Unit 1
Unit 2
Unit 3
Unit 4
Wild Card
100

40.7128° N, 74.0060° W 

vs.

Most populous city in the United States, bordering New Jersey

What is absolute location vs. relative location?

100

Between the 1760-1840s, this phenomenon led to more food, which led to a boom in the population of the "developed" world.

What is the Industrial Revolution?

100

Relocation...Expansion...Hierarchical...Contagious... Stimulus

What are types of diffusion?

100

A group of people who are united by a shared culture, heritage, language, territory, and possibly other belief systems.

What is a nation?

100

A political entity that includes several discontinuous pieces of territory.

What are fragmented states?

200

The concept helps geographers better understand how modern communication and transportation technologies have increased connections between people and places throughout the world.

What is time-space compression?

200

Arithmetic...Physiological...Agricultural

What are types of population density?

200

These are the four largest global religions.

What are Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism?

200

Nationalities that have spread among multiple states.

What are multistate nations?

200

This British economist and demographer lived during the Industrial Revolution and studied the characteristics of population while it was rising in Britain.

Who is Thomas Malthus?

300

Choropleth... dot distribution... cartogram...

What are types of thematic maps?

300

These show the distribution of people in a given country by age group and gender.

What are population pyramids?

300

The largest language family.

What is Indo-European?

300

European leaders met here to divide up a continent. They didn’t pay any attention to tribal and traditional boundaries, and instead, completely redrew country borders however they wanted.

What is the Berlin Conference of 1884 and/or the "Scramble for Africa"?

300

The #1 reason people move voluntarily.

What are economic opportunities?

400

The number of something in a defined area.

What is density?

400

The greatest amount of people the environment of an area can support sustainably.

What is carrying capacity?

400

The increasing economic and political interconnectedness between different regions of the world.

What is globalization?

400

When people want to control land to exert their influence over people or resources.

What is territoriality?

400

The theory that a place can be occupied by multiple different groups each modifying the landscape and having its own imprint for future occupiers.

What is sequent occupancy?

500

Developing an understanding of location, distance, direction, patterns, and interconnections is essential for geographers practicing this skill.

What is spatial analysis?

500

These forced migrants are similar to refugees, but they have not migrated internationally.

Who are Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs)?

500

The relationship between people, their communities, and the physical environment.

What is "sense of place"?

500

These are established after the settlement of an area and are changed to accommodate developments such as war.

What are subsequent boundaries?

500

During the Syrian conflict that began in 2011, refugees fled in droves to neighboring countries. The drastic flood of people escaping the war created this type of dispute about who would be responsible for them, a responsibility that mostly fell on neighboring countries.

What is an operational boundary dispute?

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