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Human Geography Final
Final...for Human Geography
86
Geography
Undergraduate 1
03/16/2009

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Cards

Term
Name three factors contributing to the shift from beef to chicken consumption.
Definition
1) Relative Decline in Price

2) Health Issues (consumption of red meat)

3) Chicken consumed in many new and different forms (processed, chicken nuggets)
Term
What happened to chickens produced on family farms? What are the issues associated with this?
Definition
They are now under contract to multi-national food producers.
Farmers bear the risk, but see little profit. No leverage in market, but have to meet quality standards set by producers.
Term
The average family food budget now includes ____% take-out and restaurant foods.
Definition
40
Term
How are chickens different than 100 years ago?
Definition
They are fed carefully, with a regulated diet.
Strict Disease Control.
Kept in regulated encironments.
Live weight is 50% greater than 50 years ago.
Labor input has declined by 80%.
Term
___ companies account for ___ of US chicken production.
Definition
10 : 2/3
Term
Who is the leading producer of chicken and who to they sell most to?
Definition
US: Japan, China and Russia.
Term
Where is there increasing competition and big markets for chicken production?
Definition
Increasing: Thailand, Brazil, China.
Big Markets: China and Eastern Europe.
Term
Chicken is a Segmented Industry meaning..
Definition
US has a preference for breasts ;) So they export the wings, legs and feet.
Term
In what ways is agriculture constrained by the environment?
Definition
Soil quality,

Water availability,

Temperature,

Length of growing season,

And terrain.
Term
How does agriculture affect the environment?
Definition
Irrigation,

Ground Water Use,

Pollution
Term
What percentage of people in Core Countries earn their "livelihoods" from agriculture compared to most peripheral countries?
Definition
2% : 50%
Term
Agriculture was treated as quite isolated from broader economic system. Is this still true? Why or why not?
Definition
No it is not.
It is seen as part of a broad production system.
Term
Name five food production systems discussed in lecture.
Definition
1) Hunting and Gathering
2) Slash and Burn Agriculture
3) Pastoral nomads
4) Intensive subsistence Agriculture
5) Commercial Agriculture
Term
Describe Hunting and Gathering.
Definition
Typical of earliest cultures. Now largely disappeared.
Foraging for fish and game and gathering fruits, nuts, berries and vegetables.
Term
Describe Slash and Burn agriculture.
Definition
Form of subsistence agriculture, where people produce their own food.
Shifting cultivation, clearance of a plot of land, burning the ground cover to provide nutrients.
Land used for several years, then abandoned as people move onto the next plot.
Combination of crops, tubers and root crops in tropical areas: grain crops and vegetables elsewhere.
Term
Describe Pastoral Nomads.
Definition
Another form of substinence agriculture, people live by herding animals.
Shifting location associated with availability of forage and water.
Frequently seasonal.
Term
Where are pastoral nomads present?
Definition
Characteristic of grassland regions (Africa, Middle East, Interior Asia)
Term
Describe Intensive Subsistence Agriculture.
Definition
"Chicken and Egg". Agricultural cahnge that allows population to grow? or is it population growth that forces agriculture to be more efficient?
Much more intensive usse of land, sustaining higher population denisities. Settled agriculture-usually in villages. Still prducing food for local consumption. Multiple crops on the same land with some rotation to avoid depletion of soils. Most charcteristic of intensive rice production in E, SE, and S. Asia, but also true elsewhere without rice as the dominant crop.
Term
Describe Commercial Agriculture
Definition
There has been a shift away from local production for local food supply to a more global pattern of production for consumption outside the region or country. This dominated in the core countries and is important in export sectors in the periphery and semi-periphery.
Term
What is an example of a global market for food crops?
Definition
-Fruits and vegetables in US grocery stores come from all over the world.

-Fish increasingly farmed and shipped (shrimp and salmon)-Example of the blue revolution
Term
Name the three agricultural revolution.
Definition
1) Sedentary Agriculture
2) Industrial agriculture
3) Chemical and Biological agriculture
Term
Describe Sedentary Agriculture. When did it occur? Where are the changes most characteristic of?
Definition
The first agricultural revolution. It occurred as early as 7000 BCE. It was the domestication of plants (wheat, maize, rice) and animals (sheep, goates, later water buffalo and horses). Many different heart areas for these innovation, but the changes are most characteristic of flood plains in fertile river valleys (Tigris, Euphrates [fertile crescent] and Nile).
Term
Describe Industrial agriculture. When did it occur?
Definition
The second agricultural revolution entails the transformation of subsistence agriculture in tandem with the industrial revolution. Changed in late 18th and 19th centuries. Dramatic increases in crop and livestock yield, or scientific farming. Improved technology for agriculture, ploughs. Creation of new imputs like fertilizer and field drainage. Necessary to feed growing industrial and urban population. End of 19th centure, new machines (tractors, combine harvesters, reapers, threshers) replaced labor with techonology. Increased productivity: released labor for industrial and service work.
Term
Describe chemical and biological agricutlture. When did it develop and explain the spread.
Definition
The THIRD agricultural revolution involves use of chemical and later biological elements to improve productivity. Chemicals used in the form of synthetic fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides and fungicides. Developed in the US in the 1950's, spread rapidly to other core countries in 1960's and to parts of the periphery by the 1970's. Expensive, based on petrochemcials. Considerable ecological impact.
Term
Name one important dimension associated with the green revolution.
Definition
The use of chemicals to improve yields complemented by the application of biology.
Term
Describe the Green Revolution. When was it initiated? When was it expanded?
Definition
Systematic attempt to expand food production by the development of new high yielding strains of grain crops. It was initiated in the 1940's in Mexico as an attempt to increase wheat production. It expanded dramatically in the 1960's to include rice and maize. Not successful in application to other grain crops, like millet and sorghum (which are African staples.)
Term
How much did Rice production raise in Asia between 1965 and 1985 because of the Green Revolution?
Definition
66%
Term
Name 4 advantages to the Green Revolution.
Definition
- Improved Food Supply
-Much Higher yields per acre (2 to 5x greater productivity) and per worker
-Surplus production for export in some countries
-Faster maturing crops enables multiple crops per year
Term
Name 7 Disadvantages associated with the Green Revolution.
Definition
1) Reliance on reliable water supply

2) Reliance on chemical fertilizer

3) Decreased need for human labor.

4) Susceptibility to pests and diseases

5) Taste (less nutritious, palatable or flavorful).

6) Favors wealthier farmers and wealthier areas over poorer because of input costs

7) Local production may not be able to compete with imports
Term
Name the five elements in the food productino supply chain.
Definition
1) Agricultural inputs: labor, technology, fertilizer, energy
2) Farm production: size, quality of farmland, type of crops, labor
3) Product Processing: Washing and grading, freezing and packin, slaughtering
4) Food Distribution: Wholesalers, retailers
5) Food consumption: dietary tastes and preferences, purchasing power, population growht, household strucutre, employment. Consumption of prepared food.
Term
What are the four mediating factors that affect the Food Production supply chain (5 things).
Definition
1) physical environment: soil quality, water supply, climate, topography
2) state’s farm policies: national government affects land tenure and land inheritance systems, may affect product prices through subsidies for production and price supports.
3) credit/financial markets: availability of credit for farmers (machinery, seed), market for agricultural land (mortgages)
4) international food trade: international markets, food aid, export subsidies.
Term
Name three case studies that embody political Geography.
Definition
Sri Lankan Cricket Team,

Somali Pirates,

Democratic Republic of Congo
Term
Briefly describe the "Sri Lankan Cricket Team". What are some possible motives?
Definition
Gunmen attempted to kill the team on their way to a match in Pakistan. Took place in Indian/Pakistan broder city. Possible Motives: Sri lanka has been in cicil war for two decades, w/ ETHNIC TAMILS fighting against the government, dominated by the SINHALESE. Government captures last major settlement controlled by rebels a week before the shooting.
Pakistan has been frontline for "global war on terror". Has had very ineffective control over border provinces with Afghanistan significant taliban presence.
India and Pakistan don't like ach other since 1947 when they left England's control. Pakistans "supposedly" were the cause of a Massacre in India two moths prior.

Who Dun It?
Tamil Rebels, Taliban, Indian retaliation. Each has significant conflicts. But nobody knows.
Term
Briefly describe the Somali Pirates. Why has piracy made a comeback?
What three people make up pirates.
Definition
2 major vessels and 100 smaller ones were held for ransom last year by Somali pirates. One major vessel was carrying oil from Saudi and the other was carrying russian battle tanks from Ukraine to Kenya.

Piracy has made a comeback over the past 10 years because of
1) The collapse of the Somali national government caused no control over their territory of land or water. Local clan warlords and Ethiopian troops are trying to make peace, however the troops were recently evacuated, and It is a FAILED STATE and
2) The collapse of the state has meant that foreign fisherman can come and illegally fish in Somali waters. This displace Somali fishermen, who turned to become pirates. ARGH!
To be a pirate, you need a FISHERMAN who knows the water, MUSCLE to board this ships and hurt people and GEEKS to run the boat with GPS, satellite phones and modern vessels.
Term
How do pirates get their weapons?
Definition
Plenty are available in Somalia, others are smuggled from Aden.
Term
Who funds pirates?
Definition
It is suspected that businessmen from Dubai are to blame.
Term
How do you prevent piracy?
Definition
Naval vessels from several countries now patrolling the Gulf of Aden.
Term
Tell me about the Democratic Republic of Congo. What problems is it facing.
Definition
Described as THIRD WORLD WAR. It lasted from 1998-2003 and was a conflcit involved 9 countries and left an estimated 5 million people dead. It was the worsening of ongoing problems since the independence from Belgium in 1960. SECESSION MOVEMENT by resource rich province of KATANGA (south east DR Congo) immediately after independence. Recent war derives from spillover of genocide in neighboring Rwanda in 1994. Ineffective government control of the region. Largest, most expensive and heaviest armed UN peacekeeping force deployed to stop the conflict.
Term
How many people died in the "Third World War" of DR Congo?
Definition
5 Million.
Term
Organization of cities: from center to outskirts
Definition
City center: High Volume Retailing, then facotires, then warehousing, residential is farthest from center.
Term
Organization of city (center-outskirts)shows:
Definition
The pattern of land value as well as land use. The city center has the most expensive land and it gets cheaper as you move away. (Negative exponential decay)
Term
Where is the most expensive housing?
Definition
On cheaper land. Two reasons (1) More land can be purchased when it is cheap (2) There is more $$ left over to be spent on the house if a very small amount of money was spent on the land.
Term
Where do the people who can least afford housing live?
Definition
They cluster around where the jobs are: the city center. Living by their work also means that they will spend less money on transportation since they can walk or ride the bus.
Term
What is unusual about the organization of Los Angeles?
Definition
The downtown area (city center) is not very exciting, but Westwood and areas on the edge ARE exciting and where the commercial/retail businesses are.
Term
US cities are known for their ______ skylines while European cities are known for their ______ skylines.
Definition
Highrise, lowrise
Term
Characteristics of European cities:
Definition
There is greater neighborhood stability (less change over time). Families tend to stay in the same place/city.
Term
Cities in the periphery vs. the core
Definition
(1) Population Density - higher in peripheral cities, lower in the core (2) Public Services - EX: transportation systems, lower in periphery and higher in the core (3) Types of Commerce - periphery is mainly street vendors, sells hand crafted items, more street markets (4) City Planning - peripheral cities are unplanned, core cities ARE planned (5) Economic make-up - peripheral cities have huge disparities of wealth and poverty
Term
Territory refers to...
Definition
The physical space occupied by a political unit (country). That territory is bounded.
Term
Boundaries (borders)
Definition
defined the territory of the two adjacent units (Ex: 49th paralles is the boundary in west for the US and Canada)
Term
______ is a political entity, a government that exercises sovereignty over territory within its borders.
Definition
State
Term
The functions of state:
Definition
(1) Conduct foreign policy (2) national defense
Term
____ refers to the characteristics of a population. Explain.
Definition
Nation. It reflects a group of people with shared experience, common values and a sense of belonging, generally to a state.
Term
When nation and state are linked, this is a ______. How often is this the case?
Definition
Nation-state. Few states where the nation and the state are coincident: Japan, Iceland, Somalia. Most states are multi-national or multi-ethnic and this can create a variety of problems.
Term
The world map presents a ______.
Definition
false picture of political continuity
Term
Recent break-ups on the map are:
Definition
(1) Break-up of the Soviet Union created 15 new states (2) Break-up of Yugoslavia created 7
Term
Where are there boundary disputes?
Definition
On every continent, including Antarctica.
Term
Only one South American state, _____, has the same boundaries it did when it came independent.
Definition
Uruguay
Term
There are claims of _______ in many states for self-government. Where?
Definition
Ethnic minorities. In both the core and the periphery. Mre likely to be resolved peacefully in the the core.
Term
How do states evolve?
Definition
Typical argument is the state evolves around a ‘core’ region – Paris (Ile de France), London (SE England). Influence and control gradually spreads outward to adjacent regions. This is true of middle-sized European states, with centralized governments.
Term
Describe the spread of Russia from 1462-present.
Definition
Today, it is a huge state. In 1462, its core was the Duchy of Muscovy (15,000 sq. mls.): by 1914, it had expanded to 8.5 million sq. mls. Expanded through a series of territorial acquisitions. Initially, north and west to exploit natural resources – timber and fur. By end of 17th century, eastward expansion including vast area of Siberia to the Pacific, Arctic and Caspian seas by conquest and annexation. Westward (Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus and W. Ukraine) and southward expansion (towards warm water ports on the Black Sea) under Catherine the Great and Peter the Great. Capital moved to St. Petersburg in 1713: remained there until 1918. Territorial expansion completed in 19th century with acquisition of North Caucasus, Kazakhstan and Far East. Empire incorporates 100 ethnic minorities.
Term
Most empires created by European expansion overseas, leads us to _____ and _______.
Definition
Colonialism and imperialism
Term
Competition betweeen core states, original phase at the end of the 15th century...
Definition
Spain and Portugal divide up the world and Europeans take control of the Americas. Portugal gets Brazil: Spain gets the rest of North and South America. (Treaty of Tordesillas)
Term
European empires between 1620 and 1750:
Definition
Britain, France and Netherlands become imperial states, mainly in the Caribbean. Scramble for sugar. Need for labor created the slave trade, part of the triangular trade between Africa, Americas and Europe.
Term
Final phase of empires:
Definition
Scramble for Africa. Congress of Berlin 1884 European powers carve up the map of Africa. Create most of the current state boundaries (irony is that most African boundaries are older than most European).
Term
How do colonies differ from empires?
Definition
They include large numbers of settlers from the core country (US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa)
Term
Examples of decolonlization:
Definition
US independence from Britain, 1776 (those revolting colonies!). Early 19th century revolts against Spain and Portugal in the Americas. Most other regions become independent after 1945. Indian sub-continent in 1947, India and Pakistan separate reflecting religious differences. SE Asian French territories given independence in 1954. Most of Africa decolonized after 1960. Political independence did not necessarily translate into economic independence.
Term
Boundaries of Urbanization
Definition
(1) High levels of urbanization in core countries (2) change in rates greatest in areas w/ lowest level of urbanization (3) colonialism and imperialism - shades of replication
Term
United States has no ________ city.
Definition
dominant
Term
New York dominates:
Definition
media & finances, it is a global city.
Term
US Population spread 1790-present
Definition
-1790: pop. concentrated in NE mostly along coast. -1830: pop. spreading W, growth around Erie Canal (new, faster transportation) -1870: Continued western expansion. New Orleans, St. Lous, metropolitan area of Chicago. Development of the manufacturing belt. -1920: Manufacturing belt at its height. More settlement on W coast (LA, Seattle, Portland). Dallas becomes the Chicago of the south, with cattle, wheat and railroads. -1960: Denver, Salt Lake City, Albequerque. Rapid growth in Florida (Miami) Increased growth on W Coast.
Term
Majority of urban growth in the US:
Definition
Seattle, San Diego... Pacific NW, SW, Denver, Phoenix, the South.
Term
**4 levels of scale**
Definition
(1) World (global) scale (2) National scale (3) Community scale (4) Personal scale
Term
**3 types of location**
Definition
(1) Nominal location - what we call places (2) Absolute location - Latitude/longitude (3) Relative Location - how places are related to one another in terms of cost, time, or accessibility
Term
**Two types of regions**
Definition
(1) Formal regions - defined by the presence of one or more common characteristics ex Spanish speaking world (2) Functional regions - defined by the flows or movements between one place and a set of other places
Term
**The changing global context**
Definition
(1) relatively little change in the core (2) External area disappears (3) Periphery gets relatively smaller (4) Semi-periphery expands
Term
**4 distinct elements of contemporary globalization**
Definition
(1) New International Division of Labor (2) Internationalization of Fincance (3) New technologies (4) Global Consumer Markets
Term
Is the definition of "urban" the same across the globe?
Definition
No, there is no agreed upon definition and it varies from country to country.
Term
It is estimated that _____ the world population lives in urban settlements.
Definition
half
Term
Rapid growth in world urbanization
Definition
1900 - 13% of population (220 million)
1950 – 29% (732 million
2005 – 49% (3.2 billion)
USA 5% urban in 1800, 50% in 1900 and just under 80% today.
Term
Two notes about urbanization:
Definition
(1) proportion of population who are urban has increased over time, but (2) there has been growth in total population at the same time. Therefore the numbers of people living in urban places worldwide has risen 16x since 1900.
Term
Levels of urbanization are ____ in the core regions. How much?
Definition
High. typically 80% or higher in most of Western Europe, North America and Japan. High levels are no longer exclusive to the core – S. Korea, Taiwan, Australia and parts of the Middle East have similar levels.
Term
Latin America surprisingly _____ urbanized. Compare/contrast with Europe.
Definition
heavily. 77% vs Europe 73%.
Term
Regions with low levels of urbanization:
Definition
Africa and Asia (with exceptions)
Term
Where are rates of urban growth highest? Lowest?
Definition
Opposite of levels of urbanization: Rates of urban growth are highest in Africa and Asia, while urban growth now slow in core countries.
Term
Change in the distribution of world's largest cities...
Definition
In 1950, 20 of the 30 largest cities in the core, including the five largest, and nine were in Europe. By 2010, only eight of the 30 largest cities are projected to be in the core, with only three in Europe. No European city is projected to be in the top 20. e.g. Mumbai (Bombay) India, 2.1 M in 1950, projected to be 20 M in 2010, second only to Tokyo.
Term
Primate cities:
Definition
All major functions - government, commercial, industrial, and services - located in one place. Urban systems dominated by one single large city. True in both the core and periphery. EX: France, Portugal, Philippines, Bangladesh.
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