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AP Human Geography Notes

General Geography:

US road map is not a thematic map

Every meridian is the same length and has the same beginning and end

According to environmental determinism, the physical environment causes social development

Highest density: most in numbers

Highest concentration: closest together 

Cloropleth map uses shading

Five Themes of Geography:


Location:
Relative location
Absolute location
Place:
Human Characteristics
Physical Characteristics
HumanEnvironmental
HumanEnvironmental !nteraction:
Humans adapt to the environment
Humans modi"y the environment
Humans depend on the environment
#ovement
People
$oods
!deas
Regions
%ormal &uni"orm'
%unctional &nodal'
(ernacular &perceptual'

Culture:
Customary belie"s, social "orms, and material traits o" a group o" people in tradition

Hearth:
)here an idea originates

Acculturation:
*he spread o" cultural traits "rom one society to another 

Globalization of Culture:
$lobali+ation due to interchanging belie"s and customs

Globalization of Economy:
$lobali+ation due to business
eference !aps:
Regular maps shoing cities, boundaries, mountains, or roads

Thematic !aps:
#aps highlighting a particular "eature or a single variable such as temperature, city, si+e, or acreage in
 potatoes &$ives e-tra
e-tra in"ormation'

"soline !aps:
Sho lines that connect points o" e.ual value
!solines are on topographic maps

Choropleth !aps:
Sho the level o" some variable ithin prede"ined regions, such as counties, states, or countries

#ot !aps:
Use a dot to represent the occurrence o" some phenomenon in order to depict variation in density in a
given area

Cartograms:
#aps that have distorted population

esolution:
*he amount o" details or depth o" a map

$cale:
$enerally, the relationship beteen the portion o" Earth being studied and Earth as a hole, speci"ically
the relationship beteen the si+e o" an ob/ect on a map and the si+e o" the actual "eature on Earth0s
sur"ace
*he three main types o" scales are ratio &"raction' scales, bar scales, and ritten scales

$mall $cale:
1epicts a large area &such as the state o" Ari+ona' but ith less detail

%arge $cale:
1epicts a small area &such as donton Phoeni-' ith great detail

Cartography:
*he science o" ma2ing maps

Pro&ection:
*he system used to trans"er locations "rom Earth0s sur"ace to a "lat map
*he most common type is the Robinson Pro/ection
Hoever, maps depicting the entire orld can distort shape, distance, relative si+e, and direction

Toponym:
*he name given to a portion o" Earth0s sur"ace
Has to be a natural "eature

$ite:
*he physical character o" a place
$ituation:
*he location o" a place relative to other places &relative location'

!eri'ian:
An arc dran on a map beteen the 3orth and South poles &longitude'
*he to main meridians are the Prime #eridian and the !nternational 1ate Line

Parallel:
A circle dran around the globe parallel to the e.uator and at right angles to the meridians &latitude'

Time (ones:
*here are "our ma/or time +ones in the United States &Eastern, Central, #ountain, and Paci"ic'4 *he time
+ones are based on $reenich, England because at the time England as the most poer"ul country4
*here is a ne time +one ever 56 degrees longitude4 7ne degree longitude is 89 miles, so there is a ne
time +one every 5,;6 miles4 !" you go east you go "orards in time4 !" you go est you go bac2 in time4

Green)ich !ean Time:


*he time in that time +one encompassing the prime meridian, or +ero degrees longitude4

"nternational #ate %ine:


An arc that "or the most part "ollos 5< degrees longitude, although it deviates in several places to avoid
dividing land areas4 )hen you cross the !nternational 1ate Line heading east &toard America', the cloc2
moves bac2 => hours, or one entire day4 )hen you go est &toard Asia', the calendar moves ahead one
day4

$patial Association:
*he distribution o" one phenomenon that is related to another phenomenon4 &*he reason to things are
 placed here they are ? i" they0re related they ill probably be close'

$patial #istribution:
*he arrangement o" phenomenon across the Earth0s sur"ace

Environmental #eterminism:
A nineteenth and early tentieth century approach to the study o" geography that argued that the general
las sought by human geographers could be "ound in the physical sciences4 $eography as there"ore the
study o" ho the physical environment caused human activities4 &States the physical terrain o" the orld
dictates ho the humans survive'4

Possibilism:
*he theory that the physical environment may set limits on human actions, but people have the ability to
ad/ust to the physical environment and choose a course o" action "rom many alternatives4 &States people
can overcome the physical problems@"eatures ? humans con.uer land instead o" land con.uering humans'4

#istribution:
*he arrangement o" something across Earth0s sur"ace

#ensity:
*he "re.uency ith hich something e-ists ithin a given unit o" area4 1ensity does not tell you here
something is, /ust strictly numbers

Arithmetic #ensity:
*he total number o" people divided by the total land area

Physiological #ensity:
*he total number o" people divided by all arable land &"armland'

Agricultural #ensity:
*he total number o" "armers &and "amily' divided by all arable land

Concentration:
*he spread o" something over a given area
Concentration tells you here something is
Can be clustered or dispersed

Pattern:
*he geometric or regular arrangement o" something in a study area

#iffusion:
*he spreading o" a "eature or trend "rom one place to another over time

elocation #iffusion:
*he spread o" a "eature or trend through physical movement o" people "rom one place to another4 1oes
not have to gro in numbers4 A!1S is an e-ample o" relocation di""usion4

E*pansion #iffusion:
*he spread o" a "eature or trend among people "rom one area to another in a snoballing process4
!nvolves groing numbers4
Hierarchical #iffusion  ? *he spread o" a "eature or trend "rom one 2ey person or node o"
authority or poer to other people or places4 E-ample grunge music4
Contagious #iffusion ? *he rapid, idespread di""usion o" a "eature or trend throughout a
 population4 E-ample in"luen+a &"lu'4
$timulus #iffusion ? *he spread o" an underlying principle or thought process, even though a
speci"ic characteristic is re/ected4 E-amples Apple computers@#artin Luther ing Br4 &he is dead
 but his thought process still lives on'4

Cartography:
*he science o" map ma2ing

Toponym:
A name given to a place on earth4

$cale:
*he relationship to a "eature0s si+e on a map to its actual si+e on earth4
Fractional $cale ? numerical ratio 5:=>,
+ritten $cale ? description in ords 5 inch e.uals 5 mileD
Graphic $cale ? bar line shoing distance
 6 5 #!LES
$ite:
*he physical characteristic o" a place

$ituation :
*he relative location o" a place
!eri'ian:
Lines o" longitude running in the northsouth direction ending at the poles

Parallel:
Lines o" latitude parallel to the e.uator 

Time (one:
$reenich #ean *ime ? *he time at the prime meridian
!nternational 1ate Line ? 5< degrees "rom Prime #eridian ? => hours
*elling time "rom longitude ? every 56 degrees4 %rom Prime #eridian going est loose 5 hour@56
degrees ? east gain 5 hour@56 degrees

egions:
%ormal &Uni"orm' ? Everyone shared distinct characteristics
%unctional &3odal' ? Area organi+ed around a "ocal point
(ernacular ? A perceptual region ? belie"s and cultural identity

$patial Association:
*he distribution o" one phenomenon that is scienti"ically related to the location o" another phenomenon

$patial #istribution:
*he arrangement o" phenomenon across the earth0s sur"ace

#istribution:
*he arrangement o" a "eature in a space
*hree types ? density, concentration, pattern

#ensity:
*he "re.uency o" hich something occurs4
Arithmetic ? the total number o" ob/ects in an area
Physiological ? the number o" persons per unit area o" suitable agricultural land
Agricultural ? number o" "armers per area o" "armland

Concentration:
*he spread o" something over a given area
Clustered ? close together 
1ispersed ? "ar apart

Pattern:
*he arrangement o" ob/ects in space

Culture:
Customary belie"s, social "orms, and material traits o" a group o" people in tradition

Hearth:
)here an idea originates

Acculturation:
*he spread o" cultural traits "rom one society to another 
#iffusion:
*he spreading o" a "eature or trend "rom one place to another4
elocation ? spreading through physical movement4
E*pansion ? Spreading in a snoballing process
Contagious ? rapid idespread di""usion o" a characteristic throughout the population ? e-ample
 in"luen+a
Hierarchical *he spread "rom authority or poer to other people ? e-ample ? political leaders
or hip hop music
$timulus ? the spread o" an underlying principal though the characteristic itsel" might di""use ?
e-ample ? principals "rom Apple computer though the company di""used4

Globalization of Culture:
$lobali+ation due to interchanging belie"s and customs

Globalization of Economy:
$lobali+ation due to business

Environmental #eterminism:
 Physical environment dictates the social environment

Possibilism:
Humans have the ability to ad/ust to the environment

Population:

#emography:
*he study o" human populations

,ver Population:
*he de"inition o" over population is having too many people and to little resources

Carrying Capacity:
*he largest number o" people that the environment o" a particular area can support

#oubling Time:
*he time it ta2es "or a population to double

Four most over populate' regions-$parsely populate' regions in the )orl' .,ver populate'/:
East Asia
South Asia
Southeast Asia
)estern Europe

East Asia:
7ne "i"th o" the orld0s people live in east Asia4
*he region borders the paci"ic ocean4
East Asia includes: eastern China, Bapan, the orean Peninsula, and *aian4

$outh Asia:
Another one "i"th o" the orld0s population lives in south Asia4
South Asia includes: !ndia, Pa2istan, angladesh, and Sri Lan2a4
$outheast Asia:
*he orld0s third largest population cluster is in southeast Asia4
A hal" billion people live in southeast Asia4
*he islands are: !ndonesia &Bava, Sumatra, orneo', Papua 3e $uinea, and the Philippines4

+estern Europe:
)orld0s "ourth largest population cluster4
Contains one ninth o" the orld0s population4
#ost o" Europe0s people live in cities4
*his region ranges "rom #onaco to Russia4

$parsely Populate' egions:


#ry %an's0
)hen an area is dry "or "arming not many people ant to live there4
*hese areas cover about =F o" the earth0s land sur"ace4
*he largest desert region is the Sahara4
1eserts lac2 su""icient ater to gro crops to "eed many people4
+et %an's0
)et lands are lands that receive high levels o" precipitation4
*hese areas are un"avorable "or human li"e4
A combination o" rain and heat depletes nutrients "rom the soil hich prevents groing crops4
Col' lan's0
Cold lands are areas that are covered ith ice or have permanently "ro+en ground4
*hese regions have less precipitation than some deserts4
*hese polar regions are unsuitable "or crops and animals4
High lan's0
%e people live at high elevations4
*he highest mountains in the orld are steep, snoy, and sparsely settled4
Some people pre"er to live at higher elevations i" the temperature and precipitation are uncom"ortable at
loer elevations4

Population "ncrease:
#oubling time0 *he number o" years needed to double a population4
Total fertility rate0  *he average number o" children a oman ill have during her childbearing years4
"nfant mortality rate0 *he annual number o" deaths o" in"ants under one year old4
%ife e*pectancy measures the number o" years a neborn ill be e-pected to live4

*he current estimated orld human population is 8,;G9,56G,;854 *his "igure is e-tremely precise,
hoever, since there is no complete database on the orlds population, and humans are constantly being
 born &at the rate o" about ; per second' and dying4 Hoever, it is clear that the orlds population
continues to gro, in other ords, more people are being born than people dying4

Causes of Population "ncrease:

Cru'e birth rate .C1/0 *he total number o" live births in a year "or every 5, people alive in the
society4
E-: a &CR' o" = means that "or every 5, people in a country, = babies are born over a one year
 period4
Cru'e 'eath rate .C#/0 total number o" deaths in a year "or every 5, people alive in the society4
*he annual number o" deaths per 5, population4

Natural increase rate .N"/0 the percentage by hich a population gros in a year4 *o compute you
subtract CR "rom C1R4

Natural "ncrease:
 3atural means a country0s groth rate e-cludes migration4
About < million people are added to the orld0s population each year4
*he historic high as in 59<9 ith <G million4
*he number o" people added each year has dropped sloer than the 3!R because the population base is
much higher no than in the past4

Fertility:
*%R total "ertility rate the average number o" children a oman ill have throughout her childbearing
years &56>9'4

!ortality:
*o use"ul measures o" mortality in addition to the crude death rate already discussed are the in"ant
mortality rate and li"e e-pectancy4
"nfant mortality rate ."!/0the annual number o" deaths o" in"ants under one year o" age, compared
ith total live births4
%ife e*pectancy0 the average number o" years a neborn in"ant can e-pect to live at current mortality
levels4

Population Pyrami':
A bar graph representing the distribution o" population by age and se-
Population pyramids can be used to demonstrate the demographics o" a certain area, and can be used as an
indication o" the development o" a certain area

The #emographic Transition:


*he asics
*here are "our stages to the demographic transition:
Stage 5: Lo $roth
Stage =: High $roth
Stage ;: #oderate $roth
Stage >: Lo $roth
All countries are in one stage or another o" the demographic transition4
7nce a country has entered a stage, it cannot go bac2 don to a previous stage4

$tage 2:
 3o countries are still in stage 54
#ost o" humanity0s severalhundredthousandyear occupancy o" Earth as characteri+ed by stage 5 o"
the demographic transition4
Crude birth and death rates vary yearly but over time they ere comparable4
 3ational increase rate as essentially +ero, and orld population as constant at about hal" a million4
1uring this period primary "ood relied on hunting and gathering4
As "ood became easier to obtain, population increased, but hen "ood became more di""icult to obtain, the
 population decreased4
About < C the population became to gro by several thousand per year4
eteen < C and 5G6 A1 the population "rom 6 million to about < million4 *his as caused by
the agricultural revolution4
*his as the "irst time humans domesticated plants and animals4

$tage 3:
%rom about 5, years a"ter the agricultural revolution, orld population gre at a modest pace4
Around 5G6 A1 the population began to gro ten times as "ast4
*he natural increase rate rose "rom 46 to 46
Some demographers divide stage = o" the demographic transition into = parts4
*he "irst part is the accelerating population groth4
1uring the second part the population begins to slo, although birth and death rates remain very
separated4
*he sudden population boom as caused by the industrial revolution hich began in England in the late
5<th century4
*he industrial revolution brought about rapid improvements in industrial technology4 *his brought about
a lot o" ealth hich as used to ma2e communities healthier4
 3e machines helped "armers increase agricultural production4 *he improved agricultural e""iciency
alloed more people to or2 in "actories4 *his caused industriali+ation in communities4
European and 3orth American countries entered stage = around 5G6 or 5<4 Countries elsehere didn0t
enter stage = till much later4 #any A"rican countries didn0t enter stage = until the late 5960s due to the
medical revolution4
*he naturalI increase rate "or stage = countries as about 54G at the time4
*he population increased by about < million in = compared to < million in 594
Several medical advances ere made during this time as ell4

$tage 4:
A country enters stage ; hen the crude birth rate begins to drop sharply4 *he death rate continues to "all
 but not as much as in stage =4
 3atural increase is more moderate than stage = as ell4
European and 3orth American nations entered stage ; in the early tentieth century4 Latin American and
Asian countries have entered rather recently, hile most A"rican countries still have not entered stage ;4
*he decrease in death rates in stage = is caused by technological advances, hile the decrease in births
during stage ; is a result o" changes in social customs4
People in stage ; countries are more li2ely to live in cities than in rural areas4

$tage 5:
A country achieves stage > hen birth and death rates are nearly e.ual and natural increase is almost +ero4
*his is 2non as JP$ or Jero Population $roth4 *his term is usually applied to stage > countries4
Social changes again dictate the change beteen stages ; and >4 Here the primary "actor is omen ho
enter the labor "orce4
Li"e style changes also tend to lead to smaller "amilies in stage >, and people ith more birth control
options tend to use them more in stage > countries4
1ue to discrepancies, JP$ is not alays accurate4 Scientists use the more accurate term *%R or *otal
%ertility Rate4 *ypically a *PR o" =45 is e.ual to the JP$4

*here are > stages in the 1emographic *ransition4


Lo groth, high groth, moderate groth, and lo groth4
)hen a country enters stage >, it has in a sense completed a cycle4 !t began ith lo natural increase in
stage 5, in stage = there is a huge increase in technology and population4 1uring stage ; it begins to slo
don, though advances continue4 !n stage > the groth is minimal4 *he only di""erence is that at the end
o" stage > the country has a vast amount o" technology and the population is much higher4
$tage 6:
Currently no Stage 6
E-perts suggesting that there ill be in the near "uture
Characteri+ed by a negative population groth
*his ill "irst occur in )estern Europe and ma2e its ay through most #1Cs4

!althus Theory:
States that the orld ill get iped out by over population, starvation, and disease &mainly the ratio o"
 people to "ood'4
*homas #althus stated this in 5G9< in his boo2 An Essay on the Principle o" Population4
*oday: 5 person, 5 unit o" "ood
=6 years "rom no: = people, = units o" "ood
6 years "rom no: > persons, ; units o" "ood
G6 years "rom no: < people, > units o" "ood
5 years "rom no: 58 people, 6 units o" "ood

ac2 in the 5G K 5<s, they didn0t have the same "arming technology and methods e have today4
*here asn0t as much medicine to cure diseases4
Lester ron a Stan"ord University biologist, said #althus made critical points but missed a couple
important points, gains in land productivity, and the pre"erence "or eating higher up the "ood chainD4

E-ample
!n SubSaharan A"rica, drought, poverty, and disease &mainly A!1S' are reducing li"e e-pectancy4
*he population is bigger than the amount o" arable landhich causes more than hal" o" the children to be
undernourished or malnourished4

Neo0!althusians:
Study #althus0 theory
*hey point out that the amount o" "ar mland is decreasing hile the population is increasing4
$lobal )arming could inter"ere ith "ood production4
oth e-tensi"ication and intensi"ication o" agriculture ill lead to land degradation4

!althus7s Critics:
#any geographers believe #althus0 theory is very pessimistic because they based on a belie" that the
orld0s supply is "i-ed not e-panding4
#althus did not "oresee the advancement in technology that ould help man2ind survive4

Census0 A complete enumeration o" a population4

Cru'e 1irth ate0 *he total number o" live births in a year "or every 5, people alive in the society4

Cru'e #eath ate0 *he total number o" deaths in a year "ro every 5, people alive in the society4

#emographic Transition0 *he process o" change in a society0s population "rom a condition o" high
crude birth and death rates and lo rate o" natural increase to a condition o" lo crude birth and death
rates, lo rate o" natural increase, and a higher total population4

#emography0 *he scienti"ic study o" population characteristics4


#epen'ency atio0 *he number o" people under the age o" 56 and over age 8>, compared to the number
o" people active in the labor "orce4

#oubling Time0 *he number o" years needed to double a population, assuming a constant rate o" natural
increase4

Epi'emiologic Transition0 1istinctive causes o" death in each stage o" the demographic transition4

Epi'emiology0 ranch o" medical science concerned ith the incidence, distribution, and control o"
diseases that a""ect large numbers o" people4

Ecumene0 *he portion o" Earth0s sur"ace occupied by permanent human settlement4

"n'ustrial evolution0 A series o" improvements in industrial technology that trans"ormed the process o"
manu"acturing goods4

"nfant !ortality ate0 *he total number o" deaths in a year among in"ants under one year old "or every
5, live births in a society4

%ife E*pectancy0 *he average number o" years an individual can be e-pected to live, given current
social, economic, and medical conditions4 Li"e e-pectancy at birth is the average number o" years a
neborn in"ant can e-pect to live4

!e'ical evolution0 #edical technology invented in Europe and 3orth America that is di""used to the
 poorer countries o" Latin America, Asia, and A"rica4 !mproved medical practices have eliminated many o"
the traditional causes o" death in poorer countries and enabled more people to live longer and healthier
lives4

Natural "ncrease ate0 *he percentage groth o" a population in a year, computed as the crude birth
rate minus the crude death rate4

,verpopulation0 *he number o" people in an area e-ceeds the capacity o" the environment to support
li"e at a decent standard o" living4

Pan'emic0 1isease that occurs over a ide geographic area and a""ects a very high proportion o" the
 population4

Population Pyrami'0 A bar graph representing the distribution o" population by age and se-4

$e* atio0 *he number o" males per 5 "emales in the population4

Total Fertility ate0 *he average number o" children a oman ill have throughout her childbearing
years4

(ero Population Gro)th0 A decline o" the total "ertility rate to the point here the natural increase rate
e.uals +ero4

!igration:

!igration:
%orm o" relocation di""usion involving permanent move to a ne location
!obility:
All types o" movement "rom one location to another 

Circulation:
Constant, short term, repetitive movements by an individual

Emigration:
#igration aay "rom country

"mmigration:
#igration into a country

Net !igration:
*he di""erence beteen the number o" immigrants and the number o" emigrants
 3et !n#igration K 3et 7ut#igration

Counterurbanization:
 3et migration "rom urban to rural areas in #1Cs

easons For !igration:


Usually people migrate "or economic reasons
Although not as "re.uently, cultural and environmental reasons also induce migration
Push "actor: hen people are "orced out o" an area
E-: Hurricane atrina destroyed many peoples0 houses, so they ere "orced to move somehere else4
Pull "actor: hen people desire to move into a ne location
E-: etter /ob opening in a ne area, a good place to retire4 Usually promises a better situation than the
 present one4

Economic Push an' Pull Factors:


Pull People emigrate to places ith better /ob opportunities4 *hey ill also emigrate because o" better
natural resources4 #etal and coal deposits might attract miners4 A brand ne industry or store could
attract technicians, scientists, engineers, or other or2ers4
Push )hen a industry goes ban2rupt, or2ers ill lose their /obs and might be "orced to move to a
di""erent area because o" a /ob opportunity4

Environmental Push an' Pull Factors:


Pull people are attracted to areas ith arm climates, mountainsides, and seasides4
Push certain physical conditions cause people to move to di""erent areas li2e too much or too little ater
in an area can "orce people to move4 Also an area that is storm prone can "orce people to migrate4

Cultural Push an' Pull Factors:


*he = main push "actors are slavery and political instability4 #illions o" people ere captured and
shipped to many di""erent countries as prisoners or slaves4
People called re"ugees are "orced to migrate "orm their countries because o" "ear o" persecution because
o" their race, nationality, religion, or political opinion4
Pull people migrate "or especially the lure o" "reedom4 People are attracted to democratic countries that
encourage individual choice in education, career, and a place o" residence4

1rain #rain:
Largescale emigration by talented people
"nternational 8 "nternal !igration:
!nternational #igration *he permanent movement "rom one country to another4
!nternal #igration Permanent movement ithin a particular country4

E-amples 
!nternational #igration #oving to Russia "rom the United States, or "rom A"rica to Australia4
!nternal #igration #oving to Ar2ansas "rom #ichigan, or "rom $eorgia to Cali"ornia4
!nternal #igration People living in !ndia must migrate to a di""erent part o" !ndia to escape the "looding
that occurs near them4
!nternational #igration Some Beish people ere able to escape the 3a+is by migrating to the di""erent
countries aay "rom them4

"nternal !igration:
Permanent movement ithin a country4
1ivided into to types
"nterregional migration movement "rom one region o" a country to another4
Rust elt and Sun elt
"ntraregional migration  movement ithin on region

"nternational !igration:
1ivided into to types
9oluntary migration implies that migrant has chosen to move "or economic improvements4
Force' migration the migrant has been compelled to move by cultural "actors4
Economic push and pull "actors usually induce voluntary migration4 )hereas cultural "actors usually
compel "orced migration

Net !igration:
*he di""erence beteen the level o" immigration and the level o" emigration4
!n#igration: synonym o" immigration, moving into a country
7utmigration: leaving a country
Countries ith net outmigrations include Asia, A"rica, and Latin America4
Countries ith net inmigrations include 3orth America, Europe, and 7ceania4

Guest +orers:
)or2ers ho migrate to the #1Cs o" 3orthern and )estern Europe, usually "rom Southern and Eastern
Europe or "rom 3orth A"rica, in search o" higherpaying /obs

Temporary !igration for +or:


54 $uest )or2ers ? Citi+ens o" poor communities ho obtain /obs in )estern Europe and the #iddle
East4
=4 *ime ? Contract )or2ers Recruited "or a "i-ed period o" time to or2 in mines or on plantations4
 European $uest )or2ers
 !n Europe, these or2ers are protected by #inimum )age las and union contracts
 About G, o" these or2ers enter Europe legally
 6, or2ers enter illegally
 *he United ingdom restricts the ability "or "oreigners to get or2 permits4
 !" you are alloed to or2 in another country there is usually a time limit "or ho long you can
stay "or your desired assignment4
1istinguishing eteen Economic #igrants and Re"ugees
 (ery di""icult to distinguish beteen those see2ing economic opportunities and re"ugees "leeing
"rom persecution etc4
 !n )estern Europe, Canada, and the US economic migrants are not usually admitted hoever
re"ugees receive priority in admission4
!ntervening 7bstacles
 !mmigrants may not alays get to there destination because o" an environmental or cultural
obstacle4
 Also, transportation is a problem ith immigration4 !t is di""icult to meet all the re.uirements to
 be able to travel in any ay to a ne country4
 7ceans and la2es are an obstacle in migration because people are unable to cross the bodies o"
ater4
 #otor vehicles and airplanes are the easiest ay to go "rom one place to another, but it is also the
hardest re.uirements to meet hen traveling4
Countries Attitudes *oards 3e !mmigrants
 #a2ing it to the desired country isn0t alays the end o" the complications, once the immigrants
reach the country, the citi+ens may disli2e the ne people because o" cultural di""erences4
 *he guest or2ers are not alays e-cepted and can be treated un"airly4

9ietnam:
*he long (ietnam )ar ended in 59G6 hen Communistcontrolled 3orth (ietnam captured South
(ietnam0s capital city o" Saigon4 *he US evacuated "rom Saigon several thousand people ho had been
closely identi"ied ith the American position during the ar and ho ere there"ore vulnerable to
 persecution a"ter the Communist victory4 A second surge o" (ietnamese boat people began in the late
59<s4 *heir most popular destinations ere #alaysia, Hong ong, and *hailand4 <, (ietnamese
have reached the US since the end o" the (ietnam )ar, another 5 million in other countries4

Pop 8 Fol Culture:

Popular Culture:
Culture "ound in a large, heterogeneous society that shares certain habits despite di""erences in other
 personal characteristics

Fol Culture:
Culture traditionally practiced by a small, homogeneous, rural group living in relative isolation "rom other
groups

,rigin of Fol Cultures:


%ol2 customs o"ten have anonymous hearths, originating "rom anonymous sources, at un2non dates,
through unidenti"ied originators

,rigin of Pop Cultures:


Popular culture is most o"ten a product o" the economically more developed countries, especially in 3orth
America, )estern Europe, and Bapan

Transition from Fol to Pop Culture:


#ost o" the orld turns "rom "ol2 to pop culture4
%ol2 culture di""uses sloly to other locations through the process o" migration4 Popular culture di""uses
rapidly across Earth to locations ith a variety o" physical conditions4

Taboo:
A restriction on behavior imposed by social custom
#iffusion Associate' +ith Pop Culture:
Rapid di""usion depends on a group o" people having a su""iciently high level o" economic development
to ac.uire the material possessions associated ith popular culture

%anguage:

%anguage Family:
A collection o" languages related to each other through a common ancestor long be"ore recorded history

%anguage 1ranch:
A collection o" languages related through a common ancestor that e-isted several thousand years ago4
1i""erences are not as e-tensive or as old as ith language "amilies, and archaeological evidence can
con"irm that the branches derived "rom the same "amily4

%anguage Group:
A collection o" languages ithin a branch that share a common origin in the relatively recent past and
display relatively "e di""erences in grammar and vocabulary

#ialect:
A regional variety o" a language distinguished by vocabulary, spelling, and pronunciation

,l' English $peaers:


)est $ermanic invaders "rom Butland &1enmar2' 2non as the Anglos, Sa-ons, and Butes began
 populating the ritish !sles in the 6 th and 8th centuries A1
Pushed the native Celtic spea2ing people into Scotland, )hales, and !reland

Creolize' %anguage:
A language that results "rom the mi-ing o" a coloni+er0s language ith the indigenous language o" the
 people being dominated

%rench Creole in Haiti


Papiamento &Creoli+ed Spanish' in 3etherlands Antilles &)est !ndies'
Portuguese Creole in the Cape (erde !slands o"" the A"rican Coast

"n'o0European %anguage Family:


*he orld0s most e-tensively spo2en language "amily by a ide margin
 3early ; billion people spea2 an !ndoEuropean language as their "irst language
Eight ranches:
!ndo!ranian
Romance
$ermanic
altoSlavic
Albanian
Armenian
$ree2 
Celtic

2; most $poen %anguages in the +orl':


Position Language %amily Script Used Spea2ers )here
&#illions' Spo2en
&#a/or'
5 #andarin Sino*ibetan Chinese <<6 China,
Characters #alaysia,
*aian
= English !ndo Latin ;;= USA, U,
European Australia,
Canada, 3e
Jealand
; Spanish !ndo Latin ;== South
European America,
Central
America,
Spain
> Arabic A"roAsiatic Arabic =;6 #E, Arabia,
 3orth A"rica
6 engali !ndo engali 5<9 angladesh,
European Eastern !ndia
8 Hindi !ndo 1evanagari 5<= 3orth and
European Central !ndia
G Portuguese !ndo Latin 5G ra+il,
European Portugal,
Southern
A"rica
< Russian !ndo Cyrillic 5G Russia,
European Central Asia
9 Bapanese Altaic Chinese 5=6 Bapan
Characters
and =
Bapanese
Alphabets
5 $erman !ndo Latin 9< $ermany,
European Austria,
Central
Europe

"'eograms:
*he system o" riting used in China and other East Asian countries in hich each symbol represents an
idea or a concept rather than a speci"ic sound, as is the case ith letters in English

eligion:

eligion< Culture< an' Physical Environment


People care deeply about their religion and dra "rom religion their core values and belie"s, an essential
element o" the de"inition o" culture4 Religious values are important in understanding not only ho people
identi"y themselves, as as the case ith language, but also the meaning"ul ays that they organi+e the
landscape4 Li2e language, migrants ta2e their religion ith them to ne locations, but although migrants
typically learn the language o" the ne location, they retain their religion4

eligion Hierarchy:
A hierarchical religion has a ellde"ined geographic structure and organi+es territory into local
administrative units &has ran2ingsD amongst the religion'4 A good e-ample is Roman Catholicism &Pope,
Cardinals, ishops'4

=niversalizing eligion:
A religion that attempts to appeal to all people, not /ust those living in a particular location
; iggs ? Christianity, !slam, uddhism
Christianity:
7rigin ? !srael
= billion adherents
non as Christians
#ainly in )estern Hemisphere and Europe
%oundation based on the *en Commandments
#a/or branches Catholics &6F'4 Protestants &=6F', Eastern 7rthodo- &5F'
"slam:
7rigin ? Saudi Arabia
54; billion adherents
non as #uslims
%oundation based on the %ive Pillars
#a/or branches Sunnis &<;F', Shiites &58F', urds &5F'
1u''hism:
7rigin ? 3E !ndia@3epal
;G million adherents
non as uddhists
#ainly in China and SE Asia
%oundation based on the %our 3oble *ruths
#a/or branches #ahayanists &68F', *heravadistis &;<F', *antrayanists &<F'
1i""erent "rom Christianity and !slam you may also participate in another e-isting religion

Ethnic eligion:
A religion ith a relatively concentrated spatial distribution hose principles are li2ely to be based on the
 physical characteristics o" the particular location in hich its adherents are concentrated
= iggs ? Hinduism and Budaism
Hin'uism:
7rigin ? !ndia@Pa2istan
< million adherents &; rd largest overall'
9GF live in !ndia &<F o" !ndia0s pop4'
elieve in several gods ? rahma being the main one
%ollo the Caste System
elieve in arma and Reincarnation
>u'aism:
7rigin ? !srael
5> million adherents
#ainly clustered in !srael and the US
Also prevent in "ormer USSR &Russia, U2raine, elarus, Lithuania'
Have similar roots as Christianity and !slam

"relan':
*he most troublesome religious boundary in )estern Europe lies on !reland4 #ost o" !reland is Roman
Catholic, but 3orthern !reland is 6<F Protestant and >=F Roman Catholic4
"srael-Palestine:
A"ter the 59G; ar, the Palestinians emerged as !srael0s principle opponent4 !sraelis have no intention o"
giving up control o" the 7ld City o" Berusalem, and Palestinians have no intention o" giving up their claim
to it4

eligious Architectures:
Christians ? Churches
#uslims ? #os.ues
Hindus ? *emples
uddhism ? Pagodas
Bes ? Synagogues

eligion 9ersus Communism:


7rgani+ed religion as challenged in the = th century by the rise o" communism in Eastern Europe and
Asia4 *he three religions most a""ected ere Eastern 7rthodo- Christianity, !slam, and uddhism4

Ethnicity:

=$ #istribution of Ethnicities:
A"rican American ? &5;F' Southeast
Hispanic American ? &5;F' Southest
Asian American ? &>F' )est
American !ndian &3ative American' ? &5F' Southest and Plains States

Clustering of Ethnicities:
)ithin a country, clustering o" ethnicities can occur on to scales4 Ethnic groups may live in particular
regions o" the country, and they may live in particular neighborhoods ithin cities4

$harecropper:
A person ho or2s "ields rented "rom a landoner and pays the rent and repays loans by turning over to
the landoner a share o" the crops

Ghettos:
)hen the A"rican American immigrants reached the big cities, they clustered in the one or to
neighborhoods here the small numbers ho had arrived in the 59 th century ere already living4 *hese
areas became 2non as ghettos4 *he ghettos today have been through e-pansion4

Ethnicity an' ace:


Race is biological4 An e-ample ould be s2in color, but its not /ust s2in color4 Ethnicity is the cultural
aspect@category4 An e-ample ould be a hearth4

$eparate 1ut E?ual #octrine:


*he Separate ut E.ual 1octrine occurred in 5<984 !t alloed segregation o" lac2s, Bes, and Roman
Catholics4

@+hite Flight:
)hite %lightD comes "rom the ron vs4 ron o" Education doctrine in 596>, hich eliminated
segregation4 M)hite %lightD is hen hites le"t their homes to here they 2ne ould be a dominate
hite area because they ere scared o" the blac2s4

$outh Africa Aparthei':


Apartheid is the physical separation o" di""erent races into di""erent areas4 *he hitedominated
government o" South A"rica repealed the apartheid las in 59954 !n 599>, 3elson #andela became
 president o" South A"rica4
South A"rica the country
lac2 G8F
)hite 5;F
Asian ;F
#i-ed 5;F
Each ith di""erent legal status

Nationality-Nationalism:
 3ationality is identity ith a group o" people that share legal attachment and personal allegiance to a
 particular place as a result o" being born there4
 3ationalism is loyalty and devotion to a particular nationality4

Nation0$tate:
A state hose territory corresponds to that occupied by a particular ethnicity that has been trans"ormed
into a nationality
Have by "ar one dominate ethnicity@nationality ? 5 country, 5 ethnicity

$elf #eterminism .$eparatism/:


*he concept that ethnicities have the right to govern themselves
Nuebec &Province in Canada' ? early 59<s strong %rench
Australia
!srael@Palestine
 3ative Americans

!ulti0Ethnic $tates-!ulti0National $tates:


#ultiEthnic state ? state that contains more than one ethnicity
1on0t necessarily try to appeal to every ethnicity ? sometimes happy, sometimes not
elgium O &1utch O %lemish O 3orth  %rench O )alloons O South'

#ulti3ational state ? state that contains to or more ethnic groups ith traditions o" sel"determination
that agree to coe-ist peace"ully by recogni+ing each other as distinct nationalities
*ry to appeal to every nationality@ethnicity &by giving them /obs' ? get along /ust "ine
United ingdom O England  Scotland  )hales  34 !reland

1loc 1usting:
Real estate agents telling people that blac2s or !ndians ere going to move ne-t door to them so they
could buy the peoples0 house "or very cheap and sell it "or double4

1alanization:
States@countries brea2ing don through ethnic con"lict ? constant con"lict

1alanize':
A geographic area that can0t be stable@happy because there are too many ethnicities and too much ugly
history beteen them4
Servia
o+nia
al2an Peninsula
Political Geography:

Colonies< Early European $tates< an' Ancient an' !e'ieval $tates:


A colony is a territory that is legally tied to a sovereign state rather than being completely independent4

*he modern movement to divide the orld into states originated in Europe4
Political unity in the ancient orld reached its height ith the establishment o" the Roman Empire, hich
controlled most o" Europe, 3orth A"rica, and Southest Asia4 *he European portion o" the Roman
Empire as "ragmented into a large number o" estates oned by competing 2ings, du2es, barons, and
other nobles4

*he development o" states can be traced to the ancient #iddle East, in an area 2non as the %ertile
crescent4 *he "irst states to evolve in #esopotamia ere 2non as citystates ? sovereign states that
comprise a ton and the surrounding countryside4

!o'ern Colonies:
*oday only a hand"ul o" colonies remain4 3early all are islands in the Paci"ic 7cean or Caribbean Sea

$tate $hapes:
Compact State a state in hich the distance "orm the center to any boundary does not vary signi"icantly
%ragmented State a state that includes several discontinuous pieces o" territory
Elongated State a state ith a long, narro shape
Prorupted State an otherise compact state ith a large pro/ecting e-tension
Per"orated State a state that completely surrounds another one

1oun'aries:
Can see on a map:
Physical natural boundaries &oceans, rivers, mountains'
$eometric main o""icial lines

Can0t see on a map:


Culture
Religious
Language

Fe'eral $tate:
An internal organi+ation o" a state that allocates most poers to units o" local government &have a say so'
Centripetal "orces
E-ample US

=nitary $tate:
An internal organi+ation o" a state that places most poer in the hands o" central government o""icials
&not necessarily bad, but no say so only government'
Centri"ugal "orces
E-ample U 

=nite' Nations:
A cooperation under the political category
1eals ith military, economic, agricultural, etc4

European =nion:
A cooperation under the economic category
Promotes development through economic cooperation &"ree trade, Euro, subsidi+ing'

$overeignty:
Ability o" a state to govern its territory "ree "rom control o" its internal a""airs by other states

#evelopment:

Gross #omestic Pro'uct .G#P/:


*he value o" the total output o" goods and services produced in a country in a given time period &normally
one year'

Gross National Pro'uct .GNP/:


Similar to $1P, e-cept that it includes income that people earn abroad, such as a Canadian or2ing in the
United States

Human #evelopment "n'e* .H#"/:


!ndicator o" level o" development "or each country, constructed by United 3ations, combining income,
literacy, education, and li"e e-pectancy

>ob Types .$ectors/:


Primary e-tracting "rom Earth &agriculture, mining, "ishing, "orestry'
Secondary manu"acturing ra materials ta2ing something "rom the land and ma2ing it a product
*ertiary Services, an2ing, Retailing, Education

osto)7s $tages of #evelopment !o'el:


Rosto, in the 5960s, made a 6 stage model o" the international trade development approach4

54 *he traditional society: the country has not yet started process o" development
=4 *he preconditions "or ta2eo"": the country initiates innovative economic activities
;4 *he ta2eo"": there is rapid groth in economic activities
>4 *he drive to maturity: modern technology di""uses
64 *he age o" mass consumption: the economy shi"ts to consumer goods

*he model assumes that L1Cs ill achieve development by moving to a higher stage in the model4

The Four #ragons:


Some o" the "irst countries to adopt the international trade alternatives ere South orea, Singapore,
*aian, and the thenritish colony o" Hong ong &2non as the "our dragons'4 *hey promoted
development by concentrating on producing manu"actured goods, especially clothing and electronics4

$elf $ufficiency:
*he more popular development alternative "or L1Cs "or most o" the = th century
!ncomes in the countryside 2eep up ith those in the city
Reducing poverty is more important than creating ealthy consumers
%ragile businesses can be independent and protected "rom businesses and governments in #1Cs
Set barriers limiting goods being imported

"nternational Tra'e:
A country can develop economically by concentrating scarce resources on e-pansion o" its distinctive
local industries
Transnational Corporation:
A company that conducts research, operates "actories, and sells products in many countries, not /ust
here its head.uarters or shareholders are located

Centripetal Force:
An attitude that tends to uni"y people and enhance support "or a state

Centrifugal Force:
An attitude that tends to brea2 or ma2e people "all apart "ight

Agriculture:

AgricultureO"arminglivestoc2 

e"ore 5=, C hunting and gathering no agriculture

Agricultural Hearths:

%ertile Crescent historical region atered by the 3ile, Bordan, Euphrates, and *igris Rivers4 !t is here
that agricultural is thought to be "irst developed4 )ild heat and barley gre in abundance and tribes o"
nomad hunters and herders settled don along the ban2s o" the rivers and became the orlds "irst
"armers4 As population increased irrigation as developed4 Around 6, 4C4 the "irst cities ere
constructed in the southern part o" the crescent valley, near the Persian $ul", by people ho became
2non as the Sumerians4

Ethiopia &horn o" A"rica' e"ore embracing "ull scale "arming Ethiopians ere mainly hunters and
gatherers4 *hey began to cultivate crops hich eventually led to "arming4 )hen "arming became more
dependable and common irrigation as e-ploited4

 3ile (alley the 3ile (alley civili+ation developed along the ban2s o" the 3ile River in Egypt4 !ts long
narro "loodplain provided ideal conditions "or settlement and development o" stable communities4 *he
annual "looding o" the river &hich as vieed as a gi"t "rom the gods' deposited nutrient rich silt over
the land4 *he silt made the soil e-cellent "or groing heat "la- and other crops4 !t is believed that many
nomadic hunters settled the land4 Around 66C hunting as mostly replaced by domesticating animals
such as cattle, sheep, pigs, and goats, as ell as groing cereal grains4

China y 6 C there ere many agricultural communities spread throughout hat is no China4
*here ere many villages along rivers such as the $reat Qello River &Huang He'4 *hey hunted deer
and other game, "ished, and gathered "ood4 *hey also raised domestic dogs, pigs, and chic2ens4 )ith the
"looding o" rivers irrigation as an important thing to master4 *he Chinese also "armed rice4

Southeast Asia Prior to agriculture, hunting and gathering su""iced to proved "ood in Southeast Asia4 !t
as here that the chic2en and pig ere domesticated and rice as "armed4 Agricultural technology as
e-ploited hen population increased to the point that systematic intensive "arming as necessary "or
survival4 River plains and delta regions helped the process o" agriculture and trade4

#esoamerica %rom < ? = the hunter gatherers in the region began to cultivate ild plants4 *his
 probably began so they ould have "ood to rely on i" hunting became bad or in the event o" a drought4 As
time ent on the cultivated plant "oods became increasingly important to the people o" #esoamerica4
*he plants they gre ere more reliable4 #esoamerica eventually ent into a subsistence pattern based
on the cultivation o" plants4 Probably the most important #esoamerican agriculture is mai+e4

$ubsistence Agriculture:
Sel"su""icient, small in scale, lo technology,
%ood production "or local consumption not "or trade or sale
Some are con"ined to small "ields very li2ely they do not on the soil they till
Small "ieldsshare cropper, lo end money pull "or agriculture
Can promote cohesiveness ithin society, share land, "ood surpluses, personal ealth is restricted
Cultivators are poor but "ree

Subsistence "arming is groing enough "ood "or one person and their "amily4 3ot to ma2e a pro"it or sell4
Lots o" subsistence "arms gro things li2e tomatoes, corn, potatoes, cucumbers, and spinach4 Some
subsistence "arms also have livestoc24

Plantation Farming:
Regional, bigger scale, but not yet commercial

Plantation "arming is on a bigger scale than subsistence, but not yet commercial4 *hese "arms are "or
 pro"it4 #any plantations "arm rubber, pine, spruce, and eucalyptus trees, oil palm, cotton, tea, and
tobacco4 Some are orchards, in hich they ould gro "ruit, &that gro on trees'4

$hifting Cultivation:
A "orm o" subsistence agriculture in hich people shi"t activity "rom one "ield to anotherI each "ield is
used "or crops "or a relatively "e years and le"t "allo "or a relatively long period
Cultivation here tropical "orests are removed by cutting and burning, ash contributes to soil "ertility
Clearings are usually abandoned a"ter a "e years "or nely cleared land &56= million people'

"ntensive $ubsistence Agriculture:


A "orm o" subsistence agriculture in hich "armers must e-pend a relatively large amount o" e""ort to
 produce the ma-imum "easible yield "rom a parcel o" land

Pastoral Noma'ism:
A "orm o" subsistence agriculture based on herding domesticated animals
*hey live in dry climates

anching:
A "orm o" commercial agriculture in hich livestoc2 gra+e over an e-tensive area
Semiarid or arid land
#1C0s

Transhumance:
*he seasonal migration o" livestoc2 beteen mountains and loland pastures

Commercial Farming:
A2a agribusiness a system o" economic and political relationships that organi+e "ood production "rom the
development o" the genetic ma2eup o" the seeds to the retailing and consumption o" the agricultural
 product not /ust "arming also development, harvesting, canning, and selling o" crops is an e-ample o" a
company that incorporates primary, secondary, and tertiary /ob sectors
#ass pro"it, almost all diary products are "rom commercial "arming
E-4 #ay"ield
*hese "arms are made "or mass pro"it4 *hey use genetically modi"ied plants, and sometimes animals4
*hey gro the orlds largest crops li2e heat, rice , corn, and pretty much everything you "ind in
roger4 *hey also raise animals li2e cos, pigs, and chic2ens4 Almost all dairy products come "rom a
commercial "arm4

The 9on Thunen !o'el:


Agricultural land use
5<=8
*he blac2 dot represents a city
5 &hite' dairy and mar2et gardening
= &green' "orest "or "uel
; &yello' grains and "ield crops
> &red' ranching
1ar2 greenOilderness here agriculture is not pro"itable

Crop otation:
*he practice o" rotating use o" di""erent "ields "rom crop to crop each year, to avoid e-hausting the soil

$lash0an'0burn Agriculture:
Another name "or shi"ting cultivation, so named because "ields are cleared by slashing the vegetation and
 burning the debris

#esertification:
1egradation o" land, especially in semiarid areas, primarily because o" human actions li2e e-cessive crop
 planting, animal gra+ing, and tree cutting

2st Agricultural evolution:
5=, yrs ago, 3eolithic era
%ertile Crescent, China, 3orth A"rica, Southeast Asia, and Latin America
Accompanied by a modest population e-plosion
1omestication animals &about > species today' occurred a"ter people became more sedentary

3n' Agricultural evolution:
5<G5595>
Resulted "rom the !ndustrial Revolution produced ne technology that helped ith the agricultural
 progress a lot
E-4 tractor, cotton gin

4r' Agricultural evolution:
A2a $reen Revolution bene"iting L1C0s by introduction and production o" "ertili+ers and pesticides into
L1C0s
598 to present
ased on higher yielding strains using genetic engineering

#ouble Cropping:
Harvesting tice a year "rom the same "ield

"n'ustry:

The "n'ustrial evolution:


Started in the north o" the U around 5G6
A series o" improvements in industrial technology that trans"ormed the process o" manu"acturing goods
*rans"ormed ho goods are produced "or society and the ay people obtain "ood, clothing, and shelter 

+orl'7s %argest "n'ustrial Pro'uction egions:


Appro-imately  o" the orld0s industrial production is concentrated in "our regions: eastern 3orth
America, northestern Europe, Eastern Europe, and East Asia4

"n'ustries in =$:
 3e England, #iddle Atlantic, #oha2 (alley, PittsburghLa2e Erie, )estern $reat La2es

1ul0e'ucing "n'ustry:
An industry in hich the "inal product eighs less or comprises a loer volume than the inputs
E-ample Copper concentration &pennies'

1ul0Gaining "n'ustry:
An industry in hich the "inal product eighs more or comprises a greater volume than the inputs
E-ample So"tdrin2 bottling

1rea0of01ul Point:
A location here trans"er is possible "rom one mode o" transportation to another 

=rban:

Filtering B =rban #ecay B "nner0City #ecay:


*he slo digression o" a city, usually occupied by loincome people
*he peripheral model helped to promote this because o" the middleclass people moving to the outs2irts

e'lining:
an2s purposely not giving loans to a certain loincome area o" a city
!llegal, but still happens because it0s hard to prove

=rban ene)al:
1one by the government
*o attract businesses
*o clean up the city and help their reputations

Public Housing:
Housing oned by the governmentI in the United States, it is rented to loincome residents, and the
rents are set at ; percent o" the "amilies0 incomes

Gentrification:
1one privately
*he process o" high income people going to lo income places and 2ic2ing the people out
Usually areas here houses are orn don, loo2s very trashy
*he high income people build houses in edgy areas because they ant to cut don on their commute

Anne*ation:
7""icial adding o" land
Can be on national scale or state scale
Peripheral !o'el:
Latest version most up to date
1eveloped in the 599s &other three developed in early 59s ? outdated'
Has to contain a beltay@ring ay@ring road
A ring road is a road that surrounds the core o" the city
*he purpose is to ta2e this road ithout going through the city
*he core o" the city ? ma/or part ? is in the ring road
#ust contain an edge city
Promotes greenbelts

$pra)l:
*he adding o" land not necessarily o""icial
Adding@spreading to the metropolitan area &the city and surrounding areas'
*a2ing up arable land
Spreads outards
Promotes greenbelts

Greenbelts:
1esignated areas not alloed to be touched by development &par2s, nature trails'
Sections o" land that are designated natural areas they cannot be built upon

$mart Gro)th:
!nstead o" building outards they build upards to save land
!ncreases population density
Saves natural areas

Central 1usiness #istrict .C1#/:


)here all big businesses ta2e place in a city
 3ode
 3uclei

E'ge City:
Little mini cities on the outs2irts that are li2e the big cities
Lots o" edge cities in Atlanta
E-4 Rosell and Alpharetta ? has most o" the services as in big cities
A44A4 suitcase citiesD
*ypically a place ithout a high residence area
Sandy Springs used to be part o" Atlanta, and then became its on o""icial city
*o become an edge city, the city has to be nely developed and business oriented more /obs than homes

Ghettoization:
Started in Europe
Legal restriction o" people to certain areas
Used to be legali+ed but not anymore
$hettos re"er to areas here populations o" mi-ed income are con"ined to a certain area even though they
might have the means and desire to move
Can be economic or social ghettosD

"n'ustrialization an' =rbanization:


*he groing o" industry and the groing o" population and population density o" a city
7ne promotes the other
*he !ndustrial Revolution promoted Urbani+ation

!egalopolis:
A $ree2 ord meaning great city
14C4 $eographer Bean $ottmann named the region in the northeastern US large metropolitan areas so
close together that they no "orm one continuous urban comple-, e-tending "rom north o" oston to
south o" )ashington #egalopolis

Primate Cities:
 Having more than tice the population o" the second largest city
Center o" culture "or country
1ras citi+ens because they "eel they have to be apart o" the city to be success"ul
#ost li2ely to become capital &e-4 Paris, %rance'
 3ot every country has a primate city
Can have primate cities on large and small scales
Cali"ornia0s primate city is Los Angeles
America lac2s a primate city

an $ize ule:


=nd largest city is  o" 5 st
;rd largest city is 5@; o" 5st
>th largest city is T o" 5 st

+orl' Cities:
Have a large population density because o" technology high rise
*hey are cities that have great in"luence on the hole orld
*hey become a orld city because they are in the center o" the global economic system
Highest *ier o" )orld Cities London, *o2yo, and 3e Qor2 &orld0s business capital'
=nd *ier Chicago, )ashington and Los Angeles

!egacities:
7ver 5 million people
E-perience a sudden rise in population here the in"rastructure can0t support the population "or a time
%or the most part #egacities are in L1C0s because the people there are "orced to go to urban areas to "ind
or2

Central Place Theory:


)alter Christaller created the central place theory to e-plain the si+e and spacing o" cities that speciali+e
in selling goods and services
*he theory consisted o" to basic concepts:
54 *hreshold the minimum mar2et
=4 Range the ma-imum distance the a mount o" distance a person is illing to drive to the threshold

Concentric (one !o'el:


A general model that cities are based upon that urgess developed in 59=6
*he plan o" a city &urban planner' may be based on the concentric +one model
Relates the distance to the city to ho ealthy a "amily is
*he ealthier you are the bigger land you have and the "arther aay "rom the city you are
8 Concentric Jones:
Jone 5 C1
Jone = immediately ad/acent to C1 &"actories and manu"acturing plants here things are produced
ithout much pollution not nasty'
Jone ; contains poorest segments o" the urban population, lo income housing areas, lo income people
have "actory /obs and do not use car "or transportation
Jone > or2ing class
Jone 6 middle class, not struggling, higher .uality housing
Jone 8 high class, e-pensive housing
*he +ones e-pand build out not up
*he concentric +one model has to main problems: outdated and only applies to America

$ector !o'el:
Has arms that e-tend "rom the C1 instead o" circles
C1 still in center o" city
Loer income still near manu"acturing areas
*ransportation and manu"acturing most li2ely along an armD

!ultiple Nuclei !o'el:


Attributes:
1i""erential Accessibility people don0t /ust go to the same C1 all the time they go to di""erent places
Land Use Compatibility related businesses are close together, centripetal "orces
Land Use !ncompatibly con"licting businesses are sent apart "rom each other, centri"ugal "orces
Location Suitability suitable "or certain activities

Transportation
> percent o" all trips made into or out o" a C1 occur during "our hours o" the day to in the morning
and to in the a"ternoon
!n larger cities, public transportation is better than motor vehicles cheaper, less polluting, and more
energye""icient
Americans pre"er to commute by car 

"nfrastructure:
)hat ma2es a city or2 or operate
E-ample electricity, seers, road ays

$uburbanization:
*he groth o" suburbs as constrained by transportation problems
*he invention o" the railroad in the 59 th century enabled people to live in suburbs and or2 in the central
city
#any socalled streetcar suburbs built in the 59 th century still e-ist and retain uni.ue visual identities

Hinterlan':
Same as range in the central place theory
Area around the city that the city serves
*he "arthest distance a city is illing to serve

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