Mr. Samson: Unit 1 - Thinking Geographically Flashcards

1
Q

Considers the arrangement of the phenomena being Studied across the surface of the earth. Important considerations of this approach include location, distance, direction, orientation, pattern, and interconnection.

A

Spatial Approach

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2
Q

The study of spatial characteristics of various elements of the physical environment.

A

Physical Geography

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3
Q

The study of the spatial characteristics of humans and human activities.

A

Human Geography

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4
Q

The precise spot where something is according to some system, typically found using longitude and latitude.

A

Absolute Location

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5
Q

The distance north and south of the equator.

A

Latitude

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6
Q

An imaginary line that circles the globe exactly halfway between the North and South Poles.

A

Equator

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7
Q

The distance east or west of the prime meridian

A

Longitude

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8
Q

An imaginary line that runs from pole to pole through Greenwich, England.

A

Prime Meridian

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9
Q

Roughly follows the prime meridian but makes deviations to accommodate international boundaries.

A

International Date Line

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10
Q

A description of where something is in relation to other things.

A

Relative Location

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11
Q

How well two locations are tied together by roads or other links.

A

Connectivity

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12
Q

How quickly and easily people in one location can interact with people in another location.

A

Accesibility

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13
Q

Abandoned settelments of the western United States. Their good relative locations lost the advantages that they once had, however, their absolute locations remain the same.

A

Ghost Towns

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14
Q

Refers to the specific human and physical characteristics of a location.

A

Place

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15
Q

A group of places in the same area that share a characteristic.

A

Region

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16
Q

Characteristics at the immidate location (soil type, climate, labor force, human structures, etc…)

A

Site

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17
Q

The location of a place relative to its surroundings and other places.

A

Situation

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18
Q

How humans percive an area based on their personal belifes and emotional connection.

A

Sense of Place

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19
Q

Place names– provides insights into the physical geography, the history, or the culture of the location

A

Toponyms

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20
Q

The measurement of how far or near things are to one another.

A

Distance

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21
Q

The degree of nearness.

A

Proximity

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22
Q

The contact, movement, and flow of things between locations. Connections may be physical (roads) or through information (radios and Internet).

A

Spatial Interaction

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23
Q

When things are farther apart, they tend to be less well connected.

A

Friction of Distance

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24
Q

The idea that when things are farther apart, they tend to be less well connected.

A

Friction of Distance

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25
Q

The number of something in a specivically defined area (the number of people per square mile).

A

Density

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26
Q

The way a phenomenon is spread out over an area.

A

Distribution

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27
Q

Matching patterns of distribution that indicates two or more phenomena may be related, or associated with one another.

A

Spatial Association

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28
Q

The connection and exchange between humans and the natural world.

A

Human-Environment Interaction

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29
Q

How humans adapt to the environment.

A

Cultural Ecology

30
Q

The belief that landforms and the climate are the most powerful forces shaping human behavior.

A

Environmental Dererminism

31
Q

A view that acknowledges limits on the effects of the natural environment and focuses more in the role that human culture plays.

A

Possibilism

32
Q

The task of defining and describing landscapes.

A

Landscape Analysis

33
Q

The act of physically visiting a location, place, or reigeon and recording, firsthand, information there.

A

Field Observation

34
Q

All the information that can be tied to a specific location.

A

Spatial Data

35
Q

Professional images captured from planes within the atmosphere.

A

Aerial Photography

36
Q

The physical artifacts that humans have created and that form part of the landscape (buildings, roads, signs, fences, etc…).

A

Built Environment

37
Q

Anything built by humans.

A

Cultural Landscape

38
Q

The general arrangements of things being studied.

A

Patterns

39
Q

The repeted sequence of events that create patterns.

A

Processes

40
Q

The ratio is the between the size of things in the real world and the size of those same things on a map.

A

Scale

41
Q

The way a map communicates the ratio of its size to the size of what it represents.

A

Cartographic Scale

42
Q

Sometimes refered to as relative scale and refers to the amount of territory that the map represents.

A

Geographic Scale

43
Q

Sometimes refered to as geographical scale and refers to the amount of territory that the map represents.

A

Relative Scale

44
Q

Designed for people to refer to for general information about places.

A

Refrence Maps

45
Q

Show and label human-created boundaries and designations, such as counties, states, cities, and capitals.

A

Political Maps

46
Q

Show and label natural features such as mountains, rivers, and deserts.

A

Physical Map

47
Q

Show and label highways,streets, and alleys.

A

Road Map

48
Q

Show and label property lines and details of land ownership.

A

Plat Maps

49
Q

Illustrations used in books and advertisements to show specific locations mentioned in the text.

A

Locator Maps

50
Q

Show spatial aspects of information or of a phenomenon.

A

Thematic Map

51
Q

Uses various colors, shades of one color, or paterns to show the location and distribution of spatial data.

A

Choropleth Maps

52
Q

Used to show the specific location and distribution of something across the territory of a map. Each dot represents a specific quantity.

A

Dot Distribution Maps

53
Q

Uses symbols of different sizes to indicate different amounts of something. Larger sizes indicate a larger quantity while smaller sized indicate a smaler quality.

A

Graduated Symbol Maps

54
Q

Uses lines that connect points of equal value to depict variations in data across space

A

Isoline Maps

55
Q

A type of isoline map – points of equal elevation are connected, creationg contours that depict surface features.

A

Topographic Maps

56
Q

The sizes of countries (or states, counties, or another areal unit) are shown according to some specific statistic.

A

Cartogram

57
Q

The process to showing a curved surface on a flat surcace.

A

Map Projection

58
Q

Representations of reality or theories

A

Geogaphic Models

59
Q

Projection of a map of the world on to a cylinder in such a way that all the parallels of latitude have the same length as the equator, used especially for marine charts and certain climatological maps.

A

Mercator Map Projection

60
Q

Map projection in which areas are shown in correct proportion at the expense of distorted shape, using a rectangular decimal grid to replace latitude and longitude. It was devised in 1973 to be a fairer representation of equatorial (i.e. mainly developing) countries, whose area is underrepresented by the usual projections such as Mercator’s.

A

Peters Projection

61
Q

A0 map projection in which an area of the earth is projected onto a cone whose vertex is usually above one of the poles, then unrolled onto a flat surface.

A

Conic Projection

62
Q

The Robinson projection is a map projection of a world map which shows the entire world at once. It was specifically created in an attempt to find a good compromise to the problem of readily showing the whole globe as a flat image.

A

Robinson Projection

63
Q

United by physical, cultural, or economic traits.

A

Formal Regions/ Uniform Reigons/ Homogeneous Regions

64
Q

Organized around a focal point and are defined by an activity that occus across the reigon.

A

Functional Regions/ Nodal Regions

65
Q

The informal sense of place that people ascribe to them.

A

Perceptual Regions/ Vernacular Regions

66
Q

The maps that people create in their minds based on their own experiences and knowledge.

A

Mental Maps

67
Q

Regions divided into smaller areas.

A

Subregions

68
Q

Data that is observed and recorded on on location, and the act of collecting it.

A

Fieldwork

69
Q

Information that is measured and recorded using numbers.

A

Quantitative Data

70
Q

Information that is collected through interviews, documents, and visual observations.

A

Qualitative Data