Human Geography Crossword Puzzle 3

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Across
  1. 2. The ratio of the number of farmers to the total amount of land suitable for agriculture.
  2. 4. A number of similar things grouped together.
  3. 12. A global network connecting millions of computers, making it possible to exchange information.
  4. 15. Random, scattered, linear, sinous, and land survey.
  5. 16. The area of a city where retail and office activities are clustered.
  6. 17. A model that describes how economic, political, and/or cultural power is spatially distributed between dominant core regions, and more marginal or dependent semi-peripheral and peripheral regions.
  7. 18. To spread or scatter freely or widely.
  8. 19. The region from which innovative ideas originate.
  9. 20. Grouping together of many firms from the same industry in a single area for collective or cooperative use of infrastructure and sharing of labor resources.
  10. 21. An urban center with a number of attributes that, if augmented by investment support, will stimulate regional economic development in its hinterland.
Down
  1. 1. Distinct regional approach to land surveying found in the Canadian Maritimes, parts of Quebec, Louisiana, and Texas whereby land is divided into narrow parcels stretching back from rivers, roads, or canals.
  2. 3. Is the real population density or the number of people per unit area of arable land.
  3. 5. The multiple different ways and patterns in which human phenomena diffuse spatially or spread across the Earth's surface.
  4. 6. A market center for the exchange of services by people attracted from the surrounding area.
  5. 7. The process by which passengers or goods are moved or delivered from one place to another.
  6. 8. The total number of people divided by the total land area.
  7. 9. Property lines in grid pattern, one square mile sections that display uniformity.
  8. 10. The geometric or regular arrangement of something in a study area.
  9. 11. 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 farther.
  10. 13. Marginal; outer; surrounding.
  11. 14. A method of land description which involves identifying distances and directions and makes use of both the physical boundaries and measurements of the land.