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CORRECT DETAILED ANSWERS\VERIFIED 100%
ALREADY GRADED A+ Cartography
small scale map
shows a large area with small detail (1:5,000,000)
functional/nodal region
area organized around a node/focal point and diminishes in
importance outward (airlines, newspaper, amazon deliveries)
formal/uniform region
area marked by a shared common trait (physical, cultural)
vernacular/perceptual region
area perceived differently by people, exists as an idea (Middle
East, Midwest, Kurdistan)
,absolute vs relative
quantitative vs qualitative
direction- compass directions vs left/right
location- latitude/longitude vs relationship to another place
distance- miles/kilometers vs spatial connections/movement
between places (travel time)
how is geographic data used at different scales?
personal- where do i want to live (crime, schools, income
level) business- needed products, who are main customers,
location of stores organization- needs of community/how to
provide services
government- voting districts, school placement
,demographic transition model
model of how the size of a population changes as a country develops
its economy
stage 1- high cbr, cdr (zero nir)
stage 2- high cbr, rapidly decreasing cdr (high
nir) stage 3- rapidly decreasing cbr,
decreasing cdr stage 4- low cbr, cdr (zero
population growth)
stage 5- low cbr, slightly higher cdr (decreasing population)
epidemiologic transition model
model of the causes of death in each stage of the DTM
stage 1- famine, plague, infectious diseases, no
medicine stage 2- receding pandemics, improved
sanitation/medicine
stage 3- chronic disorders, human-created diseases instead of
natural deaths
stage 4- degenerative diseases, improved life choices yet
obesity stage 5- diseases resistant to medication, faster
spread with
globalization/urbanization/poverty
, pandemic
an epidemic that occurs over a wide geographic area and
affects a very high proportion of the population
epidemic
widespread outbreak of an infectious disease
economic sectors
primary- extract raw materials from the Earth
secondary- manufacturers/construction that process raw
materials tertiary- provision of goods/services for
payment
quarternary- knowledge based;
research/information quinary- decisions
impact lots of people
Wallerstein's World Systems Theory
power/wealth in the economy is clustered in core countries
(developed) while semi-periphery and periphery countries (less
developed) have less access
core countries take advantage of cheap labor/materials in
periphery countries; creates a cycle of exploitation where LDCs
can't advance