5 Themes of Geography
Maps and How to Read Them
Regions
Landforms and Water Systems
Climate and Biomes
HEI
Human Geography and Population Pyramids
Push/Pull Factors
Culture and Human Geography
World Religions
Economics and Government
100

Location, Place, Human-Environmental Interaction, Region, Movement

What are the 5 themes of geography?

100

the exact coordinates of a place on Earth

What is absolute location?

100

formal regions

What are regions that have clear boundaries and specific characteristics that set them apart?

100

when two of Earth's tectonic plates are moving apart from each other

What is a divergent plate boundary?

100

polar, temperate, tropical, and arid

What are the climate zones?

100

how humans modify and adapt to their local environment

What is Human-Environmental Interaction?

100

a graphic that shows a population's age and gender distribution

What is a population pyramid?

100

social, economic, environmental, and political

What are push/pull cause factors?

100

the customs, behaviors, and norms of a group of people

What is culture?

100

founder is Abraham and the sacred writings are called the Torah

What is Judaism?

100

the method used by society to produce and distribute goods and services

What is an economic system?

200

Examining landforms and geological process.

What does Physical geography primarily focus on?

200

by comparing a place's position to other places

How do geographer's describe relative location?

200

perceptual regions

What type of region is based on a person's feelings, attitudes, or opinions about a place?

200

the landform typically formed by the collision of tectonic plates or volcanic activity

What is a mountain?

200

polar climate

What climate is found near the poles and extremely cold?

200

things found on Earth and used for economic purposes

What are natural resources?

200

the average number of children that are born to a woman over her lifetime

What is the total fertility rate?

200

puritans were among the first to emigrate to the New World to escape religious persecution in Britain

What is a social push factor?

200

a group of people that share a geographic region, sense of identity, and culture

What is a society?

200

the founder is unknown and the sacred writings are called Vedas

What is Hinduism?

200

an economy based on customs and habits, children would work the same jobs and parents

What is a traditional economy?

300

flow of people, goods, ideas, and information across the Earth's surface.

What does the theme of "Movement" in geography refer to?

300

symbols and their meanings

What does a map key or legend typically show?

300

a pizza delivery area

What is an example of a functional region?

300

the landform that is a deep, narrow valley with steep sides and is often carved by river erosion

What is a canyon?

300

tropical climate

What climate is found near the Equator and is warm and humid?

300

how we can use resources responsibly

What is sustainability?

300

the number of live births per 1,000 people per year

What is the birth rate?

300

families of resettled Vietnamese were allowed to be reunited in the United States

What is a pull social factor?

300

a group that shares a language, customs, and common heritage.

What is an Ethnic group?

300

the founder is Siddhartha Gautama and the sacred texts are called the Tipitaka or the triple basket

What is Buddhism?

300

a government controlled economy

What is a command economy?

400

how humans interact with their environment

What is human-environmental interaction?

400

the cardinal directions

What does a compass rose on a map tell us?

400

more likely to change over time

What is a perceptual region?

400

saltwater

What is the majority of Earth's water?

400

arid climate

What climate zone is found above and below the tropical climate zone has littler rain and includes deserts?

400

how people use and modify the land they live on

What is land use?

400

the average number of years a person could expect to live

What is the life expectancy?

400

In the 1830s agricultural works in Germany were displaced by the Industrial Revolution

What is a push economic factor?

400

the place of origin for a cultural trait and sites ofinnovation

What are cultural hearths?

400

the founder is Jesus and the sacred writings are the Bibile

What is Christianity?

400

a king or queen reigns over the state for life and hereditary right

What is a monarchy

500

where something is on the Earth's surface

What is location?

500

by using the map scale

How can you estimate distances between places on a map?

500

can be man made or from the physical environment

What is a formal region

500

the primary source of freshwater for many communities and agriculture

What are rivers?

500

Deciduous Forest

what biome has trees that lose their leaves and distinct seasons

500

building an igloo for a home

What is an example of how humans adapt to their environment?

500

the number of deaths per 1,000 people in a population per year

What is the mortality rate?

500

Ireland's potato crop was destroyed by blight disease in 1845 and 1846

What is a push environmental factor?

500

the spread of cultural ideas outward from the hearth

What is cultural diffusion?

500

enlightenment and the end of the cycle of suffering in Hinduism

what is Nirvana?

500

a monarch is guided by a constitution that limits their power and responsibilities 

What is a constitutional monarchy?
600

the unique physical and human characteristics of a location

What is place?

600

one of the most common projections with straight lines and angles to help with traveling but heavy distortion in size at the top and bottom

What is the Mercator Projection?

600

the Bible Belt 

What is an example of a perceptual region?

600

where freshwater rivers meet the sea

What are Estuaries?

600

extreme aired conditions, low precipitation, high temperatures and are threatened by overgrazing livestock, climate change, and destruction for agriculture 

What is a Desert?

600

building a dam

What is an example of how humans modify their environment?

600

the process of a society moving from higher birth and death rates to low birth and death rates as a country undergoes industrialization and economic development

What is demographic transition?

600

in 1848 an attempt to bring about a liberal resolution in Germany failed and many Germans fled to the USA

What is a push political factor?

600

after being exposed to a new form of culture a society can change

What is acculturation?

600

founder is the Prophet Muhammad and the sacred writings are the Quran

What is Islam?

600

people elect political leaders, including presidents, prime minsters, and representatives to lead the government

What is a Republic?

700

how long it takes to get from point A to point B

What is time distance?
700

known as the interrupted projection it minimizes distortion which is a great benefit but the drawback is it interrupts oceans and makes measuring distance between continents difficult

What is the Goode's Homolosine Projection?

700

states, countries, the Rocky Mountains, the Arctic Circle, the Sahara Desert

What are examples of formal regions?

700

condensation, evaporation, runoff, infiltration, precipitation 

What is the hydrologic cycle also known as the water cycle?

700

vast expanses of grasses with few trees, has distinct seasons wit hot summers and cold winters

What is a Grassland?

700

resources without limits

What is a renewable resource?

700
the information give on the y-axis of a population pyramid

What are the ages of the populaton?

700

in 2025 the fires in California forced thousands to flee their homes to find safety out of the area of destruction

What is a push environmental factor?

700

reflects many aspects of culture, binds a group together, and creates unity

What is language?

700

living in harmony with mature and the three treasures are compassion, frugality, and humility

What is Daoism?

700

a person rules with almost unlimited power

What is a Dictatorship?

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