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US Land Ordinance 1785 • Thomas Hutchins – geographer of US, 1781. • Another ________________ indicator of location. • Divided much of country into system of townships and ranges to promote the _____ of land to settlers in the _______. • Easy to do because of physical geography. • Township – square ___ miles on each side. • Each township has a number corresponding to its distance north/south of a particular base line. US Land Ordinance 1785 • Townships in first row N of a baseline = T1N (Township 1 North), the 2nd row to the N = T2N, first row to S = T1S, blah, blah. • Each has a 2nd # = _________ (corresponding to its location E/W of a principal meridian. • Townships are divided into 36 sections, each one mile by one mile. • Numbered in consistent order, from 1 in the NE to 36 in the SE. US Land Ordinance 1785 • Each section is divided into __ quarter sections (only 0.5 mile by 0.5 mile, or 160 acres). • Amount of land many western pioneers bought as a _____________. • FYE – Explains the location of ___________ across the Midwest, farm fields in Iowa, and major streets in __________. Types of Regions • Region = any area larger than a point yet smaller than the entire planet. • Places can be in more than one region. • Usually applied at once of two scales – countries sharing important features and/or localities w/in a country. • Identify three types of regions: formal, functional, and vernacular. Formal Regions • Formal Region – aka “__________” region or a “homogeneous” region – area within which everyone shares in common one or more distinctive characteristics. • Example: ___________ (cultural), producing tobacco (economic), climate (environmental). • Characteristic is present throughout. • Countries, local government units, Wheat Belt, Corn Belt, Republican/Democratic States. • Identified to help explain broad global or national patterns (religion, economic development). • Usually illustrates a general concept rather than a precise mathematical distribution. Functional Regions • Functional Region – aka “______” region – area organized around a node or focal point. • Characteristic dominates at a central focus or node and diminishes in importance outward. • Region is tied to the central point by ______________ or ________________ systems or by economic or functional associations. Functional Regions • Display information about economic areas. • Region’s node = shop or service (ex. Kroger) • Boundaries of the region mark the limits of the ________ area of the activity. • People and activities may be ____________ to the node; information may flow from the node to the surrounding area. • Example: Circulation of a newspaper. Vernacular Regions • Vernacular Region – aka “___________” region – place that people believe exists as part of their cultural identity. • Arise from informal sense of place rather than from scientific models developed through geographic thought. • Draw a mental map to identify a perceptual region. • Example: The South – WW and Alabama Alabama