- High tech computer companies/Computers

What are the 3 reasons why culture changes?

-Discovery- learning about something that already exists within a culture (women athletes) -Invention- the creation of something that changes a culture (tech.) -Diffusion- transmission of items or practices from 1 culture to another (food, language, etc.)

Describe Stage 4 of Rostow's Stages of Development- The Drive To Maturity

-Growth is diverse and self-sustaining, supported by tech innovation -Economic development spreads to all parts -A more complex transport system develops -Increase in # and types of industry -Manufacturing expands as early industries decline

Describe the relationships between input, factories, and the market in bulk reducing/*material oriented* markets

-Heavy input short distance from source to plant -lighter output, long distance to market

Describe Pre-Agriculture Life (Paleolithic (Stone Age) Era)

-Hunter-gatherers and nomads -Family groups of 50 or less -5-10 million ppl. with lots of space(9000 BC)

Give an example of division of labor on a more personal level

-I cook this, you cook that, makes a whole meal -Group projects and dividing up the work between the groupmates

How does womens' rights affect population size?

-If more women are able to attend school, they learn employment skills, gain more economic control of their lives, and make more informed reproductive choices. -With the survival of more infants assured, women would be more likely to choose contraceptives to limit the number of children.

Describe Stage 3 of Rostow's Stages of Development- Takeoff

-Industrialization increases w/ workers switching from the land to manufacturing. -Growth is concentrated in few regions of the county and in one or two industries -New political and social institutions support industrialization -Airports, Roads, and railways are built

Smartphones and the S-Curve

-Initially, a small group that can afford -Once more ppl. learn + prices drop, a much faster adoption rate (majority adopters) -Finally, the rate of adoption slows down + the "late adopters" who didn't have one, purchase

Describe Landlocked Countries

-Isolation -At the merry of neighbors -Need communication linkages (highways, airports, rivers, etc.)

Popular Culture Lagniappe Info.

-Large, heterogeneous societies -Largely Urban Based -Large Scaled -Product of economically more developed countries -Based on global connections

Compare the Rates and Levels of Urbanization in China and America

-Level OU in US is nearly 75% but the rate is much lower than China's -China has a rapid rate despite its level of 30%

Describe Stage 1 of the Epidemiological Transition: Age of Pestilence and Famine

-Life expectancy >35 -Pestilence - fatal epidemic diseases -Ex: Bubonic plague - 1347 Europe - kills 1/2 of population Death by animal & human attacks -<10% heart disease

Describe the relationships between input, factories, and the market in bulk gaining/*market-oriented* markets

-Lighter input, longer distance to plant -Heavier output, short distance to market

What do all cities have?

-Locally elected officials -Ability to raise taxes -Responsibility for providing essential services

Give some examples of agricultural village cities

-Mesopotamia -Indus River Region -Nile Valley -Huang the River Valley -Mexico and Peru

Ravenstein Revisions

-More migrants are female, most migrants are best educated

How did Buddhism become less popular in India?

-Muslims relocated to the country in their migration -Hindu diffused into India from the hearth, Punjab

Who were the two superpowers in the era of two superpowers?

-NATO- anti-communist -Warsaw Pact- Pro Communist

What were the effects of devolution in Europe?

-New States are created -Political Instability -Mass Migration -Ethnocentrism

How have *lower developed country* farmers fixed the *high population growth* problem?

-New farming methods (plows, not very effective) -Land left fallow for shorter periods of time

What are some Culture Hearth locations?

-Nile River Valley in Egypt -Indus River Valley in India -Yellow River Valley in North China -Meso-America in Mexico -Mesopotamia in Iraq

What are the 4 Primary Industrial Zones (New Industrial Countries)?

-Northeastern US and Canada -Central and Western Europe -Western Russia and Ukraine -East Asia (4 tigers) + Japan, China

Give some examples of Regional Organizations

-OSCE (Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe) -OAS (Organization of American States) -AU (African Union) -Commonwealth

Where's federalism often found? (give examples)

-Often in Multinational states Ex. Unites States, Russia, Canada, Brazil, India

What are the effects of supranationalism on Europe?

-Open Borders -Free Trade between countries (No Tariffs) -Common Policies (Environmental, Foreign) -Larger Trading Market -Common Currency (EURO)

Judaism

-Original Abrahamic religion -4000 yrs. Old -Has territorial & political identity T-orah- Holy Book -10 Commandments

Environmental Downsides to the Green Revolution

-Pesticides have caused pollution and soil-contamination -Workers are exposed to chemicals + suffer health problems -Requires more water so it strains water resources -Requires more mechanized equipment that requires more expensive fuels which increases pollution

What is Place like?

-Physical features -Climate, landforms + vegetation -Dams, highways, houses

What are the two ways states can cooperate with each other?

-Political and Military -Economic, trade agreements, military alliances​

Place

-Ppl develop a sense of place by infusing a place w/ meaning + emotion -We also develop perceptions of places where we have never been through books, movies, stories, and pictures

Describe Stage 1: Low Growth

-Ppl. depended on hunting + gathering for food -Most of human history spent during this stage -The NIR/RNI is essentially zero -There's no country still in this stage

Characteristics of Pre-Industrial Cities

-Surrounding rural settlements provided food to urban dwellers who in turn provided different economic functions -Served as trade centers and gateways to foreign lands and markets -Had a diverse mix of economic functions in any given space -Shops, markets, homes and government offices could be found jumbled together -Economic segregation often existed between the elite and poor

Physiological Density

-The # of ppl. supported by a unit area of arable land -Provides insight into the relationship between the size of a pop. + the availability of resources in a region

Describe what happened between the USSR and Afghanistan

-USSR controlled Afg. in 1979 -US gave money/weapons to Afg rebels called "Mujahideen" fighting Russians -USSR kicked out by 1992

Describe countries in the SEMI-PERIPHERY area of Wallenstein's World Systems Theory (w/ examples)

-Used to be peripheral -Increased economic development Ex: BRICS counties

Folk Culture Lagniappe Traits

-Usually relatively isolated -Anonymous hearths, sources, and dates -Dependent on the env. -Usually practiced by small, homogenous groups

Where do most people live? (Ecumene)

-almost 90% live north of equator -most live close to sea level -More than half of all people live on about 5% of the land, 9/10 less than 20% -About 2/3 of the world's pop is concentrated within 300 miles of the ocean

Describe Universalizing Religions

-claim applicability to all humans -that seek to transmit their beliefs through missionary work + conversions -choose to make it a commitment

What are the exceptions to the location rules that industries follow?

-footlose industries -substitution principle -agglomeration

Diffusion S-Curve by Hagerstrand

-hearths diffuse in stages 1st- innovations gain acceptance in their origin 2nd- Beings to diffuse rapidly outward 3rd- slows down and reaches max. saturation

yoke for horse

-improved during 2nd A.R. , the oxen were replaced with horses

Lagniappe Industrial Revolution Facts

-machines replaced human labor -coal was leading energy source -improved transportation + infrastructure

What two changes have recently changed the density gradient?

-number of people living in the center of CBD has decreased -a trend toward less density difference within urban areas

What types of buildings are best in rural areas? Why? *(land industries)*

-one story buildings are most efficient, as there isn't enough room for giant one story factories in cities

Describe Stage 5 of Rostow's Stages of Development- High Mass Consumption

-rapid expansion of tertiary industry -industry shifts to production of durable consumer goods

What site and situation factors allowed for the creation of the urban banana?

-site- arable land, street layout, building layout -situation- proximity to major trade routes and other urban places

Ethnic Religion

-strong territorial identification -strong cultural group identification -become a member by birth or by adoption of a complex lifestyle and cultural identity -not merely by a statement of faith (Fellman, 157)

Concentric Zone Model (1920s, *Burgess*)

-suggests that a city's land use can be viewed from above as a series of concentric rings -assumes a process called *succession migration*

In what two ways are the populations of a country influenced by demographic transition?

-the % of pop. in each age group -the distribution of males + females

What do Malthus supporters argue?

-the growth of less developed countries are outstripping even Malthus' predictions -world pop is stripping other resources, not just food -birth control is a neccesity

What do Malthus' critics believe?

-the theory states that food prod. is fixed rather than growing -increase in food tech is allowing for growth -larger pop= larger economic growth to produce greater resources

What's the highest and best score you can get on the human development index?

1

Describe the 1st Agricultural Revolution in Southwest Asia (Mesopotamia, Fertile Crescent) 1. Where was it located? 2. What was domesticated? 3. What animals were used?

1. Between the Tigris + Euphrates River 2. Barley + Wheat 3. Pigs, Cattle, Sheep + Dogs

Describe the 1st Agricultural Revolution in Latin America (Yucatan Peninsula + Incan) 1. What was domesticated? 2. What crops were grown?

1. Corn, Potatoes, Squash + Beans 2. Staple Crops

Ravenstein's Laws of Migration

1. Most migration is over a short distance. 2. Long-range migrants usually move to urban 3. Most migration is step migration 4.' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' is rural to urban 5. Each flow has a counterflow 6. Most migrants are young males

What are the 5 Levels of Activities?

1. Primary 2. Secondary 3. Tertiary 4. Quaternary 5. Quinary

What are the reasons for Colonialism?

1. Promote Christianity (God) 2. Extract useful resources + to serve as captive markets for their products (Gold) 3. Establish relative power thru the # of their colonies (Glory)

What are the main parts of the Demographic Transition Model?

1. The Demographic Transition -Low, High, Moderate, Low Growth 2. Pop Pyramids -Age Distribution, Sex Ratio 3. Countries in diff. stages of demo. transition 4.Demo. transition + world pop. growth

5 Rostow stages of development

1. The Traditional Society 2. Pre-conditions for takeoff 3. Takeoff 4. The Drive to Maturity 5. High Mass Consumption

According to the gravity model, what 2 patterns reflect consumer behavior?

1. The greater the # of people living in a particular place, the greater is the # of potential customers for a service 2. The farther people are from a particular service, the less likely they are to use it (distance decay)

What were Weber's 5 assumptions about his own theory?

1. Uniformity- an area is completely uniform physically, politically, culturally + technologically 2. One product/market- manufacturing involves a single product to be shipped to a single market whose location is known 3. Raw Materials from Multiple Locations- Inputs involve raw materials from more than 1 known source location 4. Infinite/Immobile Labor- Labor is infinitely available but immobile in location 5. Fixed Transportation Routes- transportation routes aren't fixed but connect origin + destination by the shortest path -trans. routes directly reflect the weight of items shipped + their distance moved

What are the four levels of cities that geographers distinguish that play a major role in the provision of producer + other business services in the global economy?

1. World Cities 2. Command and Control Centers 3. Specialized Produced- Service Centers 4. Dependent Centers

The second agricultural revolution intensified _________ and promoted ____________. Dramatic improvements included ________ + ________

1. agriculture 2. higher yield per acre 3. crop + livestock yields

How many people globally are factory workers? What countries make up that number?

1/2 billion -China- 1/4 -India- 1/5 -MDCs- 1/5

How much US capital does Silicon Valley have?

1/4

What percent of the world's population is in Europe?

11%

How many islands does Indonesia have?

13,677

Sikhism

1500s attempt to unify Hindu and Islam

How did the # of people living in cities increase over time?

1800- 1% 1850- 6% 1900- 14% 1950- 30% 2000- 47%

When did the Medical Revolution begin?

1850, developed countries get medicines, doubling rate decreases

From 1945-1993 how many u.n. countries were added?

1945: Established by the Allies 1955: 16 countries 1960: 17 countries 1990-93: 26 countries

Describe what happened between the Taliban and Afghanistan

1995- Taliban gains control 2001- US invaded Afg + unseated the Taliban -Taliban still challenges US backed Afg.

What percent of the world's population lives in West Africa?

2%

How much world area do Dry Areas take up?

20%

What percent of the world's population is in South Asia?

20%, 2nd largest concentration of ppl.

In what year did the population of urban areas exceed that of rural?

2008

How is 20th-century global conflict different than in the 21st?

20th- between states/countries 21st- indicated by individuals/groups (terrorism) (9/11, Boston Marathon)

density, concentration, pattern

3 main properties of distribution

Global Positioning System (GPS)

30 satellites- Navstars- beam longitude, latitude, altitude and time to Earth

When were the earliest cities born and what were they?

3500 BCE, agricultural villages

What are the top 5 countries ranked by agricultural output?

5. Japan 4. Brazil 3. U.S. 2. India 1. China

List the 5 activities in terms of biggest to smallest industry-wise (1- biggest, 5- smallest).

5. Quinary (basically connected to Quaternary) 4. Tertiary 3. Primary 2. Secondary 1. Quaternary

What's the rule of 70?

70/RNI= # of years of doubling time

What percent of Europeans live in cities?

75%

What percent of people in South Korea and Japan live in urban areas?

75%, their pops. are distributed differently + is also not uniform

How many of the 10 most populous cities are in LDCs?

8

When did the Agricultural Rev. take place?

8,000 BCE, Doubling Rate decreases b/c/o food

What percent of East Asia's population is in China?

80%

Exclave

A bounded territory that is part of a particular state but is separated from it by the territory of a different state.

Geographic Information System (GIS)

A computer system that stores, organizes, analyzes and displays geographic data. -Combines data from a variety of sources + displays it

GIS (geographic information system)

A computer system that stores, organizes, analyzes, and displays geographic data.

Indigenous Cultures

A culture group made up of the original inhabitants of a territory that is distinct from the dominant national culture

ranching

A form of commercial agriculture in which livestock graze over an extensive area.

pidgin language

A form of speech that adopts a simplified grammar and limited vocabulary of a lingua franca, used for communications among speakers of two different languages.

Biotechnology

A form of technology that uses living organisms to produce/genetically modify or change plant or animal products

Cereal Grain

A grass yielding grain for food.

Race

A group of human beings distinguished by physical traits, blood types, genetic code patterns or genetically inherited characteristics.

Geocaching

A hunt for a cache, the GPS coordinates which are placed on the Internet by other geocachers.

Swidden

A patch of land cleared for planting through slashing and burning.

Example of The Hexagonal Spatial Pattern

How places like Brusly and Walker wouldn't be able to function well without Baton Rouge

Types of Toponym

Descriptive- Phys. Features, EX: Grand Canyon Shift Names- Relocated Names Mistaken- Historic Errors Manufactured- Made-Up names Commemorative- In Honor of a Famous Person Possessive Names- Named for a Person Incident Names- Names for events Commendatory- Praising Names

Give an example of deindustrialization besides the rust belt

Detroit after the 2008 crash

What did Samuel Borchert do in the 1960s?

Developed the Model of Urban Evolution (Evolution of U.S. City) by linking changes in transportation tech. to urban evolution

Human Development Index

Developed to gain a predictor or standard of living by evaluating both the *productivity* of a country and its *social factors*

Gadhafi

Dictator of Libya

Absolute Location

Distance described by using a unit of measure

Relative Location

Distance described using other factors

What does the Epidemiological Transition model focus on?

Distinctive causes of death in each stage of the demographic transition

What areas are sparsely populated?

Dry, Wet, Cold, High Areas

When were Rostow's and Wallerstein's models made?

During the cold war

When did the Industrial Revolution diffuse to mainland Europe?

Early 1800s

Where does bird flu come from?

East Asia

What 6 areas are 2/3 of the world's population concentrated in (in population order)?

East Asia, South Asia, Europe, Southeast Asia, US/Canada, West Africa

What's most important today in determining world powers?

Economy

What are other government policies that will influence their industry?

Education- what do you need to have education-wise to join an industry? Taxes, Subsidies -Env. Regulations- finding ways to make factories more eco-friendly takes money, time and resources

Examples of Genetically Modified Crops

Eggplants in Bangladesh, Papayas in Hawaii -Both prevented mass hunger in those areas

Where and when did the Industrial Revolution begin?

England in the 1700s

Example of Imperialism

European colonization of Africa + Asia is considered imperialism

Quinary Activities

Executive decision makers

What three types of diffusion helped with the spread of Christianity?

Expansion, Hierarchal, Contagious

What do Nitrogen-based fertilizers increase (positives of 3rd A.R.)?

Farm Productivity

Theme 3: Region

Features of the Earth's surface tend to be concentrated in particular areas, which we call regions.

What devices or tools were developed in the 2nd A.R.?

Fertilizers, Weed Killers, Pesticides -Refrigerators -Jethro Tull's Seed Drill

How did fields change in the second Agricultural Revolution?

Fields were much larger but still used the same amount of labor

What does Europe import?

Food + other resources

In the 3rd A.R., what grew to a global scale?

Food manufacturing

How does one earn the USDA Organic label?

Foods must be produced w/out the use of synthetic pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers, sludge, irradiation or genetically modified seeds. Cows must have access to pasture a min. of 120 days a year

Why were inner-city homes destroyed? What was the replacement?

For public housing, which was a low-income household who must pay 30% of their income for their rent

What do landlocked countries do to lessen isolation?

Form alliances w/ other countries

3 Types of Regions

Formal- Defined by borders, climate, economy -Continental area, cultural styles, climate (US, Canada, Latin America, East Asia) Functional- A Hub city and its suburb Perceptual- People perceive the region to have similar characteristics, but the characteristics differ

Who created the Organic Theory?

Friedrich Ratzel

What are the economic factors of the Human Development Index?

GDP per Capita

Scale

Geographers employ this concept to understand individual, local, regional, national + global interrelationships

2nd World Countries

Hardline communist countries, centrally planned economies

double cropping

Harvesting twice a year from the same field.

Megacities

Have a high degree of *centrality* + *primacy* though not considered world cities. They have a *high level of influence* and power in *their countries' economies* -*HAVE TO HAVE OVER 10,000,000 RESIDENTS*

Political Maps

Have borders like states on the US map or countries on a world map -Reference Map

What are geographical questions?

Have we discovered everything on Earth? How do countries get their borders? What are the various ways we can move from Point A to B? Why are some countries fighting?

At what level of Rostow's stages of development is the United States at?

High Mass Consumption -Secondary Sector is declining

Theme One: Location

Highlights how the geographical position of people and things on Earth's surface affects what happens and why

The 4 Asian Tigers

Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan

How does this "bank investing capital in a factory system" affect the relationship between LDCs and MDCs?

MDCs will get most of the investments, as the MDC banks aren't very trusting in investing in LDCs when they can invest in their own industries. *LDC banks aren't very efficient*

What type of device was given a much larger focus in the 3rd A.R.?

Machines (Mechanization)

Sustainable Agriculture

Maintains and enhances environment -Organic farming -Fewer pesticides + chemicals -Better integration of crops and livestock

What's an example of a city that has *centrality* despite its population size?

Managua, Nicaragua accounts for only 30% of the total population but controls nearly 40% of the country's economy

Examples of industrial cities

Manchester, Chicago, Barcelona

cottage industry

Manufacturing based in *homes* rather than in a factory where people manufacture tools + ag. equipment for *their own communities*

What's something from Malthus' theory that was correct but for different reasons?

Many people in the world cannot afford to buy food or do not have access to sources of food, but these are problems of distribution of wealth rather than insufficient global production of food, as Malthus theorized.

Range of a good or service

Maximum distance a person is willing to travel to obtain a good or service

What was the crop innovation from North China? What was that crop's diffusion route?

Millet -Route: To S/West Asia + S/East Asia

What was the crop innovation from Ethiopia? What was that crop's diffusion route?

Millet -There was no route, remained isolated in Ethiopia

What's the largest population concentration in the Western Hemisphere?

N-East US + S-East Canada -2% of world's pop lives here -less than 5% of ppl. are farmers

mineral/fossil fuels

Natural resources containing hydrocarbons, which are not derived from animal or plant sources.

What political parties may have originated from the Organic Theory?

Nazis and Lebensraum

Where in the UK was Coal production centralized?

Newcastle

Where does 50% of West Africa's population live?

Nigeria

Does the multiple nuclei model make CBDs unimportant? Why or why not?

No, it just shows that areas can grow simultaneously

Does intensive subsistence yield small amounts of output per acre?

No, it yields large amounts

examples of superimposed boundaries

North and South Korea, East and West Germany

Criticisms of Developmentalism

Not equal opportunity system -core countries have advantages that peripheral countries do not

Foot Loose Industries w/ examples

Not restricted in when they can lo/relocate + they can maintain the *same cost of transportation and production* Examples: Amazon, Food Trucks

Rank Size Rule Formula

Nth largest city= 1/n the size of the largest city For Example: -The largest city: 10 million -2nd largest: 5 million (half of largest) -3rd largest: 3.33 million (3rd of largest)

Density Gradient

Number of houses per unit of land diminishes as the distance from the center of the city increases.

cultural convergence

Occurs when 2 cultures adopt each other's traits + become more alike

Cultural Barrier

Occurs when a prevailing culture attitude renders certain innovations, ideas or practices unacceptable or unadoptable in that particular culture

Culture System

Occurs when many culture complexes share particular traits (eg. Germans in the north and south speak with different accents, but share many cultural traits)

Distance Decay

Occurs when the intensity of some phenomenon decreases as distance from it increases

cultural divergence

Occurs when two cultures become increasingly different

Polar or Azimuthal Projection- purpose, strengths, distortion

P- Airline Pilots S- Straightest direction D- Shows the Poles

Mercator Projection- purpose, strengths, distortion

P- Navigation S- Directions are accurate, lines of latitude and longitude meet at right angles D- Distance between lines of long. appear constant, land masses near poles appear large

Peters Projection- purpose, strengths, distortion

P- Spatial distributions related to area S- Sizes of land masses are accurate D- Shapes are inaccurate, especially near the poles

Robinson Projection- purpose, strengths, distortion

P- general S- No major distortion, oval shape is like the globe D- Area, shape, size and directions all slightly distorted

example of irredentism

Pakistan and India fighting over Kashmir

Theme Two: Place

People develop a sense of place by infusing a place with meaning and emotion.

intracontinental migration

Permanent movement from one country to a different country on the same continent.

Interrgional migration

Permanent movement from one region of a country to another.

What do GMCs reduce the need for?

Pesticides

food security

Physical, social, and economic access at all times to safe and nutritious food sufficient to meet dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life.

Toponym

Place name, name of something on Earth

The 4 Stages of Borchert's Model of Urban Evolution

Stage 1- "sailwagon era" of 1790-1830 -cities mostly near ports and waterways Stage 2- "iron-horse cities" of 1830-1870 -rapid spread of the railroad and steamboats Stage 3- "steel-rail epoch" of 1870-1920 -industrial cities blossomed Stage 4- cities of 1920 -car and air travel leading to the rapid spread of suburbs

5 stages of epidemiological transition

Stage 1- Age of pestilence and famine ex: Black Death Stage 2- Stage of receding pandemics, ex: Cholera Stage 3- Degenerative + Human-Created Diseases, Ex: cancer, cardiovascular disease Stage 4- Delayed degenerative diseases, ex: cancer stopped thru medical reasons Stage 5- Reemergence of infectious + parasitic diseases Reasons: Evolution, Poverty, Improved Travel

What agricultural revolution stage are most Lower Developed Countries still in?

Stage 2

How did the industrial revolution diffuse?

Start: Great Britain Then: -Belgium/France (late 1700s) -United States(the 1790s) -Italy, Netherlands, Russia, Sweden (late 1800s) -Asia, Middle East + Africa (Mid 20th Century)

Organic Theory

States are like organisms that need food to survive. Thus, they must take over other lands to become stronger

Microstates

States with very small land areas (Sealand)

Anthropology

Study of the origins and development of people and their societies

Surveying

Surveyors observe, measure, and record what they see in a specific area -Remote sensing

ridge tillage

System of planting crops on ridge tops, in order to reduce farm production costs and promote greater soil conservation.

Domestication with examples

Taming animals + plants, changes their genetics -Examples: Pigs, Goats, Sheep, Cattle

Commercial Agriculture

Term used to describe large-scale farming and ranching operations that employ vast land bases, large mechanized equipment, factory-type labor forces, and the latest technology. -----Economic based

Give an example of how industries moved from region to region due to lower wages.

Textiles moved from the Northeast to the Southeast due to lower wages

What brought on the commodification of labor?

The Industrial Revolution

Ethnic Conflicts: Hutu vs Tutsi (Rwanda) 1994

The Rwandan Genocide was a genocide of the Tutsi and smaller scale genocide of the Hutu. The genocide was organized by the Hutu run government. During the 100 day time period, 500,000- 1 million Rwandans were killed (70% of the Tutsi population and 20% of the Rwandan Population).

remote sensing

The acquisition of data about Earth's surface from a satellite orbiting the planet or other long-distance methods.

Carrying Capacity

The amount of a species which can be sustained in an env. based on resources

infant mortality rate

The annual number of deaths of infants under one year of age, compared with total live births.

rate of natural increase

The annual rate of population growth

Total Feritility Rate (TFR)

The average number of children a woman will have during her child-birthing years

Heartland Theory

The belief of Halford MacKinder that the interior of Eurasia provided a likely base for world conquest. -whoever controls Eastern Europe, Central Asia + the seas would control

Why did the economy in Detroit fall so low?

The deindustrialization of the northeast greatly affected the *city* that was *the heart of the car industry* -all of those jobs and factories in the car industry were lost, which had a great effect on the city

What does Spatial Interaction depend on?

The distance among places, the accessibility of places, the transportation + communication connectivity among places

Possibilism

The doctrine that the choices a society makes depend on what its members need and on what technology is available to them -Culture is determined by social limits, not env. -Nature v. Nurture- Nurture

Neolithic Revolution

The drastic changes that occurred when ppl. began to cultivate crops + domesticate animals. People were able to stay in one place, grow their crops + start to build communities. -Genders started to divide (Patriarchial)

Columbian Exchange

The exchange of plants, animals, diseases, and technologies between the Americas and the rest of the world following Columbus's voyages.

Custom

The frequent repetition of an act, to the extent that it becomes characteristic of the group of people performing the act.

Pattern

The geometric or regular arrangement of something in a study area.

horticulture

The growing of fruits, vegetables, and flowers.

How is industrialization still in the US if most products are manufactured in other countries?

The ideas behind the creation of those machines is still concentrated in the U.S. -For example: if an American product by Apple, Microsoft or Google is *made in China*, the idea and innovation behind that product *originated in the US*

How do people, goods, and ideas move from one location to another?

The internet, Planes, Boats, Music (Christian music, this is America), Immigration, Word of Mouth

Formal sector of the economy

The legal economy that is taxed and monitored by a government and is included in a government's Gross National Product -established buildings, stores

Grain Farming

The mass *mechanized* planting and harvesting of grain crops, such as wheat, barley, and millet.

Proximity

The nearness of important features

The Rust Belt

The northern industrial states of the United States, including Ohio, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, in which heavy industry was once the dominant economic activity. In the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s, these states lost much of their economic base to economically attractive regions of the United States and to countries where labor was cheaper, leaving old machinery to rust in the moist northern climate. *Deindustrialization*

Sex Ratio

The number of males per 100 females in the population.

dependency ratio

The number of people under age 15 and over age 64 compared to the number of people active in the labor force

Density

The number of things in one square unit of space. -a large population doesn't = high density -Usually used w/ population (arithmetic- # of people, # of land) -Also can calculate the physiological density, agricultural density, housing

What happens to the number of people that work in primary, secondary, tertiary sectors when their income goes from low to high?

The numbers for primary sectors will decrease, and tertiaries will exponentially increase -primary always has the least amount of people out of the three *(technology takes hold, the reason why less income have more primary is b/c that tech. is expensive)*

level of urbanization

The percent of a country's population living in urban places.

Hearth

The place which an innovation or cultural change originates

Ecumene

The portion of Earth's surface occupied by permanent human settlement.

crop rotation

The practice of rotating use of different fields from crop to crop each year, to avoid exhausting the soil.

Diffusion

The process by which a characteristic spreads across space from 1 place to another over time

Industrialization

The process by which economic activities on the earth's surface evolved from producing basic, primary goods *(hand-made)* to using factories for mass-producing goods for consumption

Devolution

The process by which regions within a state demand and gain political strength and growing autonomy at the expense of the central government.

Contagious Diffusion

The rapid, widespread diffusion of a feature or trend throughout a population. Ex: Diseases, Memes, Hamilton, Silly Band, Pop Sockets, Fortnite

Space Time Compression

The reduction in the time it takes for something to reach another place b/c of a change in technology -Increases sense that the world is "becoming smaller". Limited to developed parts of the Globe. Reduces perceived distance not actual distance on land (Cars, Planes)

What does higher productivity lead to (positives of 3rd A.R.)?

The reduction of dependency on imports from China, India, etc.

Demography

The scientific study of population characteristics.

market gardening

The small scale production of fruits, vegetables, and flowers as cash crops sold directly to local consumers.

Concentration

The spread of something over a given area.

Human Geography

The study of where and why human activities are located where they are

Greenwich Mean Time

The time in that time zone encompassing the Prime Meridian, or 0 degrees longitude

crude death rate

The total number of deaths in a year for every 1,000 people alive in the society.

crude birth rate

The total number of live births in a year for every 1,000 people alive in the society.

Arithmetic Density

The total number of people divided by the total land area.

dietary energy

The type of energy created from Chemosynthesis that helps 'feed' certain organisms.

Central Place Theory

Theory proposed by Walter Christaller that explains how and where central places in the urban hierarchy should be functionally and spatially distributed with respect to one another.

Why do southern workers have little interest in joining the union?

There is not a lot of industry in the south, so they don't need any protection from unions

What's the benefit to the US having a service-based economy?

There's low-no transportation cost

What did regions in mainland Europe *(early 1800s)* need for the Industrial Revolution to come to them?

They needed proximity to coal fields connection via water to a port -flow of capital

quaternary activities

Those parts of the economy concerned with research, with the gathering and dissemination of information, and with administration

primary activities

Those parts of the economy involved in making natural resources available for use or further processing -mining, agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting, and grazing.

Pre-Industrial Cities

Those that developed *prior to industrialization* and shared several characteristics

Why do they create legislative districts?

To determine the districts that will be represented by a single representative

Why did Iraq invade Kuwait?

To gain control of oil fields and reserves -they said it had been taken away from them, but the real reason was oil

Why was district 2 (New Orleans) extended into Baton Rouge, instead of another region?

To keep the district voting the same way as it had previously by: -Maintaining the Black Majority -Maintaining the Democrat Majority

What are the 5 toos that humans can't live in?

Too Hot, Cold, Wet, Dry, Hilly

What are the four major costs in an industry?

Transportation (most important), labor, agglomeration, deglomeration


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