Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY FALL SEMESTER EXAM REVIEW

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY FALL SEMESTER EXAM REVIEW"— Presentation transcript:

1 AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY FALL SEMESTER EXAM REVIEW

2

3 Unit 1 Geography: Its Nature and Perspectives
5-10% of the AP Exam

4 The 5 Themes Location Place Human/Environment Interaction Movement
Regions

5 The 5 Themes Location Place Human/Environment Interaction Movement
Absolute Relative Place Human/Environment Interaction Movement Regions

6 The 5 Themes Location Place Human/Environment Interaction Movement
Toponyms- place names Site- location based on characteristics Situation- relative location Human/Environment Interaction Movement Regions

7 The 5 Themes Location Place Human/Environment Interaction Movement
Migration Communication, transportation, trade Regions

8 The 5 Themes Location Place Human/Environment Interaction Movement
Regions Formal Functional Perceptual

9 Scale Small scale = small detail Large scale= large detail

10 Large-scale Small-scale

11 Important lines of latitude
Parallels are circular lines used to indicate latitude Equator: 0 degrees Tropic of Cancer: 23.5 degrees North Tropic of Capricorn: 23.5 degrees South Arctic Circle: 66.5 degrees North Antarctic Circle: 66.5 degrees South

12 important lines of longitude
Prime Meridian: 0 degrees (runs through Greenwich, England) International Dateline: 180 degrees Time Zones: every 15 degrees of longitude equals one hour

13

14 Time Zones http://www.timezonecheck.com/

15 Geographic Information System: a collection of computer hardware
and software that permits storage and analysis of layers of spatial data.

16 Space-Time Compression, 1492-1962
The times required to cross the Atlantic, or orbit the earth, illustrate how transport improvements have shrunk the world.

17 When contact diminishes with increasing distance and eventually disappears.
Distance Decay

18 Thematic Maps Dot Map Cartogram map Cloropleth map
Contour or Isoline map Proportional symbol map Flow line

19 World Population Cartogram

20 Space: Distribution of Features
Spatial Distribution—The regular arrangement of a phenomenon across Earth’s surface. Three features (1)Density (2)Concentration (3)Pattern

21 Diffusion The process by which a characteristic spreads across space and over time Hearth = source area for innovations There are two main types of diffusion (1)Relocation (2)Expansion

22 The Cultural Landscape
A unique combination of social relationships and physical processes Each region = a distinctive landscape People = the most important agents of change to Earth’s surface

23

24 Unit 2 Population 13-17% of the AP Exam

25 Density Arithmetic Physiological Agricultural
Total pop/total land area Physiological Total pop/arable land Agricultural Farmers/arable land

26 Population Pyramids

27 90% of all people live NORTH of the equator
2/3 of the world’s population is concentrated in four regions: East Asia South Asia SE Asia Western Europe

28 World Population Density

29 VIP Terms CBR CDR IMR TFR NIR Dependency Ratio Demography

30 The Demographic Transition
Fig. 2-13: The demographic transition consists of four stages, which move from high birth and death rates, to declines first in death rates then in birth rates, and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates. Population growth is most rapid in the second stage.

31 REVIEW!

32 Theories of Population Growth
Thomas Malthus 1798 British economist First critic to note that the population was growing faster than the food supply Malthus (early 1800s) worried about population growing exponentially and resources growing linearly. Ehrlich (1960s) warned of a population bomb because the world’s population was outpacing food production.

33 Exponential vs. Linear Growth
Population increases = GEOMETRIC (exponential growth) Food supply increases = ARITHMETIC (linear growth)

34 Population Issues and Policies
Aging population Overpopulation

35 Migration Immigration Emigration Ravenstein’s Laws of Migration
1885- British Most migrants = young, unmarried, males Most move to places that are close, to cities

36 Global Migration Patterns
From Asia to Europe From Asia to North America From South America to North America

37 INTERregional – between regions
INTRA-regional- within one region

38 U.S. Immigration Patterns (3)
Colonization Emigration from Europe Immigration since WWII

39 Unit 3 Cultural Patterns and Processes
13-17% of the AP Exam

40 Schools of Thought Environmental Determinism Possibilism
Environmental Perception Cultural Determinism

41 Concepts of Culture Non-material vs material Acculturation
Assimiliation Transculturation Syncretism

42 Language Chinese = most spoken (as a first language)
Indo-European languages = 50% of languages spoken in the world Tree Branch group language

43 Lingua franca Dialect Pidgin

44

45 Religion Universalizing Ethnic Christianity Islam Buddhism Jewish
Roman Catholicism Eastern Orthodox Protestant Islam Sunni Shiite Buddhism Mahayana Theravada Jewish Hinduism Chinese Religions Shintoism Shamanism


Download ppt "AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY FALL SEMESTER EXAM REVIEW"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google