The amount of linkage between locations in a network
Back
What is Spatial Perspective?
Front
Observing variations of geography across space
Back
Why do wealthier countries benefit more when it comes to malnourishment?
Front
They can afford to buy more food than the poorer countries
Back
What are distances?
Front
The measured physical space between two places
Back
What is location theory?
Front
An attempt to explain the locational pattern of economic activity and how it interrelates with other economies
Back
What are reference maps?
Front
They show locations and geographic features
Ex. Map of United States
Back
What is sequence occupance?
Front
When the cultural technologies and traditions on a landscape pass down or influence the culture that arrives there
Back
What do discussions of globalization usually compare it to?
Front
A blanket
Back
What are Regions?
Front
Areas that have similar features
Back
What do processes at the individual, local, regional, and national scales do?
Front
Change human geography and shape globalization
Back
What is location?
Front
The geographical position of people and things and how it affects what happens and why things happen
Back
Does having a large amount of arable land mean you have the least amount of malnourished people?
Front
No, because most countries with high amounts of arable land export their goods to other countries for profit
Back
What is geographic fieldwork?
Front
When geographers physically go to places to see what people are doing, observe people's reactions, and develop maps to help observe where they are.
Back
What is accessibility?
Front
How easy it is to reach one place to another
Back
What is Cultural Landscape?
Front
The human activity on a landscape
Back
What are the five themes?
Front
1. Location
2. Human-Environment
3. Region
4. Place
5. Movement
Back
What is cartography?
Front
Making and creating maps
Back
How do you receive Cholera?
Front
By eating food, or drinking water with contaminated bacteria
Back
How has technology advanced communication and transportation?
Front
People can now travel places faster than ever before
Back
What is Globalization?
Front
Processes that increase interactions, deepen relationships, and accelerate interdependence across borders
Back
How are you now advised to fight Cholera?
Front
1. Clean/Boil water
2. Use salts
3. Take antibiotics
Back
What are thematic maps?
Front
They show stories or events
Ex. Map of African American Population
Back
What is Medical Geography?
Front
Mapping the distribution of a disease
Back
What percent of the world is malnourished?
Front
1 out of 7 (about 1 billion)
Back
What is landscape?
Front
Material character, natural features, human structures, and tangible uniqueness of a place
Back
What is Spatial Interaction?
Front
The interaction between distances, accessibility, and connectivity
Back
What makes up the majority of the 1/7th?
Front
Women and Children
Back
What are perceptions of places?
Front
An idea that we set for a place to be like because of a book, movie, etc. (What OTHERS create our mind to perceive)
Back
What is Spatial?
Front
The arrangement of places and phenomena (They're lay out, organization, and how arrangements appear on Earth's landscape)
Back
How did Dr. Snow solve Cholera in the Soho district of England?
Front
He mapped out the street pumps, and noticed that most people affected were around the Broad Street pump. He asked the officials to turn off the pump, and the disease was practically gone
Back
What is Spatial Distribution?
Front
How things are distributed across space
Back
What are Patterns?
Front
Relationships between places and things
Back
What is Physical Geography?
Front
A part of geography that studies the structure, process, and location, of the natural environment
Back
Why do geographers use a "scale"?
Front
To compare individual, local, regional, national, and global interrelationships, because events have different effects in each scale.
Back
What is Human-Environment Interaction?
Front
The relationship between humans and the physical world
Back
What is Human Geography?
Front
1. How people make places
2. How we organize space and society
3. How we interact with each other
4. How we understand ourselves and others in localities, regions, and the world
Back
What is the goal of human geography?
Front
To understand and explain the diversity of people and places (Spatial Distribution)
Back
When do the biggest changes happen to a cultural landscape?
Front
Generally after a catastrophe such as a war, invention, depression, etc.
Back
What is Cholera?
Front
A disease that causes fatal diarrhea and dehydration
Back
What is sense of a place?
Front
Having a special meaning or emotion, remembering important events, or adding a certain character to a place (Homy)
Back
Where did it start?
Front
India
Back
Where is cultural landscape found?
Front
Everywhere
Back
What is a Place?
Front
Anywhere that has a unique physical and/or human characteristic
Back
When did it start?
Front
1816
Back
When did the National Geographic Society introduce the five themes?
Front
1986
Back
Where do globalizing processes happen?
Front
All Scales
Back
How does cultural landscape present different cultures?
Front
It allows us to see many different values, customs, practices, etc.
Back
What is movement?
Front
The mobility of people, goods, and ideas across the world
Back
What region is mostly malnourished?
Front
Sub-Saharan Africa
http://www.transportintelligence.com/market-reports/report-sub-saharan-africa-logistics-2012/296/
Back
Section 2
(50 cards)
Is absolute or relative location used more in everyday life?
Front
Relative location
Back
What is environmental determinism?
Front
Human behavior is strongly affected and/or determined by the physical environment
Back
What are mental maps?
Front
Maps we create in our minds of places we have been or hope to go
Back
What are absolute locations?
Front
Precise plotting usually by using latitude and longitude lines
Back
What makes Google Earth great?
Front
We can see the physical and human features of countries that prohibit foreign access and foreign aid.
Back
What is stimulus diffusion?
Front
When a cultural trait is diffused, but first has to have adapt
Back
What is hierarchical diffusion?
Front
When an idea or invention diffuses by going to a primary group, then a secondary group, etc.
Back
What is the criteria for a region?
Front
1. Formal (Physical or Cultural)
2. Functional
3. Perceptual
Back
What tools do geographers use?
Front
Fieldwork, remote sensing, GIS, GPS, and qualitative techniques
Back
What are the two broad categories of diffusion?
Front
Expansion Diffusion and Relocation Diffusion
Back
What is culture?
Front
A way of life that has unique values, beliefs, and physical traits
Back
What is relocation diffusion?
Front
When people take an idea or invention and physically brings it somewhere else
Back
What is political ecology?
Front
The study of how environmental issues are caused by political and economic statuses
Back
What is the Global Positioning System (GPS)?
Front
A satellite based locater that allows us to find absolute locations easier
Back
What are Geographic Information Systems (GIS)?
Front
Systems that are used to compare spatial data and analyze data by; digital representations of the environment, combining layers of spatial data, and creating maps with clear patterns and processes
Back
What is a culture trait?
Front
A single attribute to a culture
Ex. Turbans
Back
What are the two meanings for scale?
Front
1. Distance on map compared to distance on Earth
2. Spatial extent of something
Back
What are activity spaces?
Front
Places were we conduct everyday activities which allows us to have a better mental map
Back
What is cultural diffusion?
Front
When ideas, people, or goods move across a space
Back
What are Cultural Barriers?
Front
Innovations, ideas, or practices that the general population doesn't accept a characteristic for their culture
Back
What is jump scaling?
Front
When you go from a smaller scale and jump to the global scale
Back
What do functional regions have in common?
Front
Either:
1. Politics
2. Economics
3. Sociality
Back
What is Terra Incognita?
Front
Unknown and unreachable lands
Back
What are geographic concepts?
Front
Ways of seeing the world, that are used by geographers to answer questions (location, places, diffusion, etc.)
Back
Why are regions useful?
Front
They are a form of spatial classification where we can take large amounts of information and simplify it to make it comprehensible
Back
What is Relative location?
Front
Describes a place in relation to another feature
Back
What is a good example of contagious diffusion?
Front
Silly Bandz
Back
What is geocoaching?
Front
People that travel with their GPS to find treasures
Back
What are perceptual regions?
Front
A region that is developed by a person's perceptions (YOU make the perception)
Back
What is possibilism?
Front
It states that cultural development is dependent on human decisions, not the environment
Back
What is human geography like today?
Front
1. Making sense of spatial organization of humans on Earth's surface
2. Discovering the character of places and regions created by people
3. Relationships between humans and the physical environment
Back
What is a culture complex?
Front
When a certain idea or trait is used by many cultures but for different reasons
Back
What is Geographic Information Science (GISci)?
Front
Studying the development and geospatial concerns to examine patterns and processes
Back
What is great about remote sensing?
Front
It comes almost simultaneously
Back
What historically differs past mental maps to present mental maps?
Front
Nomadic people tended to use mental maps for food and shelter, while we use it to navigate in cities
Back
How does a geographer do geographic research?
Front
1. Thinks of a question with a spatial or landscape component
2. Chooses the scales of analysis
3. Applies 1 or more geographic concepts
Back
What does it mean to rescale?
Front
It means you change your scale when reviewing a subject
Ex. change from national scale to regional scale
Back
What is remote sensing?
Front
Conducting research on earth's environment from far away
Back
How did Kolivras use GIS?
Front
He reviewed Dr. Snow's work and then used the new technology to discover that Dengue fever could potentially arrive in Hawaii
Back
What is a cultural hearth?
Front
Where cultural traits form and then diffuse
Back
What differs between absolute and relative location?
Front
1. Absolute is precise while relative doesn't have to be
2. Relative can change while absolute usually doesn't
Back
What is a functional region?
Front
A region where unique activities or interactions are held between all the people
Ex. Chicago and surrounding suburbs
Back
What is Expansion Diffusion?
Front
When an idea or invention that starts in hearth remains strong as it spreads to other places
Back
What is cultural ecology?
Front
The study of how culture adapts and alters the environment
Back
What is an independent invention?
Front
When a cultural hearth is developed somewhere without influence from the main hearth
Back
What are the benefits of studying with scales?
Front
We can see how phenomenons affect a larger scale, and then how they affect all the smaller scales, or vice versa
Back
What is Contagious Diffusion?
Front
When almost all of the areas near the innovation or idea are affected
Back
What is a formal region?
Front
A region that has one of the criteria similar to another region
Back
What is Time-Distance Decay?
Front
When a combination of time and distance from hearth causes an idea or innovation to lose popularity
Back
How do mental maps differ between men and women?
Front
Women tend to use landmarks, and men tend to use paths
Back
Section 3
(26 cards)
What is the difference between perceptual region, and perception of place?
Front
Perceptual Region is what YOU perceive a specific place to be
Perception of Place is what OTHERS (Social Media, Friends, etc.) lead you to perceive a region to be
Back
What is the market for the world called?
Front
The Global Market or The Global System
Back
What are Semi-Peripheral states?
Front
States that are in the middle ground, meaning they share characteristics of both
Back
What can Relocation Diffusion be compared to?
Front
Migration / Immigration / Emigration
Back
What are Peripheral states?
Front
States that are underdeveloped
Back
If the smaller the geographic area then...
Front
The larger the scale
Back
What are examples of peripheral areas?
Front
Southeast Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa,
Back
What is the main difference between expansion diffusion and relocation diffusion?
Front
Expansion = Ideas, Innovations, etc,
Relocation = PEOPLE
Back
What are examples of core areas?
Front
North America, Europe, Australia, South Korea, Japan, Greenland, and Russia (very low)
Back
What is offshoring?
Front
Moving a business to another country
Back
What is outsourcing?
Front
A business that relocates within a country
Back
What are examples of semi-peripheral areas?
Front
South America, Central America, South Africa, Saharan Africa, Middle East
Back
What is the Global-Local Continuum?
Front
What happens at the global scale directly affects what happens at the local scale, or vice versa
Back
What does cultural geography entail?
Front
Traits like religion, language, and ethnicity
Back
If the larger the geographic area then....
Front
The smaller the scale
Back
What are Core states?
Front
States that are highly developed
Back
What is a synonym for a country?
Front
A state
Back
What are the most common type of thematic maps?
Front
Census Maps
Back
What does Hierarchal Diffusion depend on?
Front
Your interconnectedness
Back
What are characteristics of Core states?
Front
1. Strong political and economical power
2. High Literacy Rate
3. CBR is medium to low
4. Median death rates
5. Modern infrastructure
6. Good sanitation
Back
What are characteristics of peripheral states?
Front
1. Weak economical and political power
2. Low life expectancy
3. Low literacy (especially females), Varies in men
4. High CBR
5. High CDR
Back
What is the best example?
Front
Fashion:
Hearth- Fashion show in Milan
1st- Will go to NYC, Paris, London
2nd- High end Boutiques/Stores, LA, Miami, Monaco
3rd- Target, Walmart,
Back
What is a good example of Relocation Diffusion?
Front
Chinatown in NYC or San Francisco
Back
What are the sub disciplines?
Front
1. Political Geography
2. Economic Geography
3. Urban Geography
4. Population Geography
5. Cultural Geography