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Chapter 1

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Question
Answer
absolute direction   Direction with respect to cardinal east, west, north and south reference points.  
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absolute distance   The shortest-path separation between two places measured on a standard unit of length (usually miles or kilometers).  
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absolute location   The exact location of an object or place stated in spatial coordinates of a grid system designed for locational purposes.  
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accessibility   The relative ease with which a destination may be reached from other locations. May be measured in geometric, social or economic terms.  
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area analysis tradition   One of the four traditions of Geography, that of regional geography.  
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connectivity   The directness of routes linking pairs of places; all of the tangible and intangible means of connection and communication between two places.  
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cultural landscape   The natural landscape as modified by human activities and bearing the imprint of a culture group or society; the built environment.  
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Culture-environment tradition   One of the four traditions of geography; identified with population, cultural, political, and behavioral geography  
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Earth science tradition   One of the four traditions of geography, identified with physical geography in general  
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Formal (uniform) region   A region distinguished by uniformity of one or more characteristics that can serve as the basis for an areal generalization and of contrast with adjacent areas  
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Functional (nodal) region   A region differentiated by what occurs within it rather than by a homogenity of physical or cultural phenomena; and earth area recognized as an operational unit based on defined organizational criteria  
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Globalization   The increasing interconnection of all parts of the world as the full range of social, cultural, political, economic, and enviromental processes and patterns of change becomes international in scale and effort  
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Locational tradition   One of the four traditions of geography; identified with economic, urban, and environmental geography  
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Natural landscape   The physical environment unaffected by human activities. The duration and near totality of human occupation of the Earth's surfaceassusre that little to no "natural landscape" so defined remains intact  
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Perceptual region   A region perceived to exist by its inhabitant or the general populace. Also known as a vernacular region or popular region, it has reality as an element of popular culture or folk culture represented in the mental maps of average people  
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Region   An area of the earth that displays a distinctive grouping of physical or cultural phenomena or is functioanlly united as a single organizational unit  
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Relative direction   A culturally based locational reference, such as the Far West, the Old South, or the Middle East  
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Relative distance   A transformation of absolute distance into such relative measures as time or monetary costs. Distances between places are constant by absolute terms, but relative distances may vary due to improvements to transportation, communications, etc  
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Relative location   The position of a place or an activity in relation to other places or activities  
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Scale   The size of an area studied, from local to global  
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Site   The place where something is located; the immediate surroundings and their attributes  
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Situation   The location of something in relation to the physical and human characteristics of a larger region  
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Spacial diffusion   The outward spread of a substance, a concept, a practice or a population from its point of origion to other areas  
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Spacial interaction   The movement (people, goods, etc.) between different places; and indication of interdependence between areas  
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In describing the processes and patterns of spatial interaction, geographers employ the ideas of:   distance, location, accessibility, and connectivity  
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The name "geography" was reputedly coined by the Greek scientist:   Eratosthenes  
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What is a dominating interest characterizing all of geography's subdivisions?   the spatial variation of physical and human phenomena, regional analysis, spatial systems that link the physical environment and human activities  
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The physical characteristics of a place help shape how people live, but do not what?   Dictate  
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The term "formal region" implies:   a uniformity of the attributes within an area  
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The culture-environment tradition is primarily concerned with:   how people perceive the environments they occupy  
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Aside from the local scale, spatial relationships may be traced at:   regional, national, and global scales  
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The distribution of cultural phenomena is the focus of which tradition?   locational  
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The visible imprint of human activity is known as:   the cultural landscape  
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Relative location:   expresses spatial interconnection and interdependence  
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Diffusion rates are affected by:   distance, population density, means of communication  
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The term "location matters" refers to:   relative location  
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Distance can be measured:   as linear, time, cost, or psychological distances  
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According to Strabo, the purpose of geography was:   describe known parts of the world and to assess the differences among countries  
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Scale implies:   the degree of generalization represented  
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The cultural landscape:   exists at different scales and levels of visibility  
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Earth areas that display significant elements of uniformity are called:   regions  
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An example of a functional region is:   the trade area of a city  
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The characteristics of places today are the result of:   constantly changing past conditions  
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Absolute location records a precise position, where?    
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The essential modifier used by geographers in forming their concepts is:    
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Regional boundaries are marked by:   significant changes in the region's unifying characteristics  
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"Site" refers to:   the physical and cultural charcteristics of a place  
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What term refers to how easy or difficult it is to overcome the friction of distance?   Accessibility  
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Modern geography had its origins in the surge of scholarly inquiry that began in which century?   17th century  
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Which geography tradition focuses on the study of regions and the recognition of their spatial uniformities and differences?   Area analysis tradition  
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What term refers to the increasing interconnection of all societies in all parts of the world?   globalization  
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With regard to spatial interaction, telephone lines, road systems and pipelines are all examples of:   connectivity  
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Which of the four geography traditions underlies all of geographic inquiry?   locational tradition  
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"Out West" and "down South" are examples of:   relative direction  
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