Across
- 3. An ethnic group can no longer be distinguished from another group in there area due to them giving up their beliefs and traditions. (3, CC)
- 6. The slowdown of births after/before a war ends/starts. (2, IDK)
- 8. A system of exchange in which no money changes hands. (6, IDK)
- 10. How quickly and easily people in one location can interact with people in another location. (1, IDK)
- 13. An ethnic or immigrant group moving to a new area adopts the values and practives of the larger group thathas recieved them, while still maintaing major elements of their own culture. (3, CC)
- 14. Created by Johann von Thunen, who was a farm owner in Germany, in 1826. It is an economic model that suggested a pattern for the types of products that farmers would produce at different positions relative to the market where they sold their goods. In this model a bid rent curve was also used to say that the land closer to the CBD (central business district) was more expesive than the land farther away. This model is a very important topic because it is still true today and it is a very good guide for a geographer. (5, VIT)
- 17. The population of cities, as compared to other areas, contains a great or poor variety of people. (7, IDK)
- 19. The commercial heart of a city. This is one of the most important terms becuase it is in most of the models, such as the sector model/Hoyt's Model, Concentric Zone Moel/Burgess Model, Multiple-Nulcei Model, Galactic City Model, Griffen-Ford Model (Latin America), European Cities Model, African Cities Model, Middle Easter/Islamic Cities Model, and McGee Model (S.E. Asia). (7, VIT)
- 22. The changes in the production process that replaced humans with machines. (6, CC)
- 24. The inverse of friction of distance. Friction of distance indicates that when things are farther apart, they tend to be less well connected. (1, CC)
- 26. Are cities of more than 10,000 inhabitants but less than 50,000, the country in which it is located, and the surrounding countries that have a high degree of integration. (7, CC)
- 28. The spreading of information, ideas behaviors, and other aspects of culture over wider areas. This is important because almost everything stpreads. There are a bunch of ways to spread like relocation, stimulus, hierarchical, reverse hierarchical, expansion, and contagious. (3, VIT)
- 30. Agriculture that involves greater inputs of capital paid labor relative to the space being used. (5,CC)
- 31. How well two locations are tied together by roads or other links. (1, IDK)
- 32. In 1884 and 1885, representatives from Europe met met in Berlin to lay out claims made on the continent of Africa. This meeting used these claims to form state boundaries in Africa based on their language. (4, IDK)
- 33. The drawing of boundaries for political districts by the party or grop in power to extend or cement their advantage. This is very important due to the fact that, even though it is illegal, it still takes place today in the forms of packing, stacking, cracking, and kidnapping. (4, VIT)
- 34. A boundary drawn before a large population was present. (4, CC)
- 35. Something that folk cultures provide to a person. (3, IDK)
Down
- 1. Water beyond the EEZ is open to all states because the United Nations Convention of the Law of the Sea. (4, IDK)
- 2. Created by Thomas Malthus in 1798. States that food production would increase arithemtically, while the population will grow exponentially. Therefore, the Earth will go beyond its carrying capacity unless we limit population growth. This is a very important term because people still believe that this could happen in the future, even though they have no evidence to support their claim. (2, VIT)
- 4. A boundary drawn to accommodate religious, ethnic, linguistic, or economic differences. (4, CC)
- 5. Agriculture that uses fewer inputs of capital and paid labor relative to the amount or space being used. (5, CC)
- 7. Consists of a city of at least 50,000 people, the country in which it is located, and the adjacent countries that have a high degree of social and economic integration or connection with the urban core. (7, CC)
- 9. Programs to decrease/discourage the number of births. (2, CC)
- 11. The global movement of plants and animals between Afro-Eurasia and the Americas. They took hundreds of plants and animals, such as coffee(E. Africa)/bananas(New Guinea)to(Americas), back east. (5, IDK)
- 12. A set of changes in technology that dramatically increased manufacturing productivly. This is a very important topic becuase it changed how people worked and behaved, where they lived/work, and how they related to each other spatially. (6,VIT)
- 15. An earlier baby boom. (2, IDK)
- 16. Programs designed to increase/encourage the fertility rate. (2, CC)
- 18. The shrinking "time distance" between locations because of improved methods of transportation and communication. (1, CC)
- 20. The location decision for a factory is dependent upon the location of other factories (6, IDK)
- 21. The process of showing a curved surface on a flat surface. This is a very important term because the models of the field of human geography because of how many are used. We have the mecator, peters, conic, robinson, and the goode homolosine which are all used to show the earth on a flat surface. (1, VIT)
- 23. A system of mass production that involved the human version of an assembly line. (6, CC)
- 25. A series of laws enacted by the British government which enabled landowners to purchase and enclose land for their own use that has previously been common land used by peasant farmers. (5, IDK)
- 27. The permanently inhabited portion of the earth's surface (7, IDK)
- 29. Anti-immigrant (3, IDK)
