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AP Flashcards

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11616921521What's your name?Comment t'appelles-tu ?0
11616932070How old are you?Quel âge as-tu ?1
11616940477Where are you from?D'où viens-tu ?2
11616944498Where do you live?Où habites-tu ?3
11616954176Have you got any brothers and sisters?As-tu des frères et sœurs ?4
11616960585Have you got a pet?As-tu un animal de compagnie ?5
11616964434What are your hobbies?Quels sont tes loisirs ?6
11616969076What do you have for breakfast?Qu'est-ce que tu prends pour le petit-déjeuner ?7
11616979364When are we meeting tomorrow morning?Quand est-ce qu'on se retrouve demain matin ?8
11616990961My name is...Je m'appelle...9
11616998642For breakfast, I have...Pour le petit-déjeuner, je prends...10
11617003289I really like...J'aime beaucoup...11
11617016612I'm ... years old.J'ai ... ans.12
11617024263We are meeting at 8 o'clock tomorrow morning.On se retrouve à 8h demain matin.13
11617030272I live in...J'habite à...14
11617037342I'm from...Je viens de...15
11617119424A hobbyUn loisir16

AP - Vocab #3 Flashcards

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7471420162Affrontan insult0
7471420163Blase(adj.) indifferent, bored as a result of having enjoyed many pleasures; apathetic1
7471420164Cajolepersuade someone to do something by sustained coaxing or flattery2
7471423825Cholerichot-tempered, easily angered3
7471423826EncumberTo weigh down or burden4
7471426678Feckless(adj.) lacking in spirit and strength; ineffective, weak; irresponsible, unreliable5
7471426679Impassedead end6
7471430288Indolentlazy; averse to work7
7471433180Lugubrioussorrowful; mournful; dismal8
7471433181Ribald(adj.) irreverently mocking; coarse, vulgar, or indecent in language9
7471435891Adulation(n.) praise or flattery that is excessive10
7471435892Censureharsh criticism or disapproval11
7471438229Dissembleto present a false appearance; to disguise one's real intentions or character12
7471438230Drollcurious or unusual in a way that provokes dry amusement13
7471440077Expectoratecough up and spit out mucus from the respiratory tract14
7471440078PeremptoryLeaving no opportunity for denial or refusal15
7471442014Pusillanimous(adj.) contemptibly cowardly or mean-spirited16
7471442015Didacticintended to teach, particularly in having moral instruction as an ulterior motive17
7471445257Audacious(adj.) bold, adventurous, recklessly daring18
7471445258Pithybrief and full of meaning and substance; concise19
7471447988Jocundcheerful, merry20
7471447989Pedanticpompous; self-important; making a show of knowledge21
7471450916Serenecalm and peaceful22
7471450917Incisive(adj.) sharp, keen, penetrating (with a suggestion of decisiveness and effectiveness)23
7471454439Cynicaldoubtful or distrustful of the goodness or sincerity of human motives24

AP Spanish: Science and Technology Flashcards

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9190969664escribir a máquinato type0
9190969665cargarto upload1
9190969666grabarto video2
9190969669investigarto research3
9190969673desarollarto develop4
9190969674cifrarto calculate5
9190969675el avanceadvance6
9190969676la computadora/ el ordenadorcomputor7
9190969681la informacióninformation8
9190969682la communicacióncommunication9
9190969683el conocimientoknowledge10
9190969684el entretenimientoentertainment11
9190969685el teléfono celular/ el móvilcell phone12
9190969686el teléfono fijoland line13
9190969687las relaciones personalespersonal relations14
9190969688la educacióneducation15
9190969689la seguridadsecurity16
9190969690el trabajowork17
9190969691la aplicaciónapplication18
9190969692el aparatodevice19
9190969693la bateríabattery20
9190969694la pilabattery21
9190969695el engancheaddiction22
9190969696la addiciónaddiction23
9190969697electrónicoelectronic24
9190969698viejoold25
9190969699nuevonew26
9190969700públicopublic27
9190969701privadoprivate28
9190969702technológicatechnological29
9190969703caroexpensive30
9190969704baratocheap31
9190969705beneficiosobeneficial32
9190969706útiluseful33
9190969707avanzadoadvanced34
9190969708por teléfonoby phone35
9190969709en personain person36
9190969710cara a caraface to face37
9190969711por escritoby writing38
9190969712port textoby text39
9190969713fomentar/ maximar/ potenciarto promote, to strengthen, to boost40
9190969714porgresarto progress41
9190969715innovarto innovate42
9190969716el retochallange43
9190969717la productividadproductivity44
9190969718la competitividadcompetitiveness45
9190969719la capacidadcapacity46
9190969720la calidadquality47
9190969721el costecost48
9190969722el impulsoimpulse49
9190969723el espíritu emprendidorentrepreneurial spirit50

AP Terms Flashcards

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10823230653Allusionbrief reference to a person, event, or place (real or fictional) or to a work of art0
10823230654AnalogyA comparison between two seemingly dissimilar things1
10823230655Anecdotea brief story used to illustrate a point or claim2
10823230656Aphorismshort, concise statement of truth3
10823230657Epigrama pithy saying and often antithetical (a concise statement that usually contains something directly opposing the other)4
10823230658Explicationa line by line explanation of a poem or other literary work5
10823230659Occasionthe time and place a speech is given or a piece is written6
10823230660Parodyan imitation of a particular writer's style with deliberate exaggeration for comic effect7
10823230661PersonaGreek for "mask." The face or character that a speaker shows to his or her audience8
10823230662Purposethe goal the speaker wants to achieve9
10823230663Rhetoricthe faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion. In other words, it is the art of finding ways of persuading an audience10
10823230664Satirethe use of irony or sarcasm to critique society or an individual11
10823230665Stylethe distinctive quality of speech or writing created by the selection and the arrangement of words and figures of speech. The combination of two elements: the idea to be expressed and the individuality of the author12
10823230666Synthesiscombining two or more ideas in order to create something more complex in support of a new idea13
10823230667Thesisthe essay's main idea or the central idea in a work to which all parts of the work refer14
10823230668Tonea speaker's attitude toward the subject conveyed by the speaker's stylistic and rhetorical choices15
10823230669Voicein rhetoric, a distinctive quality in the style and tone of writing. In grammar, a term for the relationship between a verb and a noun16
10823230670PathosGreek for "suffering" or "experience." Speaker's attempt to emotionally motivate their audience. Specifically, they play on the audiences values, desires, and hopes on the one hand, or fears and prejudices on the other17
10823230671EthosGreek for "character. "Speaker's attempt to demonstrate that they are credible and trustworthy to speak on a given topic. It is established by both who you are and what you say18
10823230672LogosGreek for "embodied thought" Speaker's appeal to reason by offering clear, rational ideas and using specific details, examples, facts, statistics, or expert testimony to back them up19
10823230673Rhetorical Modesthings that describe the variety, conventions, and purposes of the major kinds of language based communication, particularly writing and speaking20
10823230674Descriptiongeneric name for a group of figures in order to make the reader visualize a person, place, or thing21
10823230675Expositionthe presentation of a essential information to explain22
10823230676Narrationin classical oration, the factual and background information, establishing why a subject or problem needs addressing. It precedes the confirmation, or laying out of evidence, to support claims made in the argument23
10823230677Persuasionthe presentation of known information on a debatable subject to change the reader's mind24

AP Human Geography Models Flashcards

Add any more models you know!

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6782190840Demographic Transition Model (DTM)In the four stages of transition from an agricultural subsistence economy to an industrialized country, demographic patterns move from extremely high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates. In the process, population growth rates skyrocket and then fall again. The crude death rate first falls because of the influx of better health technology, and then the birth rate gradually falls to match the new social structure.0
6782190841Boserup HypothesisBased on the observation that explains how population increase necessitates increased inputs of labor and technology to compensate for reductions in the natural yields of swidden farming.1
6782190842Epidemiologic Transition ModelDisease vulnerability shifts in patterns similar to the DTM. In the early stages, plague and pestilence spread as a result of poor medical technology. As industrialization proceeds, diseases related to urban life spread. In later stages, diseases once thought eradicated reappear as more-developed societies come into easier contact with less-developed regions struggling with the more primitive diseases, such as smallpox and the bubonic plague. Leading causes of death in later stages are related to diseases associated with aging, such as heart disease.2
6782190843Gravity ModelWhen applied to migration, larger places attract more migrants than do smaller places. Additionally, destinations that are more distant have a weaker pull effect than do closer opportunities of the same caliber.3
6782190844Zelinsky Model of Migration TransitionMigration trends follow demographic transition stages. People become increasingly mobile as industrialization develops. More international migration is seen in stage 2 as migrants search for more space and opportunities in countries in stages 3 and 4. Stage 4 countries show less emigration and more intraregional migration.4
6782190845Ravenstein's Laws of Migrationin the 19th century, E.G. Ravenstein used data from England to outline a series of "laws" explaining patterns of migration. His laws state that migration is impacted by push and pull factors. Unfavorable conditions, such as oppression and high taxes, push people out of a place, whereas attractive opportunities, called pull factors, cause them to migrate into regions. Ravenstein's laws state that better economic opportunities are the chief cause for migration; that migration occurs in multiple stages, rather than one move; that the majority of people move short distances and that those who migrate longer distances choose big-city destinations; that urban residents are less migratory than rural residents; that for every migration stream, there is a counterstream; and factors such as gender, age, and socio-economic level influence a person's likelihood to migrate. Keep in mind that his "laws" applied to the timeframe and context of his analysis.5
6782190846Von Thünen's Model of Agricultural Land UseDeveloped by German geographer Johann Heinrich von Thünen, this model explains and predicts agricultural land use patterns in a theoretical state by varying transportation cost. Given the model's assumptions, the pattern that emerges predicts more-intensive rural land uses closer to the marketplace, and more-extensive rural land uses farther from the city's marketplace. These rural land use zones are divided in the model into concentric rings.6
6782190847Weber's Least Cost TheoryThis is Alfred Weber's theory of industrial location, explaining and predicting where industries will locate based on cost analysis of transportation, labor, and agglomeration factors. Weber assumes an industry will choose its location based on the desire to minimize production costs and thus maximize profits. Drawbacks to the model include its assumption of an immobile and equal labor force.7
6782190848Hotelling's ModelHotelling's theory asserts that an industry's locational choices are heavily influenced by the location of their chief competitors and related industries. In other words, industries do not make isolated decisions on locations without considering where other, related industries exist. location of an industry cannot be understood without reference to other industries of the same kind.8
6782190849Rostow's Modernization Model (stages of economic development)Developed in the 1950s, the model exemplifies the liberal development ideology, as opposed to structuralist theory. Under this model, all countries develop in a five-stage process. The development cycle is initiated by investment in a takeoff industry that allows the country to grow a comparative advantage, whch sparks greater economic gain that eventually diffuses throughout the country's economy. Drawbacks to this model include its not identifying cultural and historic differences in development trajectories because it is based on North American and western European development histories.9
6782190850Borchert's Model of Urban EvolutionBorchert created this model in the 1960s to predict and explain the growth of cities in four phases of transportation history: stage 1, the "sail wagon" era of 1790-1830; stage 2, the "iron horse" era of 1830-1870; stage 3, the "steel rail" epoch of 1870-1920; stage 4, the era of car and air travel that began after 1920-1970. stage 5, the high tech era 1970-present.10
6782190851Christaller's Central Place TheoryDeveloped in the 1930s by Walter Christaller, this model explains and predicts patterns of urban places across the map. In his model, Christaller analyzed the hexagonal, hierarchical pattern of cities, villages, towns, and hamlets arranged according to their varying degrees of centrality, determined by the central place functions existing in urban places and the hinterlands they serve. Assumptions: - Flat plane with uniform geography and nature - Uniform population - single mode of transportation - evolution towards the growth of cities - all persons have a similar income - all persons have similar consumption patterns11
6782190852Burgess Concentric Zone ModelThis model was devised in the 1920s by Ernest Burgess to predict and explain the growth patterns of North American urban spaces. Its main principle is that cities can be viewed from above as a series of concentric rings; as the city grows and expands, new rings are added and old ones change character. Key elements of the model are the central business district and the peak land value intersection.12
6782190853Bid Rent Curveshows the variations in rent different users are willing to pay for land at different distances from some peak point of accessibility and visibility in the market, often the CBD. Because transportation costs increase as you move away from the market (often the CBD), rents usually decrease as distance increases from the market. Importantly, different types of land use (commercial retail, industrial, agriculture, housing) generate different bid-rent curves. explain the series of concentric rings of land use found in the concentric zone model.13
6782190854Hoyt's Sector ModelThis model, conceived by Homer Hoyt, predicts and explains North American urban growth patterns in the 1930s in a pattern in which similar land uses and socioeconomic groups clustered in linear sectors radiating outward from a central business district, usually along transportation corridors.14
6782190855Harris-Ullman Multiple-Nuclei ModelDeveloped in the 1950s by Chauncy Harris and Edward Ullman, this model explains the changing growth pattern of urban spaces based on the assumption that growth occurred independently around several major foci (or focal nodes), many of which are far away from the central business district and only marginally connected to it.15
6782190856Vance Urban Realms ModelJames Vance developed this model in the 1970s to explain and predict changing urban growth patterns as the automobile became increasingly prevalent and large suburban "realms" emerged. The suburban regions were functionally tied to a mixed-use suburban downtown, or mini-CBD, with relative independence from the original CBD.16
6782190857Renn's New Donut ModelCore Revitalization New Ring of Poverty17
6782190858Griffin-Ford Latin American City ModelLarry Ford and Ernest Griffin created a model of the pattern of urban growth in Latin America. Their model contains elements of Latin American culture and imprints of colonization and globalization, such as a prominent plaza and heavy growth around the CBD. However, in the Latin American pattern shown in their model, residential quality decreases with distance from the CBD. The model also presents a zone of maturity, populated with services and a wealthier population; in a zone of squatter settlements, where recent urban migrants set up makeshift housing; and a zone of in situ accretion, which is a transitional zone that shows signs of transition to a zone of maturity.18
6782190859McGee Southeast Asian City ModelDeveloped by T.G McGee. The focal point of the city is the colonial port zone combined with the large commercial district that surrounds it. McGee found no formal CBD but found separate clusters of elements of the CBD surrounding the port zone: the government zone, the Western commercial zone, the alien commercial zone, and the mixed land-use zone with misc. economic activities.19
6782190860De Blij Sub-Saharan Africa City ModelDeveloped by Harm De Blij. A model of a city in Sub-Sahara Africa in which there are 3 Central Business Centers: Colonial CBD, Market Zone, and Traditional CBD. The Central Business Districts are encircled by ethnic neighborhoods, ethnic and mixed mining and manufacturing, and finally informal satellite townships20
6782190861Islamic City ModelOwe their structure to their religious beliefs; contain mosques, open air markets; courtyards, surrounded by walls, limiting foot traffic in residential neighborhoods21
6782190862Core-periphery modelCore is the economic, political dominant center (relative center). MDCs above Brandt Line, LDCs around periphery22
6782190863Lee's Migration ModelModel based on Lee's migration theory, that people migrate due to push and/or pull factors, and intervening obstacles are factored23
6782190864Harris peripheral/galactic cityDeveloped in the 1960s, interstates introduced. Ring roads play key role in Harris' model; ring roads detrimental to CBD because removes advantage of CBD. CBD loses consumer services, higher income residences, decrease tax base, decrease infrastructure, decrease in education, etc. Ring roads are *bad* for cities24
6782190865Malthus' Theory of OverpopulationMalthus argued supply grows linearly (arithmetic), while population was growing geometrically. Also argued for humans to use "moral restraint" to avoid overpopulation25
6782190866Tobler's First Law of Geography"All things are similar, but nearby things are more similar than distant things."26
6782190867Friction of Distance and Distance Decay27
6782190868Density Gradient ModelThe change in density in an urban area from the center to the periphery28

AP Human Geography Population Flashcards

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8907518757CensusA complete enumeration of a population0
8907518758Demographic Transitionthe process of change in a society's population1
8907518759Demographythe scientific study of population characteristics2
8907518760Infant Mortality Ratenumber of deaths in a year among infants under one year old per 10003
8907518761Natural Increase Rate (NIR)The percentage growth of a population in a year (CBR-CDR)4
8907518762Physiological Population Densitypeople per arable land5
8907518763Population CompositionStructure of population in terms of age, sex6
8907518764Population Pyramidrepresents the distribution of population by age and sex7
8907518765Total Fertility Rate (TFR)The average number of children a woman will have during her childbearing years.8
8907518766Zero population growth (ZPG)A decline of the total fertility rate to the point where the natural increase rate equals zero.9
8907518767Thomas Malthusfirst to recognize population would outgrow food10
8907518769Sustainabilitythe level of development that can be maintained without depleting resources11
8907518770Stable Population Levelstable fertility and death rates12
8907518771Carrying CapacityThe largest population that an area can support13
8907518772doubling timeBR-DR/10=# 70/#14
89075187735 stages of demographic transition1 - lots of births and lots of deaths 2 - birth stays, death drops 3 - birth drops, death stays 4 - low birth, low death 5 - birth rates drop below replacement level15
8907518774age distributionproportion of people with different ages16
8907518775restrictive policyenforces smaller families17
89075187765 stages of epidemiological transition1 - Pestilence 2 - receding pandemics 3 - degenerative diseases 4 - delayed degenerative diseases 5 - reemergence of infectious diseases18
8907518777epidemiological transitiontransferring of mortality, disease19
8907518778sex rationumber of males per 100 females20

AP Vocab 06 Flashcards

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7003918374AllegoryA narration or description usually restricted to a single meaning because its events, actions, characters, settings, and objects represent specific abstractions or ideas.0
7003918375ApostropheAn address, either to someone who is absent and therefore cannot hear the speaker or to something nonhuman that cannot comprehend1
7003918376CharacterizationHow the author explains or develops the characters in a story. Can be done directly or indirectly2
7003918377EmblemA concrete object that represents something abstract; unlike a symbol, an emblem has a fixed meaning that does not vary in context3
7003918378Magic RealismFiction which displays a mingling of the mundane with the fantastic, giving the narrative dual dimensions of realism and fantasy. One of its purposes is to draw attention to the fact that all narrative is an invention. The technique is mainly associated with South American writers, such as Jorge Luis Borges and Gabriel García Márquez, but has also been used by writers such as the British Angela Carter, and the Anglo-Indian Salman Rushdie4
7003918379SymbolA symbol has two levels of meaning, a literal level and a figurative level. Characters, objects, events, and settings can all be symbolic in that they represent something else beyond themselves. The dove literally is a bird, but is has come to figuratively represent peace5
7003918380SymbolismThe use of symbols to convey meaning6
7003918381AbashedAshamed or embarrassed; disconcerted7
7003918382BenignantlyKind, especially to inferiors; gracious;8
7003918383DiscoursingCommunication of thought by words; talk; conversation9
7003918384ScruplesA moral or ethical consideration or standard that acts as a restraining force or inhibits certain actions10
7003918385HyperboleUse of specific words and phrases that exaggerate and overemphasize the basic crux of the statement in order to produce a grander, more noticeable effect11
7003918386IronyWords are used in such a way that their intended meaning is different from the actual meaning of the words. It may also be a situation that may end up in quite a different way than what is generally anticipated. In simple words, it is a difference between the appearance and the reality.12
7003918387MetaphorMakes an implicit, implied or hidden comparison between two things that are unrelated but share some common characteristics. In other words, a resemblance of two contradictory or different objects is made based on a single or some common characteristics13
7003918388PersonificationA figure of speech in which a thing, an idea or an animal is given human attributes. The non-human objects are portrayed in such a way that we feel they have the ability to act like human beings14

ap enviro / biodiversity Flashcards

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8218717814i can identify the physical and chemical processes that support life on the planetphysical: water cycle, heat, soil formation chemical: photosynthesis, nutrient cycle, respiration0
8218721272i can explain why high quality energy from the sun loses quality as it moves through the ecosystemone way flow of hq energy sun - living things - environment (air & water) - space (high quality to low quality) ex/ sunlight hits a car = heat radiation off of car1
8218724586i can describe the levels of hierarchy that make up an ecosystemproducers < consumers < decomposers2
8218726006i can identify the trophic levels in an ecosystemecologists assign every type of organism in an ecosystem to a feeding level, depending on its source of food or nutrients3
8219584957producerssometimes called autotrophs (self feeders) through processes like photosynthesis ex/ lichen, moss4
8219593995consumers"other feeders", cannot produce the nutrients they need. get their nutrients by feeding on other organisms. depend on producers. ex/ humans5
8218730104i can model energy moving through a food chain in an ecosystem using the 10% rule and hierarchy of trophic levels6
8218734900i can compare and contrast Gross Primary Production and Net Primary ProductionGPP: rate at which primary producers (plants and algae) convert solar energy to biomass NPP: rate at which primary producers make chemical energy that is stored in their tissues available to other organisms (both are measured in Kcal/m^2/yr7
8218738847i can defend Net Primary Production's essential role in determining the biodiversity of an ecosystembiodiversity is positively effected by high temps and high rates of NPP8
8218743056i can analyze cause and effects of human activity on Earth's nutrient cycles (carbon, sulfur, phosphorus, and nitrogen)carbon: deforestation = less carbon sinks, which = high carbon sulfur: high sulfur = less plant growth phosphorus & nitrogen: high P + N causes algae to grow faster than the environment can handle9
8219646523Carbon Cyclethe circulation and transformation of carbon back and forth between living things and the environment. human activity ex/ burning of fossil fuels, land use and land cover change10
8219673632Sulfur Cycleburning of coal, natural gas, and other fossil fuels has greatly increased the amount of S in the atmosphere and ocean and depleted the sedimentary rock sink.11
8219673633Phosphorus Cyclehumans affect the phosphorus cycle mainly by the use of fertilizers and raising livestock, especially hogs. fertilizers and hog waste are high in phosphorus, which makes its way into the soil (where it is necessary in moderate amounts) and, due to runoff, in water.12
8219677608Nitrogen Cyclefossil fuels burning, automobiles, factories, power plants and other combustion processes that were stored in geological forms are sent back into the atmosphere by human actions which increase the amount of Nitrogen and affect the Nitrogen cycle13
8218745692i can analyze ways in which nature's biodiversity provides humans with natural capitalbiodiversity is key to the functionality of an ecosystem and farming industrial industries rely on that. also, without functioning ecosystems, we would lose the vital things we need to survive like oxygen, water, etc.14
8218749387i can differentiate between a genetic mutation and genetic resistancea gene mutation is a permanent alteration in the DNA sequence that makes up a gene, such that the sequence differs from what is found in most people. genetic resistance is inherited changes in the DNA of humans which increase resistance to the disease and result in increased survival of individuals with the genetic change.15
8218749388i can explain natural selectionprocess by which traits that enhance survival and reproduction are passed on more frequently to future generations than those that do not, thus altering the genetic makeup of populations through time.16
8218764136i can explain how geologic processes, climate change, and biogeographical islands can have an effect on natural selectiongeological processes: allowed species to move, adapt, and and form new species through natural selection. also, earthquakes can cause fissures in Earth's crust that can separate and isolate populations of species. climate change: biogeographical islands:17
8218765986i can explain and give an example of divergent and covergent evolutiondivergent evolution occurs when two different species share a common ancestor but have different characteristics from one another (ex/ ) convergent evolution occurs when two different species do not share a common ancestor but have developed similar characteristics through adaption to similar environmental conditions (ex/ similar nature of the flight/wings of insects, birds, pterosaurs, and bats. all four serve the same function and are similar in structure, but each evolved independently)18
8218770684i can differentiate between biological extinction, local extinction (extirpation), background extinction, and mass extinctionbio extinction: a species is no longer found anywhere on earth local ext: condition of a species that ceases to exist in the chosen geographic area of study, though it still exists elsewhere background ext: ongoing extinction of individual species due to environmental or ecological factors such as climate change, disease, loss of habitat, or competitive disadvantage in relation to other species. mass ext: extinction of a large number of species within a relatively short period of geological time, thought to be due to factors such as a catastrophic global event or widespread environmental change that occurs too rapidly for most species to adapt19
8218773894i can provide evidence as to why endemic species and K selected species are vulnerable to extinctionsendemic species, or animals and plants that are restricted to a relatively small area, such as an island, are inherently vulnerable to extinction. they have incurred the greatest number of extinctions in the past 400 years. changes in their habitat or losses to their populations can eliminate them. K-selected species are more prone to extinction than r-selected species because they mature later in life and have fewer offspring with longer gestation times.20
8218777773i can explain the difference in a K selected and R selected speciesK: long life span, low infant mortality (mot infants survive) high parental care for young, high reproductive age, long gestation (being carried in the womb) period, low #s per birth (ex/ humans, elephants) R: "lay em & leave em". short life span, high infant mortality (low # of infants actually survive), no parental care, young reproductive age/reproductively capably at or shortly after birth, short gestation period, 10s-100s of babies at birth (ex/ amphibians, plants, fish, insects)21
8218787895i can discuss and give evidence for an area having a high or low biodiversity in terms of species richness, relative abundance (evenness)biodiversity = lots of different species, relative abundance: different amounts of different species22
8218800936i can explain with supporting evidence the importance of specialist, indicator, keystone, and foundation species in the health and diversity of an ecosystemSPECIALIST: can only survive in a specific environment INDICATOR: serve as an early sign of ecosystem damage KEYSTONE: largely impact ecosystem, if they are removed the ecosystem collapses. FOUNDATION: provide habitat for other species23
8218803854i can provide evidence to support the hypothesis that species rich ecosystems are productive and sustainablewhen an ecosystem is more species rich, more of those species are working together to sustain the cycle of the system. if there is no diversity, the species cannot work together to get the things they need that would otherwise be provided by a different species.24
8218806021i can explain how biotic and abiotic factors correspond to the amount of diversity in an areabiotic factors shape ecosystems locally and over a short period of time. abiotic factors shape larger-scale patterns locally & globally over long periods of time.25
8218810084i can analyze benefit and loss between interactions of organisms using examples for... Parasitism, Mutualist, Commensalism, Predationpredation: one species eats another to survive mutualism: both species benefit from each other in a way that benefits both commensalism: one species benefits and the other is unaffected parasitism: one organism lives as a parasite in the other and feeds off of it, negatively effecting the host26
8218815160i can give evidence for outcomes between interspecific and intraspecific species competitioncompetition occurs when organisms have an adverse effect on each other as a result of requiring the same resource. ... when these organisms belong to the same species it is referred to as intraspecific competition. when it occurs between individuals of different species it is interspecific competition.27
8218822052i can give evidence for outcomes adaption allowing organisms to compete for resources and survive competition such as.. Camouflage, Mimicry, Resource Partitioning, Chemical Warfare, Warning Coloration, Behavioral Stratagiescamo: blend in to surroundings so predators cannot find them mimicry: make themselves look like something the predator doesn't want to eat, like something poisonous resource partitioning: divide a niche to avoid competition for resources chemical warfare: when they use other organisms that cause harm to the predator like harmful bacteria and viruses warning coloration: the species has a bright color to indicate they are poisonous so they know to avoid it behavioral stratagies: species use social behavior to stay safe and protect each other28
8218823507i can explain how coevolution workscases where two (or more) species reciprocally affect each other's evolution. ... coevolution is likely to happen when different species have close ecological interactions with one another. these ecological relationships include: predator/prey and parasite/host.29
8218828777i can describe and give examples of different population distribution and under what circumstances they exist (uniformed, clumped, and dispersed)uniformed: more can survive, decreases biodiversity clumped: safety, cooperation/finding resources random: highest biodiversity/resources30
8218831002i can identify and describe limiting factors for animal populationsfamily choice, food, shelter, water, predator/disease31
8218842604i can analyze a population growth chart for K and R selected speciesK SELECTED: parents take extra care of their young to make sure they survive, few babies at once, majority live long. R SELECTED: have thousands of babies at once, parents don't tend to young, majority does not survive after birth32
8218848100i can explain how environmental resistance affects carrying capacity of a populationdepends on water, food, etc. sets parameters33
8218850798i can analyze and explain the difference in a population with exponential versus a population with logistic growthexponential: always growing - no limit logistic: grows to a carrying capacity and levels out34
8218852471i can analyze a boom bust cycle in a populationa population that repeatedly and regularly increases and decreases in size35
8218859241i can analyze density dependent and density independent factors that affect population growthDD: dependent on a population to spread (disease, food, space/habitat) DI: going to happen no matter how big or small the population is (natural disaster, sunlight)36
8218862076i can analyze causes and describe stages of primary and secondary successionprimary succession: long period of time where pioneering species begin to grow and decompose to create nutrient rich soil (causes: glaciers, volcanoes, concrete, flood) secondary succession: following primary succession, grass grows, then shrubs, then trees. final stage = old growth forest (causes: fire, flood, storms, abandoned farms)37
8218865477i can explain the biological and physical aspects of plants that are considered pioneer species(moss, lichens, legumes, phytoplankton) lichens: break down rock to make soil legumes: contain bacteria in their roots. plant provides sugars for the bacteria and the bacteria provides nitrogen for the plant so it can grow in unusual places.38
8218867910i can analyze the role of pioneer species in primary successionover long periods of time the remains of these species lay down nutrient rich soil that paves the way for the establishment of their plant communities. this is called primary ecological succession.39
8218872074i can analyze what a climax community and old growth forests have in common, citing examples of where you would find these communities in a modern ageold growth forests = untouched by humans. old growth forests are in the final stage of secondary succession, aka a climax community. great bear forest, amazon rainforest40
8218874942i can connect and outline the progression of humans with extinctions and loss of biodiversityhumans used large bodied mammals for food and other survival resources like clothing, shelter etc. since the human population is continually growing, too many people killed too many animals for survival, therefore causing them to go extinct.41
8218883903i can distinguish between endangered and threatened species and cite examples for eachendangered - any species that is in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range; threatened - any species that is likely to become an endangered species within the foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion of its range.42
8218887255i can identify and describe four reasons why humans should protect and save animals an plants from extinctionadaption/advancement of species , linked to : overall health of ecosystem, medicine, oxygen, food/pollination, water cycling/ filtration, spiritual, art, nutrient cycles, resources (metal, lumber, etc)43
8218890701i can outline the ways in which humans are causing loss of biodiversity through HIPPCOHabitat loss Invasive species Population growth Pollution Climate change Over consumption44
8218905249i can identify and describe International and National laws that help save biodiversity (CITES Treaty, Endangered Species Act)CITES (the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) is an international agreement between governments. Its aim is to ensure that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten their survival. the Endangered Species Act provides for the conservation of species that are endangered or threatened throughout all or a significant portion of their range, and the conservation of the ecosystems on which they depend.45
8218939163i can discuss how laws that protect biodiversity can be effective and ineffectivefederal laws are easy to enforce while international laws are hard to enforce46
8218947870i can discuss pros and cons of wildlife refuges, zoos/botanical gardens, and captive breeding programs as strategies to save biodiversitykeep species alive, increase population, learning purposes, $$$ raised in zoos help scientists in the wild con: genes of animals is limited to those in the zoo47
8218951017i can identify and describe ways to prevent deforestation and between manage forests in order to protect biodiversity-enforce federal laws that restrict the amount of trees that are cut per year, per company -selective and strip cutting -control burn (frequent and small)48
8218953658i can identify and describe ways to better manage grasslands in order to protect biodiversitycontrol the # of animals grazing a certain area and how long they graze there. suppress the growth of invader plants by using herbicides, mechanical removal, or controlled burning and controlled trampling. rotation grazing:mimic natural herding of herbivores49
8218955582i can identify and describe ways to better manage national parks ad refuges to protect biodiversityset aside as "wilderness" and make a federal law not to disturb it. create buffer zones. create habitat corridors (very good way)50

AP Human Geography Population Flashcards

These are the vocabulary words from Rubenstein's AP Human Geography textbook.
Chapter-1: Thinking Geographically
Chapter-2: Population
Chapter-3: Migration
Chapter-4: Folk and popular culture
Chapter-5: Language
Chapter-6: Religion
Chapter-7: Ethnicity
Chapter-8: Political Geography
Chapter-9: Development
Chapter-10: Agriculture
Chapter-11: Industry
Chapter-12: Services
Chapter-13: Urban Patterns
Chapter-14: Resource Issues

Terms : Hide Images
7770044171arithmetic densityThe total number of people divided by the total land area0
7770044172CensusA complete enumeration of a population1
7770044173Crude Birth Rate (CBR)The number of live births in a year for every 1,000 people alive in a society2
7770044174Crude Death Rate (CDR)The number of deaths in a year per 1,000 people alive in a society3
7770044175Demographic Transitionthe process of change in a society's population as a combination of medical advances and economic development, affecting a population's desire and ability to control its own birth and death rates4
77700441765 stages of Demographic Transition1. Total population is low but it is balanced due to high birth rates and high death rates. 2. Total population rises as death rates fall due to improvements in health care and sanitation. Birth rates remain high. 3. Total population is still rising rapidly. The gap between birth and death rates narrows due to the availability of contraception and fewer children being needed to work - due to the mechanisation of farming. The natural increase is high. 4. Total population is high, but it is balanced by a low birth rate and a low death rate. Birth control is widely available and there is a desire for smaller families. 5. Total population is high but going into decline due to an ageing population. There is a continued desire for smaller families, with people opting to have children later in life.5
7770044177Demographythe scientific study of population characteristics6
7770044178Infant Mortality RateThe total number of deaths in a year among infants under one year old per 1000 live births in a society7
7770044179Natural Increase Rate (NIR)The percentage growth of a population in a year, computed as the crude birth rate minus the crude death rate (NIR=CBR-CDR)8
7770044180Physiological Population DensityThe number of people per unit of area of arable land, which is land suitable for agriculture9
7770044181Population CompositionStructure of population in terms of age, sex and other properties such as marital status and education10
7770044182Population DensityA measurement of the number of people per given unit of land11
7770044183Population DistributionDescription of locations on Earth's surface where populations live12
7770044184Population PyramidA bar graph that represents the distribution of population by age and sex13
7770044185Total Fertility Rate (TFR)The average number of children a woman will have during her childbearing years.14
7770044186Zero population growth (ZPG)A decline of the total fertility rate to the point where the natural increase rate equals zero.15
7770044187Industrial Revolutiona series of improvements in industrial technology that transformed the process of manufacturing goods and drastically altered society16
7770044188Thomas Malthus(1766-1834) An English economist who argued that increases in population would outgrow increases in food production, which would lead to widespread famine and disease.17
7770044189Dr. John Snow(1813-1858) English physician who used hand-drawn data layering on maps of London to identify and treat a cholera epidemic18
7770044190Sustainabilitythe level of development that can be maintained without depleting resources19
7770044191CartographyThe science or practice of drawing maps.20
7770044192HearthThe area where an idea or cultural trait originates21
7770044193Spatial DistributionThe physical location of geographic phenomena across space22
7770044194FieldworkThe study of phenomena by visiting places and observing how people interact with and thereby change those places23
7770044195Sequent OccupationThe idea that successive societies leave their cultural imprint on a place and each contributing to the cummulative cultural landscape24
7770044196ScaleA representation of a real-world phenomenon at a certail level of reduction or generalization. i.e on maps the ratio of ground distance to map distance25
7770044197Political Mapfocuses solely on the state and national boundaries of a place. They also include the locations of cities - both large and small, depending on the detail of the map.26
7770044198Physical Mapshows the physical landscape features of a place. They generally show things like mountains, rivers and lakes and water is always shown with blue. Usually shown with different colors and shades to show topography.27
7770044199Topographic MapShows different physical landscape features. They use contour lines instead of colors to show changes in the landscape28
7770044200Climate MapShows information about the climate of an area; like the specific climatic zones based on the temperature, the amount of snow an area receives or average number of cloudy days. These maps normally use colors to show different climatic areas.29
7770044201Economic or Resource Mapshows the specific type of economic activity or natural resources present in an area through the use of different symbols or colors30
7770044202Road MapA map that depicts roads, routes, highways, major and minor cities, as well as airports and points of interest31
7770044203Thematic Mapfocuses on a particular theme or special topic and they are different from the six aforementioned general reference maps because they do not just show natural features like rivers, cities, political subdivisions, elevation and highways. If these items are on a thematic map, they are background information and are used as reference points to enhance the map's theme. i.e. WWII Maps, a Map of the Industrial Revolution, etc32
7770044204Stable Population Levela population which has constant mortality and fertility rates, and no migration, therefore a fixed age distribution and constant growth rate.33
7770044205Carrying CapacityThe number of living beings (people) that a specific area can support. i.e. SDS can only hold/accomodate so many people, it has a carrying capacity. Once reached changes must be made to space, resources, and accessibility34
7770044206MDCMore Developed Countries. Average 10 years of schooling; a 98% Literacy Rate; sicker populations; and a Life Expectancy in the 70s. Regions: • North-America • Western Europe • Eastern Europe • Japan • South Pacific35
7770044207LDCLess Developed Countries. Average a couple years of schooling; a 60% Literacy Rate; healthier populations; and a Life Expectancy in the 60s Regions: • Latin America • East Asia • Middle East • Southeast Asia • South Asia • Sub-Saharan Africa36
7770044208Hierarchical diffusionOccurs when the diffusion innovation or concept spreads from a place or person of power or high susceptibility to another in a leveled pattern. Fashion, fads, trends, etc. Many people cutting their hair the way Taylor Swift did.37
7770044209Stimulus DiffusionOccurs when the innovative idea diffuses from its hearth outward, but the original idea is changed by the new adopters. Christianity and its many sects (Protestant, Baptist, Catholic etc) Different Menu items from McDonalds around the world.38
7770044210Contagious DiffusionOccurs when numerous places or people near the point of origin become adopters (or infected, in the case of a disease) Hinduism spreading throughout the Indian subcontinent39
7770044211Relocation DiffusionInvolves the actual movement of the original adopters from their point of origin, or hearth, to a new place i.e. Spread of Christianity, when people moved and brought it with them40
7770044212Formal RegionsHave one or more common characteristics that distinguish them from the surrounding area. i.e. states, countries, cities, areas of specific towns/cities/countries (wealthy vs. poor, industrial vs. residential) MEASURABLE DATA41
7770044213Perceptual RegionsDefined by how the areas are perceived. Reflect people's feelings and emotions towards an area42
7770044214Functional RegionsDefined by a system of interactions. Organized around a specific function (transportation, import/export)43

La Navidad - AP Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
11754958865el nacimiento / el BelénNativity scene0
11754958866las posadas9 nights before Christmas in Mexico1
11754958867la iglesiachurch2
11754958868los villancicosChristmas carols3
11754958869los duendeselves4
11754958870los renosreindeer5
11754958871Papá NoelSanta6
11754958872los regalosgifts7
11754958873La NochebuenaChristmas Eve8
11754958874el trineosleigh9
11754958875la nievesnow10
11754958876un hombre/un muñeco de nievesnowman11
11754958877el hieloice12
11754958878el Año NuevoNew Year13
11754958879La NocheviejaNew Year's Eve14
11754958880la comidafood15
11754958881ir de comprasto go shopping16
11754958884los calcetinesstockings17
11754958885las tarjetas de NavidadChristmas cards18
11754958887el zapatoshoe19
11754958888el Día de los Tres ReyesThree Kings Day20
11754958890la estrellastar21
11754958891el árbol de NavidadChristmas tree22
11754958892la cajabox23
11754958893la velacandle24
11754958894las luceslights25
11754958896los cascabelesjingle bells26
11754958897una sorpresaa surprise27
11754958898el muérdagomistletoe28
11754958899los adornosornaments29
11755163163regatearto bargain/to haggle30
11755174844la rebajadiscount31
11755188153las NavidadesChristmastime32
11755202474el papel de envolverwrapping paper33
11755783721el roscón de reyesKing's cake34

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