Barron's Human Geography Unit 1

About this set

Created by:

stevekrouse  on April 21, 2009

Subjects:

Modern World AP

Description:

All words for the first vocab quiz except for the following terms: Pattison's Four Traditions (1964): W.D. Pattison earth-science: physical geography (not one of the Five Themes) locational: spatial tradition (location) man-land: human/environmental interaction area-studies: regional geographyAll words for the first vocab quiz except for the following terms:
Pattison's Four Traditions (1964): W.D. Pattison
earth-science: physical geography (not one of the Five Themes)
locational: spatial tradition (location)
man-land: human/environmental interaction
area-studies: regional geography
(see more)

Classes:

AP HUG, Lincoln High, Zatoris, Human Geography AP Harmony, Mr. Imlay AP Human Geography, pinecrest, Human Geography AP

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Barron's Human Geography Unit 1

Anthropogenic
Caused or produced by humans
1/60
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Definitions

Anthropogenic Caused or produced by humans
Absolute location Position on Earth's surface using the coordinate system of longitude (that runs from North to South Pole) and latitude (that runs parallel to the equator).
Relative location Position on Earth's surface relative to other features. (Ex: My house is east of I-75).
Absolute distance Exact measurement of the physical space between two places.
Relative distance Approximate measurement of the physical space between two places.
Site The physical character of place; what is found at the location and why it is significant.
Situation The location of a place relative to other places.
Formal Region area within which everyone shares in common one or mare distinctive characteristics. The shared feature could be a cultural value such as a common language, or an environmental climate.
Functional Region(nodal) Area organized around a node or focal point. The characteristic chosen to define this kind of region dominates at a central focus or node and diminishes in importance outward. This region is tied to the central point by transportation or communication systems or by economic or functional associations.
Perceptual Region (vernacular) is a place that people believe exists as a part of their cultural identity. Such regions emerge from peoples informal sense of place rather than from scientific models developed through geographic thought. (Often identified using a mental map- which is an internal representation of a portion of Earths surface)
Environmental perception a person's idea or image of a place; may often be inaccurate.
Cultural trait a single element of normal practice in a culture (e.g., wearing a turban)
Culture complex a combination of related cultural traits (e.g., prevailing modes of dress; nationalism)
Culture hearth The region from which innovative ideas originate. This relates to the important concept of the spreading of ideas from one area to another (diffusion). Must be viewed in the context of time ...
Ancient culture hearth Fertile Crescent, Indus Valley, Chang & Yellow River Valley (China), Nile River Valley and Delta, Meso-America (origin of farming developed during the First Agricultural Revolution beginning around 12,000 years ago).
Modern culture hearth Europe, North America, Japan (origin and focus of the Industrial Revolution beginning in the early 1800s after the onset of the Second Agricultural Revolution).
Cultural landscape Fashioning of a natural landscape by a cultural group. This is the essence of how humans interact with nature.
Sequent occupance The notion that successive societies leave their cultural imprints on a place, each contributing to the cumulative cultural landscape. This is an important concept in geography because it symbolizes how humans interact with their surroundings.
Cultural diffusion The process of spread of a feature or trend from one place to another over time.
Relocation diffusion The spread of an idea through physical movement of people from one place to another.
Migrant diffusion spread of an idea through people, in which the phenomena weakens or dies out at its previous source ... moves like a "Slinky" (e.g., spread of the Spanish Flu toward the end of World War I).
Expansion diffusion The spread of a feature from one place to another in a snowballing process...
Hierarchical diffusion The spread of an idea from persons or nodes of authority or power to other persons or places
Contagious diffusion The rapid, widespread diffusion of a characteristic throughout the population. (Ex: ideas placed on the internet)
Stimulus diffusion the spread of an underlying principle, even though a characteristic itself apparently fails to diffuse. (Ex: PC & Apple competition, p40)
Acculturation Process of adopting only certain customs that will be to their advantage
Transculturation A near equal exchange of culture traits or customs
Assimilation Process of less dominant cultures losing their culture to a more dominant culture
Environmental determinism A 19th- and early 20th-century approach to the study of geography that argued that the general laws sought by human geographers could be found in the physical sciences. Geography was therefore the study o f how the physical environment caused human activities (e.g., Jared Diamond - Guns, Germs, and Steel)
Possibilism The physical environment may limit some human actions, but people have the ability to adjust to their environment.
Cultural Ecology The geographic study of the multiple interactions of human-environmental relationships
Holocene epoch current interglaciation period (sustained warming phase between glaciations during an ice age), extending from around 12,000 years ago to the present (some scientists speculate that since humans influence the Earth as no species was able to before, we have recently entered the Anthropocene epoch).
First Agricultural Revolution beginning around 12,000 years ago; achieved plant domestication (human influence on genetic modification of a plant) and animal domestication (genetic modification of an animal to make it more amenable to human control and use); began permanent settlements along fertile river valleys which moved humans from egalitarian societies (equal) to more stratified societies (unequal).
(Geographic Information Systems) GIS collection of computer hardware and software permitting spatial data to be collected, recorded, stored, retrieved, used, and displayed.
(Global Positioning System) GPS satellite-based system for determining the absolute location of places.
Remote sensing method of collecting data or information through the use of instruments (e.g., satellites) that are physically distant from the area or object of study.
Qualitative data described in terms of its quality (that is, informal or relative characteristics such as culture, language, religion, ...).
Quantitative data precisely describes data using numbers and measures (population, political, economic, ...).
Map projection an image of the earth put onto a 2 dimensional object
Azimuthal directions from a central point are preserved; usually these projections also have radial symmetry
Mercator straight meridians and parallels that intersect at right angles, used for marine navigation
Peters equal-area cylindrical, areas of equal size on the globe are also equally sized on the map
Robinson distorts shape, area, scale, and distance in an attempt to balance the errors of projection properties
Fuller using the surface of a polyhedron, it is unfolded to a net in many different ways and flattened to form a two-dimensional map which retains most of the globe's relative proportional integrity
dot represents a certain number of phenomena (e.g., population)
thematic made to reflect a particular topic about a geographic area (e.g., geographic, topographic, political, ...)
choropleth thematic map in which areas are shaded or patterned in proportion to the measurement of the statistical variable being displayed (e.g., population density)
reference generalized map type designed to show general spatial properties of features (e.g., world maps, road maps, atlas maps)
proportional symbol type of thematic map in which the areas of symbols are varied in proportion to the value of an attribute (e.g., city population)
preference map demonstrating progressively more desirable options
cartogram map in which some thematic mapping variable is substituted for land area (e.g., GDP)
latitude Parallel lines that run horizontally across Earth (Equator, Tropic of Cancer & Capricorn, Arctic & Antarctic Circles)
meridian line of longitude (ex: International Date Line)
TODALSIG acronym for assessing the validity and reliability of any map
Scale representation of a real-world phenomenon at a certain level of reduction or generalization
location position; situation of people and things (5 themes)
human/environmental interaction reciprocal relationship b/w humans & env. (5 themes)
region area on Earth's surface marked by a degree of homogeneity (uniformity) of some phenomenon (5 themes)
place uniqueness of a location (or similarity of two or more locales); phenomena within an area (5 themes)
movement mobility of people, goods and ideas; phenomena between areas (5 themes)

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