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Spring 2015 5-10% of exam Areas to Know: •Latin America : everywhere from Mexico south…but NOT USA •Middle East: can include Egypt •East Asia: China •South Asia: India •Southeast Asia: primarily areas like Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, Philippines, Indonesia •Oceania: Australia, New Zealand, nearby islands •Remember that the divide btwn Euro & Asia is in Russia Location Place H-E Interaction Absolute Relative—relate to “situation” Environmental Determinism: envir dictates what choices we have (no snow skiing resorts in FL) Possibilism: envir affects us but we can adjust and essentially overcome envir (snow skiing in NC—we use the mtns and some snow, then create our own snow) Movement: see diffusion slide Regions: see regions slide Projections: problem of distortion in all Robinson most common Two common types Reference: shows cities, boundaries, mtns, roads Thematic: shows a particular feature such as average snowfall, language, voting patterns Small scale=more land shown, less detail World map Large scale=less land shown, more detail Map of Wake Forest Formal (uniform) Functional (Nodal) Distinct characteristics recognized by all EX: North Carolina (lines are drawn, recognized) Organized around a focal point Often ties to transportation, communication, or trade— focuses on interactions EX: The I-85 corridor or Atlanta Metro Vernacular (perceptual) Based on personal beliefs and cultural identity EX: The South: how to we define? (dialect, climate?) Relocation: spread through physical movement of people Expansion: snowball process Hierarchical: starts with one key person, moves to others who have direct access (does not affect the majority of population) Contagious: rapid and widespread throughout a population (like an illness) Stimulus: spread of an underlying idea, but not the entire thing perhaps b/c of cultural barrier (McDonald’s sells veggie burgers) GPS: use of satellites to determine absolute location Google Maps GIS: collection of spatial data that can be manipulated into “layers” of information Google Earth 13-17% of exam Most populated: East Asia South Asia Western Europe North America CBR: # of live births each yr per 1000 CDR: # of deaths each yr per 1000 Doubling time: time for pop to double in size Total Fertility Rate: avg # of children born to a woman in a lifetime 2.1 required for pop to maintain Infant Mortality Rate: # of babies who die w/in 1st year Shorter time in many LDCs Higher in LDCs Life expectancy: avg length of life Higher in MDCs Arithmetic Density Avg population per unit of land Japan has higher density than USA (approx 880 vs 80 ppl per sq mile) Physiological Density # of people per unit of ARABLE land Changes in population of countries experiencing industrialization Stage 1: high birth, high death=low pop growth Stage 2: high birth, low death=high pop growth Improvements in medicine and living conditions Stage 3: moderate birth, low death=moderate growth Many die from disease, famine Lower birth rate b/c of delayed marriage/fewer kids Stage 4/5: low birth, low death=low/zero growth Women are highly educated, working Represent population composition Age Sex Stage 1 or 2--looks like a pine tree Stage 4 or 5: bulge in middle Expansive: countries who need to increase pop (often Stage 4) Restrictive: countries seeking to decrease pop (often Stage 2) China=One child India=sterilization Eugenic: countries seeking to decrease pop by killing off a segment Nazi Germany Cyclic: set pattern completed annually Periodic: temporary repeated relocation, return to origin Transhumance: seasonal movement following livestock EX= college Forced Voluntary Step: move occurs in stages to final destination Chain: following kinship links 1. every migration has a counter migration 2. majority move a short distance 3. most choose big-city destinations 4. urban residents migrate less often than rural 5. Young single adults most likely to migrate 1700s: Atlantic Slave Trade 1700s- 1800s: British movement to North America, Australia, South Africa Movement to colonies in Asia/Africa, job opportunities in America WWII (asylum) Post-CW and WWI: African American migrations to American NE and Midwest Most US migrants from Latin America today Push: what factors make life difficult in your point of origin? EX: War, political policies, famine Pull: What factors make it appealing to move? EX: Job opportunities, religious freedom, quality of life Consequences: POL=gov’t restrictions, immigration policies SOC/CUL=diffusion of culture, adaptation to new area Many seek asylum in new areas Jews in WWII fled to Middle East Many areas of Africa today