Across
- 2. Study of how medicine can show distribution, determinants, and control in health. Cities often cause massive epidemics and pandemics because of close proximity and contamination…This helps professionals plan, treat, and identify any risk factors.(IDK 2)
- 4. Satellites are used to transmit radio signals and create a map. As the world's infrastructure expands too fast for maps to keep up, this is even more essential for citizens to navigate.(CC 1)
- 6. The same political and economic jurisdiction over defined boundaries. Boundaries used by the government for education, fundings, and stability while also creating laws in order to maintain order/violence within specific towns, cities, or areas.(CC 4)
- 8. Spreads messages through missionary work. This plays a huge role in religious expansion/diffusion to new areas and has caused historical impact.(IDK 3)
- 9. An economic sector that is the highest level on the scale with global significance ideas including jobs like CEO’s. This sector helps manage and direct other jobs which makes its influence on sustainability, structure changes, and decisions more impactful on the workforces, economy, and social growth.(CC 7)
- 12. Food production and growth for family and not community. Smaller farming creates a global stability of not relying on grocery stores and markets which results in less strain and reliance.(CC 5)
- 14. Planting and harvesting of domesticated plants/animals for consumption. As the world develops, it’s important to realize that things like technology, cities, and infrastructure all involve this at one point. It drove revolutions, advancements, and new forms of animals/plants.(VIT 5)
- 15. A distinguished and set part of a place's limits. This provides clear boundaries which separate it from certain areas that could eventually cause wars, industrial disputes, or maladaptive diffusion (Found this word in the textbook during unit 3).(IDK 4)
- 17. Abrupt's slopes that break up the general continuity of the terrain. Mountains and cliffs. Terrain is always changing and eroding away so knowing where distinguished boundaries like slopes are can help geographers when it comes to finding boundaries and factors that can affect communities.(IDK 4)
- 18. High labor farming used to maximize land use and crop production using lots of fertilizers. This can be used to support large growing communities but have a high use to pesticides, herbicides, and pollutants from fertilizers which could later create brownfields.(CC 5)
- 19. Software duplicates to capture, store, and display or check data on Earth's surface. Ecologists can be able to get accurate data for wildlife and disease spread through populations because of its visual data.(CC 1)
- 24. A community of people with a shared identity or cultural traits. Critical for security of certain individuals and cultural preservation of things like languages, foods, and religions identities.(CC 4)
- 25. When city revenues can’t keep up with increasing demands for city services and expenditures on decaying urban infrastructure. As cities grow, and create new infrastructure, we need to understand why things can’t be met/improved.(IDK 6)
- 27. How people, ideas, etc, move around the world through space and time. This explains why populations, ideas, etc are established in the way they are and how we perceive the world because of what was diffused.(VIT 1)
- 29. Range of pro-market and anti-government positions on the economy, such as reducing government ownership and regulation and promoting privatization and market-based solutions. This reduced government spending and reshaped economies by prioritizing city/town needs.(IDK 7)
- 31. A large, densely populated settlement with a large population. The main topic that this unit was based around as well as what models are based around.(VIT 6)
- 32. An economic sector dedicated to intellectual and information services including jobs like doctors and lawyers. This is usually a highly skilled job that helps drive economic growth in technology/productivity and it helps in data management that most jobs don’t do.(CC 7)
- 34. A period of time during the 1760’s-1830’s where there was a rapid transformation of the economy through machine introduction. This period helped build the economy, create factories, and increase production of goods/materials.(VIT 7)
- 35. Average number of people of arable land. As the numbers in certain areas climb over time, this could lead to less arable land and therefore reducing food security in a region/town.(CC 2)
Down
- 1. Pattern which humans are spread out on Earth's surface. Urbanization has greatly affected where people migrated to, it's important to realize where these populations are concentrated and why.(VIT 2)
- 3. High rates of vacancy with crumbling infrastructure, lack of services, and environmental risks. Crumbling infrastructure can be redeveloped in order to not waste resources which reduces the likelihood of overconsumption in natural resources.(CC 6)
- 5. graphic representation of Earth's 3-dimensional configuration. This is essentially how the world functions in things like planning for construction, infrastructure, military, and environmental projects around the world.(IDK 1)
- 7. A farm no one lives on but planting and harvesting is done by migratory workers. This helps farms to become more of a production and efficient growing system because no long-term land ownership of an area that usually requires constant attention of one person/family/owner.(IDK 5)
- 10. Systematic documentation of property ownership, shape, and use. This helps the government in appropriate taxation because they can clearly see the boundaries/ownership of the area.(IDK 5)
- 11. total population of a country or place based on migration over time. This is essential for population tracking which can help a government figure out what to improve or ‘cater’ to based on where people have originated from.(IDK 2)
- 13. adapts enough ways to function economically and socially. It provides a bridge between an individual's daily life and culture which can help them function while having a sense of place.(CC 3)
- 16. Average number of people per unit of land area. Rapid expansion of populations means that the knowledge of pressure/strain put on the land is essential based on the number of people.(CC 2)
- 20. Blending with hosts but losing distinct traits. As the world evolves, we are creating larger populations and therefore losing native languages/ traits as we convert people to fit in.(CC 3)
- 21. Emphasizes spatial patterns of statistics/attributes and sometimes locations. This is the general term that acts as the umbrella for multiple maps that represent Earth in different patterns.(IDK 1)
- 22. political mode of people sharing common cultural background or descent. Cultural patterns and landscapes often involve communities of similar/same ethnicities which help create distinct communities and ways of functioning.(VIT 3)
- 23. Post WW2, large scale migrations from urban centers to suburban areas that are usually racially homogenous. Helps understand why people are moving away from racially diverse neighborhoods and sometimes enforcing residential segregation despite having new laws/norms create.(IDK 6)
- 26. A branch of human geography concerned with spatial analysis of political systems. The factors that influence political systems. Combines most vocab like state/nation, boundaries, supranationalism, etc, in its definition. (VIT 4)
- 28. Underutilized, abandoned, or idled properties when redevelopment is complicated because of contamination. Redevelopments of unused areas can ultimately lead to better soil, air, and water quality which can be used in agriculture or the development of green spaces.(CC 6)
- 30. Associations of workers in particular industries established to collectively bargain with capitalists. This helped workers get higher wages and treated better which improved work life.(IDK 7)
- 33. Full vocab with combined languages and becomes a native language. Many modern languages spoken in places like Hawaii, Jamaica, and Louisiana have evolved from this term and keeps a religious or colonial tie to language as well as provides a sense of ethnicity.(IDK 3)
