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Cartography

Key Issues

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Chapter 1 Key Issues ? This is Geography The Goal: The goal of Key Issues is to build understanding of the text, generate a study guide for later use, and increase retention or memory of what we learn in class and what you read at home. This will make your time spent working on AP Human Geo more efficient and effective. This assignment is designed using research- based best practice for reaching the goal. AP Human Geography Enduring Understandings for This Unit

AP chapter 1 test review

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APHG Unit One Test Concepts Explain the importance of geography as a field of study. Explain major geographical concepts underlying the geographic perspective. location, place, scale, space, pattern, nature and society, networks, flows, regionalization, and globalization Use landscape analysis to examine the human organization of space. Use spatial thinking to analyze the human organization of space. Use and interpret maps. types of maps, map distortion Apply mathematical formulas and graphs to interpret geographic concepts. arithmetic, physiological, and agricultural density Use and interpret geographic models. Use concepts such as space, place, and region to examine geographic issues. Interpret processes and patterns at different scales.

AP Human Geography Chapter 1 Study Guide

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Chapter 1, Part 1?Thinking Geographically? Mr. Chad Guge, Instructor AP Human Geography 2012-13 Top 10 ?You Should Know?s Cartography and Map projection Map Scale and how it works US Land Ordinance of 1785 (Townships and Ranges) Contemporary tools of Geography (GIS, GPS and Remote Sensing) Concepts of Site and Situation Concepts of Latitude/Longitude and creation of Time Zones Types of Regions (Formal, Functional, Vernacular) Concept of ?culture,? how it spreads, and how the environment shapes it Influences on Cultural Diffusion Population patterns and distributions Cartography and Map Projections Def: The Science of Map-Making Early Mapmaking Earliest maps drawn by Babylonians on clay tablets around 2300 B.C., but art of mapmaking is suspected to be even older

aph.geogchapter1readingandstudyguide

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Vocab You Should Know From Chapter 1 (May not be in order as textbook) Agricultural Density Arithmetic Density Density (and Physiological Density) Cartography Diffusion (Contagious, Expansion, Hierarchical, Stimulus, Relocation) Culture (Cultural Ecology, Cultural Landscape) Environmental Determinism Formal/Functional/Vernacular Regions GIS and GPS Globalization Hearth Latitude/Longitude Mental Map Parellels, Meridians Map Scale Site Situation Greenwich Mean Time International Date Line Land ordinance of 1785 Distance Decay Five Themes of Geography Remote Sensing Townships and Ranges Transnational Corporation Polder Map Projection Key Issues to Know (From the textbook) 1. How do geographers describe where things are? 2. Why is each point on Earth unique?

Chapter 1 Key Issue 1

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Maps, a scale model of the real world, are an important tool in geography. Maps can be considered as a reference tool and a communication tool. Maps were first drawn to assist with navigation. Aristotle determined that the Earth was a sphere. He noticed that the Earth?s shadow is a circle during an eclipse. Eratosthenes was the first person to use the word geography. He created the first correctly prepared world map. Ptolemy, writer of an eight volume ?Guide to Geography?, improved map-making that could not be changed for more than a thousand years. Little progress occurred after Ptolemy until the seventh century, when Bernhardus Varenius created a map which stood as the standard for almost a century.

AP Human Geography Vocab Review

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AP Human Geography Exam?Vocabulary Definitions?Unit 1: Nature and Perspectives ?(Ch. 1 & 2 in Barron's ? Pattison?s Four Traditions (1964): W.D. Pattison ??????????? -earth-science: physical geography (not one of the Five Themes) -locational: spatial tradition (location) -man-land: human/environmental interaction -area-studies: regional geography Five Themes of Geography (1986): GENIP ??????????? -location: position; situation of people and things ??????????? -human/environmental interaction: reciprocal relationship b/w humans & env. ??????????? -region: area on Earth?s surface marked by a degree of homogeneity (uniformity) of some phenomenon ??????????? -place: uniqueness of a location (or similarity of two or more locales); phenomena within an area
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