Religions
Africa and Asia
Maps and Regions
Spatial Reorganization and Human Adaptations
Europe and the Americas
100

Which religion spread from India to China, Korea, Japan and Southeast Asia?B

What is Buddhism?
100
The use of what was vitally important for Trans-Saharan Trade?

What is the camel?

100

True or False: Regions can change over time

What is True

100

The construction of the _______________  in 1869 is an example of how humans modify the environment because it connected the Mediterranean Sea to the Red Sea (Human Adaptations to the physical environment)

What is the Suez Canal

100
Name at least two places that conquered parts of the New World

What is the Spanish, English, French and Portuguese

200
This religion dominated Europe between 1450 and 1750

What is Christianity?

200

Indian Ocean Trade helped develop this language and culture on the east coast of Africa

What is Swahili

200

Every map tells a different...

What is story or perspective?

200

Yusra Mardini participated in the Olympics....What she and what team did she represent?

What is a refugee and team refugees

200

The spread of crops, animals and diseases between the Old World and the New World is known as the...

What is the Columbian Exchange?

300

What religion?

Reincarnation based on karma and moral behavior

What is Hinduism?

300

My empire is famous for taking down the Byzantines and the use of Gun Powder

Who are the Ottomans?

300

What is the name of the most commonly used Map? (By the way it is inaccurate!)

What is the Mercator Map?

300

Give an example of a push and pull factor

Up for Mr. Harrison to decide if you´re right!
300

Why did Iberian states seek new sea routes in the 1400s

What is they needed access to goods that they could not longer get from the Ottomans taking over that part of the world (Or something like that)

400

Jewish law, history, and religious teachings...

What is the Torah?

400

What two Kingdoms in Africa were able to control and tax much of the Trans-Saharan Trade?

Who are Ghana and Mali?

400

What type of region is made up of the buildings and land that your fire department protects?

What is a functional region?
400

Paper is primarily made from wood pulp, which is derived from trees. Other raw materials used in the paper-making process include water and chemicals for processing the pulp. Therefore water, chemicals and pulp are input to make the paper product. This is known as…

What is Economic Activity?

400

The ______________ was a brutal, three-legged system of transatlantic commerce (Europe, Africa, Americas) from the 16th to 19th centuries, involving manufactured goods from Europe to Africa, enslaved Africans to the Americas (the horrific "Middle Passage"), and raw materials (sugar, tobacco, cotton) from the Americas back to Europe, fueling colonialism and vast wealth but at immense human cost, forever shaping global demographics and economies

What was the Triangular Trade?
500

The Five Pillars of Islam...

What are faith, prayer, almsgiving, fasting, pilgrimage

500

A ______________ is a population scattered from its original homeland, and in the ______________, these communities (like Chinese, Gujarati, Jewish, Armenian, African) acted as vital trade facilitators by building trust networks, bridging cultures with shared language/religion, and creating intermediary hubs for commerce, linking distant regions through shared customs and merchant enclaves, fostering significant cultural/religious exchange alongside goods

What is diaspora and Indian Ocean

500

How do maps convey representations of space, place, and location?

What is through keys, symbols, and scale

500

As of September 2021, Singapore has implemented various regulations and guidelines to incorporate nature-friendly features in buildings and urban planning. This is related to which of the following?

and...

In 1957, Ghana gained their independence from Great Britain through an increase in political unity and participation. This is known as…

What are Political Factors and Political Developments

500

An economic system from the 16th to 18th centuries where governments heavily regulated trade to build national wealth, primarily by maximizing exports, restricting imports (using tariffs/quotas), and accumulating gold and silver, often through colonies that supplied raw materials and bought finished goods, viewing wealth as finite and trade as a zero-sum game

What is mercantilism?