Exam 1
Raven stein's Laws of Migration
- short distance - long distance is for big cities - step by step - rural to urban - counter migration exists - adults -males
Equator
0 degrees latitude An imaginary circle around the middle of the earth, halfway between the North Pole and the South Pole
Stages of Prehistoric Man
1. Paleolithic - old stone age - hunter gatherers 2. Meolithic - middle stone age - population pressure 3. neolithic - new stone age
Barriers to Interaction
1. friction of distance: distance effects interactions - cost 2. Distance decay: decline of activity/function
The arc distance in degrees between the North and South Poles is:
180
counter migration
25% of migrants will return to their place of origin
mass extinction
5 great ones. 99% of everything once living is now dead
Area differentiation
Areal: pertains to area. How one area/place differs from another
Who reputedly coined the term "geography"
Eratosthenes
Barriers to interaction
Friction of distance. distance effects interactions (cost)
syncretism is the process of
Fusing the old and new elements of culture
Herodotus
Greek Historian, considered the father of History. He came from a Greek community in Anatolia and traveled extensively, collecting information in western Asia and the Mediterranean lands. First greek geographer
Which of the following statements concerning longitude is not correct?
Meridians are parallel to the equator.
Subdisciplines of Geography
Regional geography: studies spatial relationships of specific places Physical geography: natural / physical environment. asks how where why people live the way they do.
gaia hypothesis
States that the environment on a global level has been changed for the better by life over the history of life on earth. Earth is in homeostasis and regulates itself like a human body does.
Geo
Study of the earth
Distance Decay
The diminishing in importance and eventual disappearance of a phenomenon with increasing distance from its origin.
Transferability
The ease with which a commodity may be transported or the capacity to move a good at a bearable cost
intervening opportunity
The presence of a nearer opportunity that greatly diminishes the attractiveness of sites farther away. serve to reduce supply/demand. Sand from Saudi Arabia
Cartography
The science of making maps
Which of the following statements is correct?
The smaller the scale of the map, the larger the area it depicts.
Aristotle
a geographer and philosopher. student of plato and teacher of alexander the great. said the earth was a sphere believed all problems could be solved by thinking about them. never tested any of his ideas
Using any map projection, there will always be some errors because:
a map has to depict the curved surface of the three-dimensional earth on a two - dimensional sheet of paper.
middle ages
a period of reduced geographic knowledge
cultural convergence
a sharing of technologies, organizational structures and culture traits among separated societies
prediction
a statement of what will happen
hypothesis
a testable explanation
The cardinal direction of north is this type of direction:
absolute
Location
absolute: identification of a place by math coordinates (global grid system) relative: in relation to other places
Direction
absolute: north south east and west relative: culturally based/directionally variable "down south"
Distance
absolute: spatial separation between 2 points. Miles relative: informal description "couple of miles" "about 30 minutes"
sociofacts
accepted and expected patterns of interpersonal relations - tell us how to act and behave
artifacts
actual things we have, tools we use,
Personal communication field (shape and size determined by)
age, sex, education, employment
A region is characterized by which of these attributes?
all of the above - location, boundaries, spatial extent
carrying capacity
amount an environment can withstand
Theory
an explanation based on many observations during repeated experiments. formed when a hypothesis passes a number of tests where others fail - vote of confidence
Activity space
area with which we freely move (3 factors) age, mobility, opportunity
Regions
areas of earth's surface marked by certain properties. All regions have location (usually expressed in the name), spatial extent (area. defines territories), and boundaries (defined territories) Hierarchy arrangement: may be arranged in some form of order
Which of the following is not a subfield of human geography?
atmosphere
Territoriality refers to
attachment to homegrown
pull factors
attractive attributes that draw you in
Place perception
awareness we have of home and distant places
Zones of habitability
believed that human economic and cultural development was controlled by their physical environment. North pole Frigid temperate torrid equator
Ptolemy
brought the classic period of greek-roman geography to a close. created a world map
culture traits
can range from language spoken to games played
A geographic distribution's pattern which emphasizes items agglomerated around a single node is said to be ___________.
centralized
innovation
change in culture due to an invention / idea
Which of the following would not be considered as a reason to migrate for a contemporary american?
changes in political affiliation
After work and family proximity, the factors most often reported as a reason for interstate moves by adults is:
climate
Cultural landscape
composite of human imprints on the earth's surface
"Hinterlands" literally means:
country left behind
Hinterlands
country left behind
Channelized migration
creates greater than expected flows.
The extent beyond which cost, effort, and means influence one's willingness to travel is referred to as
critical distance
Parts of culture
culture traits: smallest distinctive items of a culture culture complex: individual traits that are functionally related culture region: occupied by populations sharing recognizable and distinctive characteristics culture realm: largest component of culture
Culture convergence
cultures begin to share technology, organizational structures, etc
Distance decay
decline of activity or function with increasing distance from its point of origin
Movement Bias (3 forms)
distance bias: favors short over long Direction bias: certain places have greater attraction (leads to networks) network bias:
spatial distribution
distributions of things on earth 1. density: measure of # of something in a defined area 2. dispersion: amount of spread, not how many but how far apart 3. Pattern: the geometric arrangement of things in space (linear, centralized, random)
Modern Overkill
dodo bird, moa and the maori
Agricultural revolution
domestication of plants / animals
sequent occupance
each group of inhabitants leaves their imprint on the landscape
Geography started with
early man but formed itself into a science with the Greeks
Transferability
ease with which a commodity may be transported
The two most common responses to the uncertainty of natural hazards are to eliminate the uncertainty and
eliminate the hazard
Environments as controls
environmental determinism: believes physical environment alone shapes human thought/action possiblism: view that people are the dynamic forces
Environments as Controls
environmental determinism: believes physical environment alone shapes human thought/action. possiblism: view that people are the dynamic forces
Chain migration
established migrant flow
controls
experimental conditions that remain constant
observations
facts, measurements, information, data collected using the senses
Territoriality
favoritism of ones home ground
the first great tool humans used
fire
Hominids
first appear on Africa about 100,000 years ago Bering land bridge
Complementary
for 2 places to interact they must have something the other wants/needs - can satisfy eachothers needs
Types of migration
forced: slaves, prisoners Reluctant relocation: less than voluntary - political pressure voluntary: looking for a better life
types of regions
formal region: area that are uniform Functional region: defined by their interactions and connections perceptual region: reflects human feelings/attitudes about areas - defined by peoples shared objectives - Dixie
Law
formed after many years of repeated tests by scientists
Types of scale
global: largest, earth-sun relationships continental scale: large, allows study of large relationships Regional: modest size, several hundred miles Local scale: smallest of macro, events in close proximity Micro: smallest observable
Spatial analysis
how things are similar and differ from place to place. concerned with earth's space
the carrying capacity of a defined region would be lowest for
hunter gatherers
cultural divergence
hunter gatherers existed alongside more advanced civilizations
Mentifacts
ideas, values, beliefs
changes in culture, both major and minor, are inducted by
innovation and diffusion
Migration
intercontinental: massive flows of people Intracontinental: smaller scale, individuals and groups
Parallel lines of Latitude
latitude names angle, parallel names line. run horizontally, measures angular distance north and south of the equator
culture is
learned by imitation, instruction and example
5 themes of geographic science
location, place, region, movement, and human-earth relationships
Meridians of Longitude
meridian names the line and longitude names the angle. run vertically, measure angular distance east and west. prime meridian 0 degrees longitude
animal domestication occurred most likely during which period
mesolitic
Scientific method
methodical approach to solving a gap in our knowledge of a process - only accepted way
Women's trip behavior
more but shorter trips
All of the following are included in Ravenstein's laws of migration except
most migration is urban to rural
Spatial interaction
movement of people, goods and information between places
Immigrating
moving in
immigrating
moving out
Landscape
natural - soil, minerals, rocks, mountains, hills, climate, physical cultural - visible impact man has made
The early Greeks:
observed how humans lived in various areas against the backdrop of the earth's physical features.
Syncretism
old and new cultures fuse together
by the end of the paleolithic period, habitation occurred
on all continents except antarctica
variable
one of the factors that can change in an experiment
The value of a place as a migration destination is known as its
place utility
the belief that people, not environments are the dynamic forces of cultural development is termed
possiblism
Law of retail gravitation
provides a quick determinism of the breaking point between 2 cities
qualitative vs quantitative
qualitative, use the senses, qualities, color, shape, feel, taste, sound quantitative numerical - how many
from the highest to lowest, the most accurate of cultural unites is
realm region complex trait
situation
refers to external relations of the location
The statement that "the journey to work is 15 minutes by bus" is an example of:
relative distance.
Scale
relative size/scope of some phenomena
the limitations that the environment place on human use of territory are
relative to level of technology, cost considerations and economic linkages throught the world
Maps
relief, road, political and topographical Small scale: shows large area, little detail large scale: shows small area, great detail Map scale: written, graphic, fraction
the movement of black american's from rural south to the cities of the north
relocation
which of the following is not a process of cultural change
segregation
intervening opportunity
serve to reduce supply/demand interacts (sand from saudi arabia)
Model
simplified abstraction of reality
Pleistocene overkill
slaughter of 40% of animals roaming the earth. first of many man made extinctions
cultural hearth
source areas which radiate ideas, innovation, cradle area
the length of time required to make a transcontinental telephone connection has gone from 14 minutes in 1920 to less than 30 seconds
space-cost convergence
The essential perspective used by geographers in forming their concepts is:
spatial
Diffusion
spatial: an idea/ innovation is transmitted across space 1. expansion: involves spread of item from one place to another contagious: uniform spread of something Heirarchial: spread of an idea from large areas to smaller 2. Relocation: spread by migrating individuals, physically carried
The extent of individual activity space depends on all fo the following except
strength of territoriality
Culture
sum total of human learned behavior beliefs, institutions, technology
Galileo Gallilei
tested aristotle's theory that heavier objects would fall faster and discovered it was false.
the desolation of chaco canyon resulted from
the destruction of the life supporting environment
Geography traces its origins to which civilization:
the greeks
Spatial Interaction
the movement of people, ideas, and commodities within and between areas. movement across geographic space
which was a cultural hearth
the nile river valley
site
the physical and cultural characteristics and attributes of the place itself
Site refers to the:
the physical and cultural charateristics of a place that can help an observer identify its purpose.
cultural landscape
the visible imprint of human activity and culture on the landscape
The acceptable costs of an exchange of goods and services comprise the tradition of
transferability
Push factors
unfavorable that make you want to leave
With respect to space time prisms, they are steepest and spatially most narrow under which mode of transportation?
walking
Independent invention
when 2 + cultures develop similar idea at the same time
cultural lag
when a culture resists change
Acculturation
when a group adapts some/all characteristics of a more dominant group
Multilinear evolutions
widely separate cultures develop common characteristics
Of all types of trips taken by urban residents, that which is least influenced by distance decay is:
work trips
Meteorologica
written by aristotle. his theories about earth sciences, described early physics and the 4 elements, described the atmosphere and physical and human geography
In most societies, the most mobile segment of the population is
young adults
zone of personal space
zone of privacy