Map Projection & Tools
Geographic Concepts
Diffusion & Interaction
Data & Aggregation
Human-Environmental Interaction
100

A map projection that makes Greenland look much larger than it is, but is useful for navigation because it keeps lines of latitude and longitude at right angles.

What is the Mercator Projection?

100

The specific position of a place on Earth, often expressed using latitude and longitude coordinates and compass directions.

What is absolute location?

100

This type of diffusion occurs when an idea spreads from a top-down approach, leaping from one important person or city to another.

What is hierarchical diffusion?

100

The type of data that is based on numerical values, such as "how many" or "how often."

What is quantitative data?

100

A naturally occurring material or substance, like minerals or fertile land, that can be used for economic gain.

What is a natural resource?

200

A map where one inch equals one hundred miles would be considered this type of map scale.

What is a small scale map?

200

This describes a place's physical characteristics, such as its climate, terrain, and soil.


What is site?

200

The spread of an idea from a single origin point, where everyone in the area is affected.


What is contagious diffusion?

200

The process of arranging raw data in a visually useful way, often done to create a thematic map.

What is data aggregation?

200

The type of resource that can be replenished naturally over time, such as solar, wind, or water.

What are renewable resources?

300

The five main parts that a cartographer should include on a map.

What are titles, legends/keys, scales, compasses, and symbols?

300

The idea that geographers should not just describe where things are, but also explain why they are there.

What is spatial analysis?

300

When an individual or a group physically moves to a new location, bringing their ideas and practices with them, this type of diffusion occurs.

What is relocation diffusion?

300

This map uses dots to represent a specific number or count of a phenomenon, such as population.

What is a dot density or dot distribution map?

300

This is the study of the complex interactions between societies and their local environments.

What is cultural ecology?

400

The name for a map that distorts the size and shape of an area to show the intensity of a particular phenomenon, like a country's population.

What is a cartogram?

400

The visible evidence of human activity on the landscape, like farm fields, houses, and cities, is known as this.

What is cultural landscape?

400

The idea that the physical environment offers potentiality for human development, and people can overcome challenges, is known as this.


What is possibilism?

400

This type of map is designed to show the geographic distribution of a specific subject, often represented with colors, patterns, symbols, or other visual elements.


What is a thematic map?

400

The term for the mental images that make up a person's understanding of nature, which can be either accurate or inaccurate.

What is environmental perception?

500

This software application can capture, store, and analyze geographic data, often using multiple layers.

What is a Geographic Information System (GIS)?

500

The decreasing distance between places, as measured by travel time or cost, often summarized by the phrase "the world is shrinking."

What is time-space compression?

500

The belief that the physical environment is the sole and dominant force in shaping cultures and human behavior.

What is environmental determinism?

500

The acquisition of data about Earth's surface from a satellite orbiting the planet.

What is remote sensing?

500

This describes the intentional changes humans make to the environment, such as logging, mining, or building irrigation systems.

What is purposeful human-environmental interactions?

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