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Barron's AP Human Geography Chapter 1

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24761844AnthropogenicHuman-induced changes on the natural environment.
24761845CartographyTheory and practice of making visual representations of the earth's surface in the form of maps.
24761846Cultural ecologyThe study of the interactions between the societies and the natural environments they live in
24761847Cultural landscapeThe human-modified natural landscape specifically containing the imprint of a particular culture or society.
24761848Earth system scienceSystematic approach to physical geography that looks at the interaction between the earth's physical systems and processes on a global scale.
24761849Environmental geographyThe intersection between human and physical geography, which explores the spatial impacts humans have on the physical environment and vice versa.
24761850EratosthenesThe head librarian at Alexandria during the third century B.C.; he was one of the first cartographers. Performed a remarkably accurate computation of the earth's circumference. He is also credited with coining the term "geography."
24761851Fertile CrescentName given to crescent-shaped area of fertile land stretching from the lower Nile valley, along the east Mediterranean coast, and into Syria and present-day Iraq where agriculture and early civilization first began about 8000 B.C.
24761852Geographical Information SystemsA set of computer tools used to capture, store, transform, analyze, and display geographic data.
24761853Global Positioning SystemA set of satellites used to help determine location anywhere on the earth's surface with a portable electronic device.
24761854IdiographicPertaining to the unique facts or characteristics of a particular place
24761855George Perkins MarshInventor, diplomat, politician, and scholar, his classic work, Man and Nature, or Physical Geography as Modified by Human Action, provided the first description of the extent to which natural systems had been impacted by human actions.
24761856Natural landscapeThe physical landscape or environment that has not been affected by human activities.
24761857NomotheticConcepts or rules that can be applied universally.
24761858W. D. PattisonHe claimed that geography drew from four distinct traditions: the earth-science tradition, the culture-environment tradition, the locational tradition, and the area-analysis tradition.
24761859Physical geographyThe realm of geography that studies the structures, processes, distributions, and change through time of the natural phenomena of the earth's surface.
24761860PtolemyRoman geographer-astronomer and author of Guide to Geography which included maps containing a grid system of latitude and longitude.
24761861Qualitative dataData associated with a more humanistic approach to geography, often collected through interviews, empirical observations, or the interpretation of texts, artwork, old maps, and other archives.
24761862Quantitative dataData associated with mathematical models and statistical techniques used to analyze spatial location and association.
24761863Quantitative revolutionA period in human geography associated with the wide-spread adoption of mathematical models and statistical techniques.
24761864RegionA territory that encompasses many places that share similar attributes (may be physical, cultural, or both) in comparison with the attributes of places elsewhere.
24761865Regional geographyThe study of geographic regions.
24761866Remote sensingObservation and mathematical measurement of the earth's surface using aircraft and satellites. The sensors include both photographic images, thermal images, multispectral scanners, and radar images.
24761867Carl SauerGeographer from the University of California at Berkeley who defined the concept of cultural landscape as the fundamental unit of geographical analysis. This landscape results from interaction between humans and the physical environment. Sauer argued that virtually no landscape has escaped alteration by human activities.
24761868Sense of placeFeelings evoked by people as a result of certain experiences and memories associated with a particular place.
24761869Spatial perspectiveAn intellectual framework that looks at the particular locations of specific phenomena, how and why that phenomena is where it is, and, finally, how it is spatially related to phenomena in other places.
24761870SustainabilityThe concept of using the earth's resources in such a way that they provide for people's needs in the present without diminishing the earth's ability to provide for future generations.
24761871Systematic geographyThe study of the earth's integrated systems as a whole, instead of focusing on particular phenomena in a single place.
24761872Thematic layersIndividual maps of specific features that are overlaid on one another in a Geographical Information System to understand and analyze a spatial relationship.
24761873Vernacular regionsSee perceptual regions.

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