Human Geo
Across
- 1. A theory explaining how services are distributed and why settlements are located in certain places; important for understanding urban systems. (7, VIT)
- 4. The movement of people from central cities to suburban areas. (7, CC)
- 8. Leaving your country to settle elsewhere. (2, CC)
- 10. A series of improvements in industrial technology that began in the 18th century; crucial because it transformed economies and societies worldwide. (6, VIT)
- 11. An industry where the final product weighs less than the raw materials used. (6, CC)
- 16. Farming mainly for selling products for profit. (5, CC)
- 18. A form of subsistence farming based on herding domesticated animals. (5, IDK)
- 21. A large node of offices and retail activities located on the outskirts of a city. (7, IDK)
- 23. A country whose population shares a common identity; important because it connects nationalism with state borders. (4, VIT)
- 24. A computer system that captures, stores, analyzes, and displays geographic data. (1, IDK)
- 25. A zone where no single state exercises complete political control. (4, CC)
- 26. The uncontrolled spread of cities into surrounding areas. (7, IDK)
- 27. Moving into a new country to live permanently. (2, CC)
- 29. The transfer of political power from central governments to lower regional governments. (4, IDK)
- 30. A concentration of businesses in a certain area for mutual benefit. (6, IDK)
- 31. Studying the arrangement of objects across Earth's surface to understand patterns and connections; essential to human geography. (1, VIT)
- 32. The practice of understanding another culture by its own standards, not judging it. (3, CC)
- 34. A model that shows how population growth rates change over time as a country develops; important for predicting demographic futures. (2, VIT)
- 35. A farming method that involves clearing fields by cutting and burning vegetation. (5, IDK)
Down
- 2. The belief that one's own culture is superior to others. (3, CC)
- 3. A model describing shifts in the leading causes of death during demographic transition stages. (2, IDK)
- 5. Farming primarily to feed the farmer’s own family. (5, CC)
- 6. A force that unifies a state’s people and strengthens the country. (4, IDK)
- 7. The location of a place relative to other places. (1, CC)
- 9. The spread of cultural traits from one place to another, explaining how cultures change and interact. (3, VIT)
- 12. Layers of cultural imprints left by different groups on the same landscape. (1, IDK)
- 13. An industry where the final product weighs more than the inputs. (6, CC)
- 14. A vertical plane that cuts through rocks and soil to define a state's territory. (4, CC)
- 15. The rapid diffusion of new agricultural technology in the 20th century, leading to massive increases in food production. (5, VIT)
- 17. Environmental or political feature that makes migration more difficult. (2, IDK)
- 19. When a group adopts traits of another culture but keeps some of its original identity. (3, IDK)
- 20. The blending of two or more cultural traditions into a new hybrid tradition. (3, IDK)
- 22. The increasing number of people living in cities. (7, CC)
- 28. Hiring outside companies, often in other countries, to perform work. (6, IDK)
- 33. The physical characteristics of a place, like climate or soil. (1, CC)