chapter 1 vocab

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Across
  1. 3. One of the two major divisions of Geography; the spatial analysis of human population, its cultures, activities, and landscapes.
  2. 4. Measurement of the physical space between two places.
  3. 5. the design of spatial distribution.
  4. 8. One of the two major divisions of systematic geography; the spatial analysis of the structure, processes, and location of Earth's natural phenomena such as climate, soil, plants, animals, and topography.
  5. 13. The fourth theme of Geography; uniqueness of a location.
  6. 14. Developed by the Geographic Educational National Implemention Project (GENIP), the _____ ______ of geography are location, human-environment, region, place, and movement.
  7. 17. State of mind derived through the infusion of a place with meaning and emotion by remembering important events that occurred in that place or by labeling a place with a certian character.
  8. 18. the study of geographic phenomena by visiting and observing how people interact with and thereby change those places.
Down
  1. 1. expansion of economic, political, and cultural processes to the point that they become global in scale and impact.
  2. 2. The second theme of geography as defined by the GENIP; reciprocal relationship between humans and environment.
  3. 6. When two regions, through an exchange of raw materials and/or finished products, can specifically satisfy each others demands, as well as the presence of a nearer opportunity diminishing further away opportunities.
  4. 7. the study of health and disease within a geographic context and from a geographical perspective.
  5. 9. logical attempt to explain the locational pattern of the economic activity and the manner in which its producing areas are interrelated.
  6. 10. Belief or "understanding" about a place developed through books, movies, stories or pictures.
  7. 11. Regional outbreak of a disease.
  8. 12. An outbreak of a disease that spreads worldwide.
  9. 15. The fifth theme of Geography; the mobility of people, goods and ideas across the surface of the planet.
  10. 16. The third theme of Geography as defined by the GENIP; an area on the Earth's surface marked by a degree of formal, funtional, or perceptual homogeneity of some phenomenon.