Location/Data
Maps/Place
Movement
HEI
Region/Scales of Analysis
100

Spatial data tells us about the ______ and ________ of geographic features.

Location and Shape

100

What is map projection? 

The method used to present a part of the earth on a flat surface

100

This term refers to the process by which a feature, idea, or innovation spreads across space from one place to another over time

Diffusion

100

Human-environment interaction revolves around which principles? (List 2)

Land-use, sustainability, environmental determinism, possibilism
100

What is a region? What are the three types of regions? 

an area or division, especially part of a country or the world having definable characteristics; formal, functional, perceptual

200

Define Location

A specific point on earth's surface

200

What are the four ways maps can be distorted? 

Distance, direction, size/area, shape

200

Billions of dollars of goods move each day across the Pacific Ocean between China and the U.S. This is an example of international ______.

Flows

200

The idea that human decisions, not just the environment, shape societies

Possibilism

200

The service area of DoorDash in your town would be an example of this type of region.

Functional Region

300

Combining census data with maps to analyze patterns is an example of this tool.

GIS

300

This describes the physical characteristics of a place, including its landforms, climate, and resource availability, such as Sydney being located along a harbor

Site

300

TikTok videos created in South Korea are watched almost instantly in the United States, making Seoul feel “closer” to Chicago. This describes what concept?

Time-Space Compression

300

Why is environmental-determinism considered and outdated idea or a "stepping stone" towards other, more modern ideas? 

Ignores culture and environmental modification

300

People in the U.S. might disagree about where “the South” begins and ends. This shows the nature of this kind of region.

Perceptual/Vernacular Region

400

Why is interpreting data important? What kinds of decisions does it help us make? 

Personal, business, governmental

400

Singapore has limited land and natural resources, yet it has become one of the world’s busiest trade hubs because it lies along major shipping routes between the Indian and Pacific Oceans.
This describes Singapore’s ______.

Situation

400

What factors may influence the movement of people from one place to another? 

Job opportunities, money, education, resources

400

Floating solar farms in Portugal exemplify which geographical concept? How do they do so?

Generating clean energy to meet present needs while reducing reliance on fossil fuels. This ends up protecting the environment for future generations

400

What is the scale of analysis of this map? 

National

500

New Orleans is located at 30° N, 90° W. It is also described as being near the mouth of the Mississippi River, making it a key port city for trade.
This example illustrates both of these geographic concepts.

Absolute and Relative Location

500

The Mercator projection has been criticized for reinforcing this specific worldview because it makes powerful northern countries like Greenland and Europe appear disproportionately larger and more dominant than they actually are.

Eurocentric

500

Before online shopping, people were more likely to buy clothes from a nearby store rather than one several states away. Today, companies like Amazon allow shoppers to easily purchase items from across the country. This shift shows how technological change has weakened what geographic principle?

Distance Decay

500

This term refers to how people organize and change the land around them for various purposes, such as farming, building cities, or transportation, and is demonstrated by the practice of rice terracing in the Philippines. 

Land Use

500

What is this map's scale of analysis? 


Local