refers to the extraction and production of raw materials, such as agricultural products, minerals, and forestry products.
What is "Primary Production"?
___________ refer to the different functions individuals or groups play in an economy. These can include roles as consumers, producers, investors, and government regulators.
What are "Economic Roles"?
This map uses different shades to show the variation of the values.
What is a "Choropleth Map"?
Agricultural system that uses fire to clear vegetation in order to make fields for crops (Slash and Burn).
What is "Shifting Cultivation"?
a system of communication used by a particular country or community.
What is "Language"?
refers to activities that involve the creation and distribution of knowledge and information. It includes research and development, as well as the design and management of complex systems.
What is "Quaternary Production"?
those African countries located south of the Sahara Desert. It includes 46 nations on mainland Africa plus six island nations
What is "Sub Saharan Africa"?
maps with lines drawn to link different places that share a common value.
What is a "lsoline Maps"?
the purposeful integration of trees with crop and/or livestock in the same field simultaneously or sequentially.
What is "Agroforestry"?
_____________ faiths seek to transmit their beliefs through missionary work and seeking out converts (followers)
What are "Universalizing religions"?
the series of activities that are involved in the production, distribution, and consumption of a particular product or commodity. It includes all of the steps, from the extraction of raw materials to the final sale of the finished product to the consumer.
What is the "Commodity Chain"?
the process by which towns and cities are formed and grow due to an increase in population and economic activity.
What is "Urbanization"?
space that is created and defined by how humans interact with the environment.
What is "Relative Space"?
____________ patterns are influenced by land prices, transportation infrastructure, public policy, and social and ecological processes.
What are "Settlement Patterns"?
When the interaction of two cultures causes one culture to adopt almost all the traits from another without retaining their own distinct culture (can be voluntary or forced)
What is "Assimilation"?
a location where the transfer of goods from one mode of transportation to another takes place, such as from a ship to a truck or from a train to a warehouse. It is a point in the supply chain where the movement of goods is transferred from one form of transportation to another, typically in order to reach the final destination.
What is a "Break-of-Bulk Point"?
the care given to both mother and newborn immediately after birth up until about six weeks. It includes monitoring the health of both, providing necessary medical care, and offering support for breastfeeding and emotional wellbeing.
What is "Prenatal Care"?
NO PERFECT DEFINITION, Grouped by feelings or attitudes towards the area of land, shared history, or interests.
What is "Vernacular (Perceptual)"?
The ______________ was characterized in agriculture by the use of high-yield seeds, increased use of chemicals, and mechanized farming.
What was the "The Green Revolution"?
When two or more cultures blend together to form a new culture with new values, customs, ideas, practices, etc
What is "Syncretism"?
refers to the process of a country or region experiencing a decline in its industrial sector, often characterized by the loss of manufacturing jobs and the closure of factories. It can be driven by a variety of factors, including technological change, globalization, and shifts in economic policy.
What is "Deindustrialization"?
____________ refers to the number of deaths under one year of age occurring among live births in a specified geographic area during a specified year, per 1,000 live births occurring among the population of the same geographic area during the same year.
What is "Infant Mortality Rates"?
TERM: The environment determines (decides) characteristics of human society and even the success or failure of the society.
What is "Environmental Determinism"?
Requires lots of inputs and technology to produce as much yield as possible, although commercial agriculture tends to be more intensive than subsistence agriculture there are some types of subsistence agriculture that are more intensive than others.
What is "Intensive Agriculture"?
• 1/5 of world pop.
• North Africa, Middle East, and South Asia
• Indonesia - 200 million followers
• Pakistan -170 million followers
• Universalizing
What is "Islam"?