Across
- 6. : Moving into a country from another. (2, CC)
- 7. : Forces that unite a country (e.g., shared religion or language). (4, IDK)
- 8. : The transformation from an agricultural to an industrial economy that began in 18th-century Europe, reshaping economies and societies. (6, VIT)
- 10. : A region in which several large cities grow together. (7, CC)
- 11. : A process of cultural change that results following meeting between cultures. (3, IDK)
- 13. : Total population divided by total land area. (2, IDK)
- 15. : Found in large, heterogeneous societies that share habits despite differences. (3, CC)
- 18. : Leaving a country to live elsewhere. (2, CC)
- 21. : A major population center with surrounding cities and suburbs. (7, CC)
- 26. : The process of renovating urban neighborhoods, often displacing low-income residents. (7, IDK)
- 28. : A group of people with shared cultural characteristics. (4, CC)
- 30. : A state whose population is mostly homogeneous in terms of culture. (4, CC)
- 31. : When a minority group adopts the cultural traits of a dominant group. (3, IDK)
- 32. : Industry in which the final product weighs less than the inputs. (6, IDK)
- 33. : Location factors related to the transportation of materials into and from a factory. (6, CC)
- 34. : The growth of cities and the migration of people into them; essential to understanding modern human settlement patterns. (7, VIT)
- 35. : A state's ability to govern itself without outside influence. (4, IDK)
Down
- 1. : A large node of office and retail activities on the edge of an urban area. (7, IDK)
- 2. : A politically organized territory with a permanent population, defined territory, government, and recognition. This is fundamental for understanding geopolitics. (4, VIT)
- 3. : The visible imprint of human activity on the landscape, combining natural and built environments. It shows how humans interact with their surroundings. (3, VIT)
- 4. : The physical characteristics of a place. (1, CC)
- 5. : Farming for sale off the farm. (5, CC)
- 9. : Number of people per unit of arable land. (2, IDK)
- 12. : The theory that the environment dictates human behavior and societal development. (1, IDK)
- 14. : Grouping together of many firms in a similar industry in a single area for collective benefit. (6, IDK)
- 16. : Commercial grazing of livestock over an extensive area. (5, IDK)
- 17. : The location of a place relative to other places. (1, CC)
- 19. : Farming to feed the farmer’s family. (5, CC)
- 20. : The idea that while the environment sets certain constraints, humans can adapt and make decisions within those limits to shape their own cultural landscape. (1, VIT)
- 22. : A form of subsistence farming where people shift activity from one field to another. (5, IDK)
- 23. : Factors related to the costs of production inside a plant (e.g., land, labor, capital). (6, CC)
- 24. : Observing human patterns across space and asking why things are located where they are. (1, IDK)
- 25. : The maximum population an environment can sustainably support; important for understanding limits of growth and resource use. (2, VIT)
- 27. : Rapid diffusion of new agricultural technologies in the mid-20th century; significant for increasing food production in developing countries. (5, VIT)
- 29. : Traditionally practiced by small, isolated, homogeneous groups. (3, CC)
