Geographic Concepts
Population & Migration
Language and Religion
Diffusion
Political Geography
100

A map projection that preserves the shape of landmasses but distorts their relative size.

Mercator projection

100

The total number of live births per 1,000 people in a year.

Crude Birth Rate

100

The smallest unit of sound in a language.

phoneme

100

The rapid spread of an idea or characteristic from a node to nearby places.

contagious diffusion

100

An area organized into a political unit and ruled by an established government that has control over its internal and foreign affairs.

state

200

The relationship between the length of an object on a map and that object's actual length on Earth's surface.

scale

200

The average number of children a woman will have during her childbearing years.

Total Fertility Rate

200

A collection of languages related through a common ancestral language that existed before recorded history.

language family

200

The spread of a characteristic through the movement of people from one place to another.

relocation diffusion

200

A state that completely surrounds another state.

perforated state

300

The notion that the physical environment limits human action, but people have the ability to adjust to the physical environment.

possibilism

300

A bar graph that displays a country's population by age and gender.

population pyramid

300

A language used in trade by people who speak different native languages.

lingua franca

300

The spread of an idea from persons or nodes of authority or power to other persons or places.

hierarchical diffusion

300

A boundary that is drawn to accommodate religious, ethnic, or economic differences.

subsequent boundary

400

The precise spot on Earth where something is located, usually expressed by latitude and longitude.

absolute location

400

The time it takes for a population to double, assuming a constant rate of natural increase.

doubling time

400

A religion that attempts to appeal to all people, not just those living in a particular location.

universalizing religion

400

A form of expansion diffusion where all people in a place adopt an idea or innovation.

contagious diffusion (also acceptable: expansion diffusion)

400

A model that attempts to explain and predict how and why states behave and compete on a global scale, suggesting land-based power is key.

Heartland Theory

500

The geographic study of human-environment relationships, a fundamental theme in geography.

cultural ecology

500

The stage of the Demographic Transition Model characterized by low birth rates and low death rates.

Stage 4

500

A place of worship where a universalizing religion's founder received a key revelation or performed a significant miracle.

hearth

500

A specific type of stimulus diffusion where the underlying idea or principle spreads, but the characteristic itself is rejected.

reverse hierarchical diffusion or maladaptive diffusion

500

The process of redrawing legislative boundaries for the purpose of benefiting the party in power.

Gerrymandering