Unit 1
Unit 2
Unit 3
Unit 4
Unit 5
100

What is absolute location? 

A location described by coordinates, or latitude and longitude.

100

What is climate?

Analyzes the interaction between long-term atmospheric patterns and human activity.

100

What is culture?

The shared beliefs, behaviors, attitudes, values, and traditions practiced by a group of people and passed down through generations.

100

What is a nation-state?

A specific nation that has it's very own state along it.

100

What is mono cropping?

Mono-cropping is the process of only growing one specific crop. EX: I am only growing cotton to make clothing.

200

What is human geography?

A part of geography that studies relationships between people, places, and environments. Focusing on how human activities, cultures, economies, and social structures organize and shape the world.

200

What is a push factor?

A factor that makes someone want to get away from a certain place, EX: I want to get out of here because there are a lot of dangerous people, I need to keep my family and myself safe.

200

What is a safe space?

A safe space is a place someone can feel they will not get persecuted, harassed, or assaulted.

200

What is a stateless nation?

A nation that does not have their own specific state to themselves.

200

What is slash and burn?

Existing vegetation is all taken away and cut down and burned to clear land for cultivation

300

What is situation?

A location of a place relative to its surrounding environment. EX: The golden chick near the high school and public library.

300

What is IMR (Infant Mortality Rate)?

The annual number of deaths of infants under 1 year old per 1,000 live births.

300

What is a Lingua France?

A common language spoken to be able to trade, sell, and buy between countries.

300

What is imperialism?

The policy, practice, or advocacy of extending a state's power and influence over the other territories or nations.

300

What is extensive agriculture?

A system characterized by low inputs of labor, capital, and machinery relative to the vast land area being cultivated or grazed.

400

What is possibilism? 

The theory that the physical environment sets constraints and offers possibilities.  

400

What is distance decay?

Distance decay is a geographical principal stating that interaction between two places decreases as the distant between them increases.

400

What is assimilation?

The process where a minority culture, group, or immigrant population gradually adopts the customs, language, and behaviors of a dominant culture.

400

What is choke point?

A narrow, strategic waterway or passage that connects two larger areas of sea or land traffic, forcing shipping or transport through a restricted area.

400

What is crop rotation?

A process of alternating different types of crops in a specific field across successive seasons or years.

500

What is a functional region?

An area organized by a central node, or a focal point.

500

What is a refugee? 

A person that is forced to migrate across international borders to avoid armed conflict, generalized violence, human rights violations, or persecution based on specific things.

500
What is creolization?

The process where distinct cultures blend to create new unique cultural forms.

500

What is colonialism?

The attempt by a state to establish settlements and impose on its political, economical, and cultural principals on another territory.

500

What is domestication?

The process of intentionally cultivating plants or taming animals through selective breeding to make them more useful, manageable, and dependent on humans for survival. 

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