1 Big Geography and the Peopling of the Earth I. Hunter Gather Life i. Hunter gatherers use fires to cook their food‚ so it was more edible and easier to swallow and digest. ii. Hunter gatherers used stone tools for most of their chores such as kill animals‚ harvest plants‚ clear brush‚ and start fire to cook food. iii. Kinship groups tried to make the population grow and start an early agricultural movement. II. Personal Reflection Questions
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AlexisMari Wilson April 22nd‚ 2013 AP Human Geography: 6th Block Gone Forever St. Ann‚ the toponym (Unit 1) given to my city (unit 7) in the state (Unit 4) of Alabama‚ was a beautiful region (Unit 1). But today was just like any one of the other 365 days of the year. The pastures (Unit 5) were greener than green with cows spotted here and there and the spring wheat (Unit 5) was coming in nicely over across the way. The streets are always quiet in this part of the city (Unit 7)‚ so all that
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In other words‚ over transfer of food and the increase in salt density can raise water lichens and may change water living species. 8. The species may change parallel to the erosion caused by the human activities or the permanent increase in the water turbidity as an outcome of the dam construction. 9. Discharge of toxic matters (pesticides‚ toxic metals etc.) and their condensation in food chain may affect sensitive
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Urban environments - Geography URBANISATION: a process where an increasing proportion of the population lives in towns and cities‚ and there is a reduction of people living in rural areas URBAN REGENERATION: Slum clearance: the removal of old‚ port quality housing Peripheral housing estates: new estates on the edges of towns Regeneration and modernisation: upgrading of existing housing stock CAUSES: Rural urban migration: This is because of push-pull factors: for example people came
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Kaleigh Tinsley AP Human Geography Mr. Lowe 5/28/2013 Globalization has many definitions in the concept of human geography‚ but there’s one that really sums it up perfectly: globalization is the world becoming more connected‚ through trade‚ financial flows‚ the exchange of technology and information‚ and the movement of people. Now‚ globalization affects many places in many ways‚ negatively and positively. One place especially: Africa. We all know Africa is a poor‚ underdeveloped country
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Chapter 15 Outline * Soil is the relatively thin surface layer of Earth’s crust consisting of minerals and organic matter modified by natural actions like… * Weather * Wind * Water * Organisms * Soil is formed from parent material‚ rock that is slowly broken down or fragmented into smaller particles by… * Weathering Processes Biological * Chemical * Physical * Topography‚ a region’s surface features such as the presence or absence
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GEOGRAPHY MODELS Preparing for the AP Human Geography Exam THE DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION THE DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION Stage One: CBR very high CDR very high NIR low Population Growth: Low Movement from Stage One to Stage Two: MDC Industrial Revolution LDC Medical Revolution Stage Two: CBR very high CDR plummets NIR high Population Growth: High Movement from Stage Two to Stage Three: Changes in Social customs and improved technology DEMOGRAPHIC
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Chapter 1 -What is Scale? What is the difference between local and global scale? -What are the three methods of scale and describe them. 1.) 2.) 3.) -What is projection and what are the 4 types of distortion that can result from projection? What are the differences between the Mercator and Peter’s projections? -What does the saying “uniform global landscape” mean? -What does the idea the world is shrinking mean? (4 things) 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) -What is a transnational corporation
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AP Human Geography Chapter 2 Study Guide Terms: · population density - a measurement of the number of people per given unit of land · arithmetic population density - the population of a country or region expressed as an average per unit area · physiologic population density - the number of people per unit area of arable land · population distribution - description of locations on the Earth’s surface where populations live · dot maps - maps where one dot represents a certain number of a phenomenon
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Chapter 25 Process of fossilization · Moving water can suspend sediment – inorganic particles · Moving water fills into still body of water o Sediment flats to the bottom o Forms a layer o More layers form with different compositions on the bottom of the lake or ocean · Living things in the ocean die and get buried in the sediments in the ocean · A lot of weight and pressure pushing down · The organic material is replaced by rocks – mineralization resulting
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