Across
- 3. a widespread occurrence of an infectious disease in a community at a particular time (CC)
- 6. defined by Manuel Castells as a set of interconnected nodes without a center (IDK)
- 8. system of planting crops on ridge tops in order to reduce farm production costs and promote greater soil conservation (IDK)
- 9. the spread of an underlying principle, even though a characteristic itself apparently fails to diffuse (CC)
- 13. the study of statistics such as births, deaths, income, or the incidence of disease, which illustrate the changing structure of human populations (VIT)
- 14. process by which people group and live with people more like themselves in terms of culture, ethnicity, or race; this is done by choice, free of outside intervention (CC)
- 17. the spread of an idea from persons or nodes of authority or power to other persons or places (CC)
- 19. location factors related to the transportation of materials into and from a factory (CC)
- 20. people or societies that are farmers therefore promote agriculture interest. They are generally not located near cities but these types of people are essential to the way that we live and our ability to live in cities (IDK)
- 22. a term used by geographers to mean inhabited land. It generally refers to land where people have made their permanent home, and to all work areas that are considered occupied and used for agricultural or any other economic purpose (IDK)
- 25. study of how, why, and at what rate new technology spreads throughout a culture (IDK)
- 26. population of various age categories in a population pyramid. This is important because this can tell what state this country is in whether its Stage 3 or Stage 5 in the demographic transition model (IDK)
- 27. farming methods that preserve long-term productivity of land and minimize pollution, typically by rotating soil-restoring crops with cash crops and reducing inputs of fertilizer and pesticides (CC)
- 28. idea that the core houses main economic power of a region and the outlying region or periphery houses have lesser economic ties (VIT)
- 29. a boundary that separates regions in which different language usages predominate (IDK)
- 31. the study that analyzes geography, history and social science with reference to international politics. It examines the political and strategic significance of geography, where geography is defined in terms of location, size, and resources of places (VIT)
- 33. process by which middle-class people move into deteriorated inner-city neighborhoods and renovate the housing (IDK)
- 34. a disease prevalent over a whole country or the world (CC)
Down
- 1. is the central region of a country or continent; especially a region that is important to a country or to a culture (IDK)
- 2. site in which dwellings are dispersed throughout the city rather than clustered in a large project (CC)
- 4. the process by which a state breaks down through ethnic conflicts (CC)
- 5. the deliberate effort to modify a portion of Earth's surface through the cultivation of crops and the raising of livestock for subsistence or economic gain (VIT)
- 7. physical location of geographic phenomena across space (IDK)
- 10. designed primarily to provide food for direct consumption by the farmer and the farmer's family (CC)
- 11. a state that includes several discontinuous pieces of territory (CC)
- 12. a gas used as a solvent, a propellant in aerosols, a refrigerant, and in plastic foams and fire extinguishers (IDK)
- 15. 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 of how the physical environment caused human activities. (VIT)
- 16. process of legally adding land area to a city (IDK)
- 18. the dispersal of an industry that formerly existed in an established agglomeration (IDK)
- 21. a theory that explains the distribution of services based on the fact that settlements serve as centers of market areas for services; larger settlements are fewer and farther apart than smaller settlements and provide services for a larger number of people who are willing to travel further (VIT)
- 23. an otherwise compact state with a large projecting extension (CC)
- 24. geographical economic theory that refers to how the price and demand on real estate changes as the distance towards the Central Business District (CBD) increases (VIT)
- 30. location factors related to the costs of factors of production inside the plant, such as land, labor, and capital (CC)
- 32. what US suburbs are characterized by; the progressive spread of development over the landscape (CC)
