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Eratosthenes
An ancient Greek mathematician and geographer, famous for determining the circumference of the Earth using geometry.
Ptolemy
A Greek astronomer, mathematician, geographer and author of Guide to Geography which included maps containing a grid system of latitude and longitude.
George Perkins Marsh
One of the most well-regarded geographers and environmentalists of the 19th century, argued that mankind has a destructive influence on the condition of the environment in his seminal work Man and Nature (1864)
The Fertile Crescent (Mesopotamia)
The name given to a region of the Middle East that was particularly fertile several thousand years ago; thus, it was the first place where the Neolithic Revolution (First Agricultural Revolution) took place.
Carl Sauer
An American geographer, who argued that all regions of the Earth were impacted by human behavior and had been altered by human interaction (Nature + Culture = Cultural Landscape).
Spatial Perspective
The characteristics, location, and relationship between places and features on the Earth in order to explain the spatial expression of human behavior patterns ("Why" and "How").
Functional (Nodal) Region
A geographic area organized around a node, or center point, often based around economic activities, travel, or communication.
Formal (Uniform) Region
A geographic area with common attributes, traditionally defined by economic, social, political, or environmental characteristics.
Vernacular (Perceptual or Cognitive) Region
A geographic area that has no perfect definition, it only exists because of people's beliefs, feelings, and attitudes of the region.
Complementarity
The actual or potential relationship between two places, usually referring to economic interactions
Intervening Opportunities
a feature (usually economic) that causes a migrant to choose a specific destination
Intervening Obstacles
a feature that interferes with a migrant to arrive at their destination
Political Reference Map
show countries, continents, borders, oceans, etc.
Thematic Maps
A map that displays spatial patterns of places and uses quantitative data to display specific topics.
Isoline Thematic Map
displays lines that connect points of equal value
ex. temperature & rainfall
Choropleth Thematic Map
shows patterns of some variable (like population density) using colors or degrees of shading
Graduated Symbol Thematic Map
uses symbols (star, circle, triangle, etc.) to display frequency of
something
Dot Density Thematic Map
uses equally-sized dots to represent the frequency of a variable in a given area
Cartogram
uses space to show a particular variable
the more of that variable in an area → the more space that area
takes up
Quantitative Data
spatial info presented with numbers
Qualitative Data
spatial info presented in forms other than numbers
Absolute Location
The exact spot where something is located
Relative Location
Description of a location using surrounding geographic features.
Mercator Projection
most common map
created for navigation
shape/direction accurate
Gall-Peters Projection
created to show actual size of landforms
to get this accuracy → shape is distorted
Robinson Projection
kind of a compromise → everything is a little distorted so nothing is super distorted
The Fundamental Problem of All Maps is Distortion
Direction
Shape
Area
Distance
Goode Homolosine Projection
An interrupted map that is an equal area projection, shows the true size and shape of the earth's land masses but has distortion with distance and near the edges of the map.
Interrupted Map
A map that tries to remove distortion by removing parts of the globe.
Fuller (Dymaxion) Projection
Shows land masses without an interruption and maintains accurate size and shape but does not use the cardinal directions, struggles with distortion
Uninterrupted Map
A map that displays that entirety of the earth's surface.
Winkel Tripel Projection
Rounder in shape and larger, similar to Robinson
Reference Map
An informational map that shows boundaries, names of places, and geographic features of an area
Topographic Map
A map that uses contour lines to display the terrain and elevation changes.
Absolute Direction
The exact direction you are heading
Relative Direction
The direction depends on the surrounding area
Absolute Distance
The exact distance between two places (Usually measured in miles or kilometers)
Relative Distance
An approximate measurement between two places (Usually measured in time or direction)
Small Scale Map
A map that shows a large portion of the Earth's surface but has less details in the data it is displaying
Large Scale Map
A map that shows less of the Earth's surface but has more details in the data it is displaying
Dispersed
Objects in an area are spread out with ample space between them.
Flowline Map
show the movement of different goods, people, animals, services, or ideas between different places.
Geography
The study of the Earth and everything on it
Physical Characteristics
landforms, bodies of water, ecosystems
Human Characteristics
Bridges, roads, buildings, culture, languages, beliefs.
Region
Areas with common characteristics that make them distinct from other areas.
Location
Where something is on Earth's surface.
Place
Describes the physical and human characteristics of a location.
Human-Environment Interaction
How people interact with and adapt to their environment.
Movement
How people, goods, ideas, and information move from one place to another.
Map
a 2D model of a portion of the Earth that displays spatial info
Map projection
Turning Earth's round shape into a flat map.
Physical Reference Maps
show mountains, rivers, elevation, etc.
Topographic Maps
Show detailed information about the elevation and relief of an area.
Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
A computer system that analyzes and manages and displays a large variety of data and information on a particular geographic area
Remote Sensing
The process of collecting geographic data on an area without having to be present there.
Satellites capture images of Earth and we use the information to create multi-layer maps.
Local/Sub-National Scale
Stop signs, recreation parks, utilities
Regional Scale
States, road funding, customer satisfaction reports, sales data reports,
National/State Scale
Resources, money, budgets, census information, military
Census Data
An official count of the population, every 10 years and gives insights into demographic breakdowns of society (gender, age, employment)
Global Scale
Entire world, supernatural organization, international market
Friction of Distance
the degree to which distance interferes or reduces the amount of interactions between two places.
Distance Decay
The effect of distance on cultural or spatial interactions (As you move further apart, the less interaction will occur)
Waldo Tobler's First Law of Geography
Everything is related to everything else, but near things are more related than distant things.
Time-Space Compression/Convergence
The increasing sense of connectivity, due to advancements in technology, that reduces the impact of distance decay.
Sense of Place
The feeling or perception held by people about a place
Sustainability
development that meets wants & needs of present without compromising ability of future generations to meet their wants & needs
Environmental Determinism
The environment is the driver force for societal development, controlling human actions and culture.
Environmental Possibilism
The environment puts limits on society, however, people have the ability to adjust the physical environment and set their own path in life.
Cultural Determinism
The environment places no restrictions on humans whatsoever & any restrictions come from humans themselves
Scale of Analysis
Observation of data at the global, national, regional, and local scale.
Scale
The ratio of a distance on the map to the corresponding distance on the ground.
Region
A geographic area with common characteristics and patterns.
Random Spatial Patterns
Any point of data is equally likely to occur anywhere & the
position of that point isn't affected by the position of other points.
Uniform Spatial Patterns
Points equally spaced out.
Clustered Spatial Patterns
Many points close together.
Linear Spatial Patterns
Points are in the shape of a straight line.
Administration Region
Created by law, treaty or regulation with firm boundaries
Anthropogenic
Environmental change caused or influenced by people, either directly or indirectly.
W. D. Pattison
An American geographer and proposer of the four traditions of geography, in which he argued the idea that geography was an undisciplined science.
Thematic Layer
A map portraying a particular feature that is used in a GIS.
Idiographic
Used to describe or refer to a feature that is unique to a particular geographic region
Global Positioning System (GPS)
Uses satellite-driven remote sensing to determine exact locations.
Regionalization
The process of dividing up the earth into smaller regions or units or the tendency to form decentralized regions.
Regional Geography
The study of different regions such as there characteristics, elements, similarities, and differences
Geospatial Data
Data that's connected to a particular place on the earth.