Across
- 2. The seasonal migration of livestock between mountains and lowland pastures. (5, IDK)
- 6. Collecting of data about Earth's surface from a satellite orbiting the planet or other long distance methods (1, CC)
- 7. Is a demographic and social process whereby people move from urban areas to rural areas. It is, like suburbanization, inversely related to urbanization. It first occurred as a reaction to inner-city deprivation. (2, IDK)
- 8. The process by which a state breaks down through conflicts among its ethnicities (4, CC)
- 10. 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. (3, IDK)
- 12. The process of declining from a higher to a lower level of effective power or vitality or essential quality (4, CC)
- 13. Rapid diffusion of new agricultural technology, especially new high-yield seeds and fertilizers. Modern agricultural techniques spread in the '70s and '80s is known as the Green Revolution. It is important to understand this concept because it shows how agriculture improved worldwide. (5, VIT)
- 14. This focuses on the location of humans as it relates to interaction. This aspect of geography studies physical locations to determine how people live on the surface of the Earth, without it geographers wouldn't be able to see how the earth and its inhabitants work together to make a cohesive community. (1, VIT)
- 19. Satellite-based system for determining the absolute location of places or geographic features. (1, CC)
- 20. Process of less dominant cultures losing their culture to a more dominant culture. (3, CC)
- 21. A language used between native speakers of different languages to allow them to communicate so that they can trade with each other. (3, IDK)
- 24. A collection of computer hardware and software that permits spatial data to be collected, recorded, stored, retrieved, manipulated, analyzed, and displayed to the user. (1, IDK)
- 29. The act of having a specific plan in a specific place. This concept is important because without it places wouldn’t be in a state to run efficiently. (4, VIT)
- 32. An approach to industrial location theory concerned with spatial variations in revenue. It concentrates on the demand side of the industrial location problem, as opposed to the cost side addressed in variable cost analysis. (6, IDK)
- 34. The policy of a state wishing to incorporate within itself territory inhabited by people who have ethnic or linguistic links with the country but that lies within a neighboring state. (4, IDK)
Down
- 1. This covers a range of development and conservation strategies that help protect our health and natural environment and make our communities more attractive, economically stronger, and more socially diverse. (7, CC)
- 3. The small scale production of fruits, vegetables, and flowers as cash crops sold directly to local consumers. (5, CC)
- 4. The growing of fruits, vegetables, and flowers. (5, CC)
- 5. The level of development that can be maintained in a country without depleting resources to the extent that future generations will be unable to achieve a comparable level of development. (7, CC)
- 9. The tendency for competing vendors to cluster in the middle of a customer area is called (6, IDK)
- 11. A code of maritime law approved by the United Nations in 1982 that authorizes, among other provisions, territorial waters extending 12 nautical miles (22km) from shore and 200-nautical-mile-wide (370-km-wide) exclusive economic zones. (4, IDK)
- 15. Established limits by governments on the number of immigrants who can enter a country each year. (2, IDK)
- 16. These activities are specialized tertiary activities in the ‘Knowledge Sector’ which demands a separate classification. They are not tied to resources, affected by the environment, or necessarily localised by market. (6, CC)
- 17. The process of change in a society's population from a condition of high crude birth and death rates and low rate of natural increase to a condition of low crude birth and death rates, low rate of natural increase, and a higher total population. The significance of this is to show how countries populations developed over time/stages. (2, VIT)
- 18. Husks of grain separated from the seed by threshing.(5, IDK)
- 19. Trend of mid to high-income Americans moving into city centers and rehabilitating much of the architecture and also replacing the low-income population (negative view of rebuilding a neighborhood). (7, IDK)
- 22. The innovation of the city, which occurred independently in five separate hearths (Mesoamerica, Nile Valley, Mesopotamia, Indus Valley, Huang Ho). (7, IDK)
- 23. Services that focus on the creation, re-arrangement and interpretation of new and existing ideas; data interpretation and the use and evaluation of new technologies.The highest level of decision makers or policy makers perform these activities. (6, CC)
- 25. Created by Walter Christaller, it seeks to explain the number, size and location of human settlements in an urban system; settlements simply function as 'central places,' providing services to surrounding areas. This is shown through organized hexagons to eliminate unserved or overlapping market areas. (7, VIT)
- 26. The adoption of cultural traits such as language by one group under the influence of another (3, CC)
- 27. Culture that is found in big, mixed societies (cultures) that share common habits despite the difference throughout the culture. It is important to know this concept because it helps understand the differences of culture in a country. (3, VIT)
- 28. Geographic viewpoint a response to determinism- that holds that human decision making, not the environment, is the critical factor in cultural development (1, IDK)
- 30. The centralization of parts of an industry as a whole. If this didn’t exist, then geographers wouldn't be able to identify the progressions that an industry makes over a period of time. (6, VIT)
- 31. This refers to an infectious disease that spreads over the entire world in a rapid manner. (2, CC)
- 33. Diseases and conditions that spread rapidly and extensively by infection and affect many people at the same time, and it’s used figuratively to describe widely prevalent things other than infectious diseases. (2, CC)
