Across
- 5. an exact place on Earth, often given in terms of latitude and longitude
- 7. straight lines (or arcs) drawn on a map without regard for physical or cultural features
- 8. the area between the factory zone and the working-class zone in the concentric zone model of urban structure in the Burgess Concentric Zone model
- 11. relates to surrounding features, both human-made and natural that explain why something is where it is
- 13. the world economy benefits rich societies and harms other countries by making them dependent on the core countries
- 15. formed when urban expansion results in an overlap in development by cities in close proximity to one another, resulting in a network of high-density human settlements
- 17. when individuals must leave their homes due to factors outside their control such as war, natural disasters or persecution.
- 18. the type of housing in spaces where the population is more condensed, such as in communities that have condominiums or townhouses
- 19. the production, distribution, and marketing of food and other products within the geographical limits of a metropolitan area
- 21. seeks to explain the economic relationships of cities with smaller settlements and distribution of services
- 22. the variety of life in the world or in a particular habitat or ecosystem
- 24. a method of rural land survey that uses physical features of local geography along with directions and distances to define and describe boundaries of land parcels
- 26. a phenomenon that happened when a place/location loses its distinctiveness or its uniqueness
- 28. a person who remains within their borders but had left their home due to negative circumstances
- 29. the characteristics of a population such as age, gender, race, and occupation
- 30. A linked system of processes that gather natural resources, convert them into goods, package them for distribution, disperse them, and sell them on the market
Down
- 1. the number of farmers per unit area of arable land
- 2. the notion that successive societies leave their cultural imprints on a place, each contributing to the cumulative cultural landscape
- 3. a defined area of land or water that is claimed by a group or individual as their own and is protected from external interference
- 4. the process by which a country determines its own statehood and forms its own allegiances and governments
- 6. features that are inherent to a particular location
- 9. a research complex in North Carolina between the towns of Chapel Hill, Raleigh, and Durham
- 10. enclave a geographical area where a particular ethnic group is spatially clustered and socially and economically distinct from the majority group
- 12. boundaries that used to exist and can still be detected on the landscape
- 14. Economic Growth model that includes the following five stages: Traditional Society; Preconditions for Take-Off; Take-Off; Drive to Maturity; and Age of High Mass Consumption
- 16. prosperous, rural residential areas beyond the suburbs
- 20. people who must leave their home area for their own safety or survival, their home area could be a country, state, or region
- 23. the belief that territory outside a given state should be made part of the state due to a large amount of people living there of the same ethnicity as live in the state in question or due to the state having historically been in possession of the territory
- 25. the practice of a country extending its power and influence over other countries, typically through the use of military force, economic coercion, or cultural domination
- 27. A group of people bound together by some sense of a common culture, ethnicity, language, shared history, and attachment to a homeland
