Across
- 4. The first chapter of the three in question
- 5. Often the oldest district in a city, high concentrations of residents and services, significant due to its importance in all of the urban models (VIT, CH. 19)
- 6. An area of undeveloped land around an urban area meant to preserve the space (IDK, CH. 20)
- 7. The process of change in the use of a house from single-family-owned to abandonment (IDK, CH. 20)
- 9. Cities in this continent typically have a commercial spine with disamenity zones surrounding it and on the periphery (CC, CH. 19)
- 10. An area consisting of an urban center and its surrounding territory and agriculture (CC, CH. 18)
- 11. An established town near a very large city grows into a city independent of the larger one (IDK, CH. 18)
- 15. A polluted or potentially contaminated area with abandoned structures such as factories (IDK, CH. 20)
- 16. Describes one way in which the sizes of cities within a region may develop, significant due to its ability to accurately predict and use the sizes of cities in MDCs (VIT, CH. 18)
- 17. Made the sector model (CC, CH. 19)
- 19. Displays many land use zones clustering around different areas (including the CBD), forming small nodal regions within cities (IDK, CH. 19)
- 22. A take on the multiple nuclei model, shows suburban residences on the outer ring of a city serviced by nodes along a ring road or beltway (IDK, CH. 19)
- 23. An urban zone that lacks easy access to healthy food (CC, CH. 20)
- 26. The rapid spread of development outward from the inner city (IDK, CH. 20)
- 28. Cities in this continent typically have much more historic CBDs with shorter and older buildings that nonetheless provide similar residences and services as in North America (CC, CH. 19)
- 29. Made the multiple nuclei model (IDK, CH. 19)
- 30. A way of living commonly adopted by people and places with a lack of income or accumulated wealth (CC, CH. 20)
- 31. Made the concentric zone model (CC, CH. 19)
- 32. A process by which people people of one ethnic group are frightened into selling their homes at low prices due to the potential of another ethnic group entering the community (IDK, CH. 20)
Down
- 1. The shape that geographers consider a compromise between a circle and a square due to its geometric properties (CC, CH. 18)
- 2. (5 x 3) + 4
- 3. The process by which banks refuse to lend money to people from certain areas (CC, CH. 20)
- 5. Displays the CBD in the center surrounded by rings, each representing different urban land uses (CC, CH. 19)
- 8. Location where people go to receive goods and services (CC, CH. 18)
- 12. (7 x 3) - 1
- 13. The part of a city surrounding the CBD that is a common center of urban poverty, significant due to its impact on a city's economy, quality of life, and population (VIT, CH. 20)
- 14. The government's right to remove landowners after paying them full market value for repurposing (CC, CH. 20)
- 18. Communities that grew up along rail lines, emerged, often creating a pinwheel shaped city (IDK, CH. 18)
- 20. Areas generally associated with river valleys in which seasonal floods and fertile soils aided the production of an agricultural surplus (IDK, CH. 18)
- 21. The growth of lower density housing, industry, and commercial zones outside the CBD (CC, CH. 18)
- 24. Displays the CBD in the center with different regions growing from it, each representing different urban land uses (CC, CH. 19)
- 25. Adjective for areas (cities) with high concentrations of people, significant due to the entire unit being about this (VIT, CH. 18)
- 27. Surrounds each central place, for which it provides goods and services and from which it draws population (CC, Ch. 18)
