Demographics
Environment
Human Interaction
U.S. History
Vocabulary
100

The total number of live births in a year for every 1,000 people is 

What is Crude Birth Rate?

100

Land suited for agriculture is

What is Arable Land?

100

The maximum population size of a species that the environment can sustain indefinitely, given the available resources.

 What is Carrying Capacity?

100

This was a belief held by pioneers in the United States who travel to the West, that they had a God-given right to settle in the West.

What is Manifest Destiny?

100

Three types of regions, identified by geographers are

What is formally, functional and vernacular regions?

200

The number of years needed to double a population, assuming a constant rate of natural increase.

What is Doubling Time?

200

The portion of the earth's surface occupied by permanent human settlement is 

What is Ecumene?

200

The process of cultural changes resulting from the meeting of two groups, each of which retains distinct cultural features. 

What is Acculturation?

200

This era of development of machinery and moving from agriculture to factories is called

 What is Industralization?

200

Call a nodal region, it is organized around a focal point.

What is a functional region?

300

The total number of deaths in a year among infants under 1 year old. for every 1,0000 live births

What is infant mortality rate?

300

A place from which an innovation originates is

What is a Hearth?

300

The process by which a group's cultural features are altered to resemble those of another group.

What is Assimilation?

300

This historical law was created to remove Native American Indians from their home lands onto other lands across the Mississippi River.

What is the Dawes Act?

300

This combination of cultural features such as language, religion and exotic features like agriculture and industry and physical feature such as climate and vegetation.  

What is Cultural landscape?

400

The average number of years an individual can live, given current social, economic and medical conditions.  

What is Life Expectancy?

400

A widespread occurrence of an infectious disease in a community at a particular time.

What is an Epidemic?

400

This approach to human geography that emphasizes the importance of understanding the psychological basis for individual human actions in space.

What is Behavioral Geography?

400

Poineers who moved from the eastern portion of the United States out to the southwest and western portion of the United States, help with this process.

What is Westward expansion?

400

This area exists as part of a person's cultural identity.  a person's informal sense of place rather than from scientific models developed through geographic thought. 

What is vernacular or perceptional region?

500

The scientific study of population characteristics is 

What is Demography?

500

The process of change based on the distinctive causes of death in a population at each stage of the demographic transition.

What is Epidemiologic transition?

500

A geographic approach that emphasizes human-environment relationships.

What is Cultural ecology?

500

In 1830 after the passage of the Indian Removal Act, more than 16,000 Native Americans were forced to walk from their home lands to other areas of the United States.  More than 4,000 died during this journey. 

What is the Trail of Tears?

500

The study of living organism and abiotic spheres with which they interact is

What is ecology?

M
e
n
u