Unit 1
Thinking Geographically
Unit 2
Population processes
Unit 3
Cultural processes
Unit 4
Political processes
Unit 5
Agricultural processes
100

The discipline of Geography is divided into how many major areas?

2 (Physical and Human Geography)

100

Where people live within a geographic area

Population distribution

100

The visible objects and technologies that a culture creates , such as houses and buildings, clothes, tools, toys, etc.

Artifacts

100

Ethnic Russians are considered this type of political entity, because many Russian speakers live outside of Russia itself.

Multi-state nation

100

The purposeful cultivation of plants or the raising of animals to produce goods for survival.

Agriculture 

200

This perspective refers to where something occurs.  Where things are located and why they are located there.

Spatial perspective 

200

Measures the total number of people per unit area of land 

Arithmetic density

200

Widespread behaviors, beliefs, and practices of ordinary people in a society at a given point in time; Tend to change quickly 

Popular culture

200

The Basque people that occupy the borders between Spain and France have their own unique culture and language, but no country they can call their own.  This makes them what type of entity?

Stateless nation 

200

Areas that have similar climate patterns generally based on their latitude and their location on coasts or continental interiors.

Climate regions 

300

The expansion of economic, cultural, and political processes on a worldwide scale 

Globalization

300

The maximum population size an environment can sustain is known as what?

Carrying capacity 

300

Established building styles of different cultures, religions, and places, that were originally influenced by the environment and is based on localized needs and construction materials.

Traditional architecture 

300

The Strait of Hormuz, which is currently a point of strategic contention between Iran and the United states, is a narrow passageway that is difficult to pass, otherwise known as a what?

Chokepoint

300

This type of farming involves growing crops and raising animals for family consumption

Subsistence agriculture

400

Immanuel Wallerstein developed this, which described the spatial and functional relationships between countries in the world economy

World system theory

400

Data about the structures and characteristics of human populations.

Demographics

400

Place names, or this, help define what is unique about a place, such as its geographic features or history.

Toponyms

400

The push to create an empire by exercising force or influence to control other nations or people

Imperialism.

400

This theory explains how land value determines how a farmer will use the land-either intensively or extensively 

bid-rent theory

500

The mathematical relationship between the size of the map and the part of the real world that it shows

Map scale

500

The difference between the CBR and the CDR of a defined group of people.

Rate of natural increase

500

The renovations and improvements conforming to middle class standards.

Gentrification 

500

Boundaries that are physical, such as stones, pillars, or fences

Demarcation

500

Large-scale commercial farming of one particular crop grown for markets often distant from the plantation 

Plantation agriculture

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