Perspectives
Interrelationship
Maps
Random
Random
100

What are the 4 types of perspectives

Social

Economic

Environmental 

Political 

100

What is are the 4 types of interalationships

Pooled

Sequential 

Reciprocal 

Intensive

100

What are the 3 types of maps

General Purpose Maps

Topographic Maps 

Thematic Maps 

100

What are the 3 types of scales

Direct Statement/ Verbal Scale 

Uses words ( 1 cm to 10 km).


Linear/Line Scale 

A visual bar divided into units (like a ruler drawn on the map).


Representative fraction

A mathematical ratio (1 : 1,000,000, meaning 1 unit on the map equals 1,000,000 of the same unit in the real world. 



100

What is weather and climate?

Climate- Long term average temperature and weather patterns in a region/specific area

Weather- day to day weather conditions, includes short term changes in temperature, precipitation, wind, etc


200

Examples of Social

People and Culture (media)

200

What is a pooled interraltionship

combining resources or efforts so everyone can benefit (mutual)

Example: Retail chain branches. The New York branch and the Los Angeles branch don’t interact daily

200

What are the features of a General Purpose Map

Political boundaries, major transportation routes, water bodies, urban areas

200

What are the four cardinal compass points AND their bearings?

North, East, South, and West

North- 360* or 000*

East- 090*

South-180*

West- 270*

**rule of 90*

200

List and describe the factors that affect climate (LOWERN)

Latitude

Ocean Currents

Winds and Air Masses

Elevation

Relief

Nearness to water

300

Examples of economic

Wealth and resources

300

What is sequential interrelationship?

a step-by-step connection." It means that a series of things or events are linked together

Example: An assembly line or content publishing. The writer must finish the article before the editor can review it, and the editor must finish before the graphic designer can format it. 


300

What are the features of a Topographic Map

Contour lines, alphanumeric grid system, physical features, cultural features.


300

What are each of the time zones from East-West across Canada (6)

Pacific Time (PT)

Mountain Time (MT)

Central Time (CT)

Eastern Time (ET) 

Atlantic Time (AT)

Newfoundland Time (NT) 

300

What are the 2 types of climate and definitions?

Maritime- Close to Oceans and large bodies of water, heavily affected by ocean/ ocean currents results in moderate temperatures

Continental- Surrounded by land, results in extreme temperatures 

400

Examples of environmental 

Ecosystem disruption 

400

What is a reciprocal interrelationship 

give-and-take connection

Example: A hospital operating room. The surgeon, the anesthesiologist, and the surgical nurse must constantly react to and adjust based on each other’s actions in real time.


400

What are the features of a Thematic Map

Choropleth shading, proportional symbols, specific, single-topic data.


400

What are plate tectonics and why earthquakes and volcanoes are located along plate boundaries.

The scientific theory that Earth’s outer crust is broken into massive pieces (tectonic plates) that float on the hot, fluid mantle beneath them.


400

Temperature range?

is the difference between the highest and lowest temperatures recorded over a specific timeframe, typically a day or a year.

500

Examples of political

Power and Borders

500

What is Intensive interrelationship

close, deep, and active connection where two or more things affect each other strongly

Example: A multidisciplinary product development team (engineering, marketing, legal, and the UX design) brainstorming and building a brand new software platform from scratch

500

Rules of mapping (6)

Title 

Orientation

Date

Author 

Legend 

Scale 


500

What is continental drift and the 3 proofs

It's a theory that Alfred Wegner made that all continents were once joined in a supercontinent called pangea and have since drifted apart.

1. The examples include the jigsaw fit which is the coastlines of South America and Africa look like interlocking puzzle pieces

2.fossil correlation that is matching fossils of identical plants and animals found on entirely differently oceans/continents

3. and geological evidence and that is matching mountain ranges (like the Appalachians ending in Canada and matching up with mountains in Europe) and matching rock layers.