Verified Test Bank Test Bank Introduction Key Chapter 01 - Introduction to Geography 15e | Test Bank with Answer Key by Arthur Getis by Arthur Getis. DOCX document preview.

Verified Test Bank Test Bank Introduction Key Chapter 01

Chapter 01 Test Bank: Introduction Key

1. Spatial interaction is affected by


A. mobility, economics, and anticipation.
B. the physical environment, the cultural landscape, and the interchange potential of places.
C. distance, accessibility, and connectivity.
D. absolute location, spatial parameters, and network design.


Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

2. Since humans are the active agents in human-environmental interactions, people in general


A. have no contact with the physical landscape.
B. are frequently unmindful of the dangers of inappropriate environmental exploitation.
C. are immune from adverse natural events.
D. alter the physical environment so that any potential dangers it holds are made harmless or removed totally.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Physical Attributes and Cultural Attributes

3. Which of the following is not true of the natural landscape?


A. It provides the setting for human action.
B. It is perceived, interpreted, and used in different ways by different cultures.
C. It determines how people live in a particular place.
D. It is shaped by human action into a cultural landscape.


Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Physical Attributes and Cultural Attributes

4. A street address is an example of


A. relative position.
B. conformality.
C. absolute location.
D. situation.


Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Bloom's Level: 3. Apply
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

5. Geography as a discipline


A. originated in ancient Greek interest in the nature of the universe and the varying character of the known parts of the earth.
B. developed as an outgrowth of the "Age of Discovery," beginning in the 15th century.
C. emerged in the 20th Century with the development of geographic information systems (GIS).
D. was developed in response to a national need to map and describe the American West.


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Section: 01.02 Evolution of Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

6. As geographers use the term, scale tells us


A. the weight of a given commodity.
B. the intrinsic character of the object or area studied.
C. the relationship between earth distance and map distance.
D. the length of a degree of longitude along different parallels.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

7. An example of a formal region is


A. the hub and spoke network for a particular airline.
B. 100,000 square kilometers.
C. Dixie.
D. the area of France where the Breton language is spoken.


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Types of Regions

8. The attributes of a place


A. represent the current state of continuing processes of change and development.
B. are determined by natural processes and remain unchanged over time.
C. are not influenced by relationships with other places.
D. are primarily cultural, with little influence of the physical landscape.


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Physical Attributes and Cultural Attributes

9. Absolute location


A. is an abstract concept unrelated to real-world circumstances.
B. is a temporary and changing characteristic of place.
C. cannot be defined with precision in a world of conflicting cultural perspectives.
D. is a precise position on the surface of the globe.


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

10. The word geography is derived from Greek words meaning


A. human society and the earth.
B. the cultural landscape of the earth.
C. the description of the earth.
D. the measurement of the earth.


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Section: 01.02 Evolution of Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

11. When real estate agents say that "location matters," they are referring to


A. an absolute location.
B. a relative location.
C. the impact of distance decay.
D. site conditions alone.


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

12. The term "geography" was reportedly coined by which Greek scientist?


A. Pythagoras
B. Strabo
C. Aristotle
D. Eratosthenes


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Section: 01.02 Evolution of Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

13. The relationship between the size of an area on a map and its actual size on the earth's surface is called the


A. map scale.
B. map key.
C. map projection.
D. relative location.


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

14. Geography differs from disciplines such as geology, meteorology, and cultural anthropology in that it


A. involves greater accuracy of measurement of phenomena studied.
B. is more precisely defined in terms of the phenomena studied.
C. is concerned with more abstract concepts.
D. uses data from related disciplines to study spatial relationships.


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Section: 01.01 What is Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

15. The location of Chicago at 41° 49' N latitude and 87° 37' W longitude is an example of


A. intensive location.
B. absolute location.
C. relative location.
D. remote location.


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

16. Geography is BEST described as


A. the location of countries, state and national capitals, major rivers, and continents.
B. the study of the origin and behavior of humans and the development of societies and cultures.
C. the study of how and why human and physical attributes vary from place to place on the surface of the earth.
D. the study of the choices made by individuals and societies with regard to the alternative uses of scarce resources.


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Section: 01.01 What is Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

17. Which one of the following best identifies the cultural landscape?


A. the natural resources of the earth
B. the natural landscape as modified by human occupancy
C. the landscape as modified by recent catastrophic events such as hurricanes, volcanic eruptions, and earthquakes
D. places where intense human activities have obliterated any trace of the natural landscape


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Bloom's Level: 2. Understand
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Physical Attributes and Cultural Attributes

18. Which of the following distance measures refers to absolute distance?


A. a 10-minute drive
B. a $10 taxi ride
C. a one-mile walk
D. a scary trip through a dangerous neighborhood at night


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

19. Human systems in geography include


A. Population, political, cultural
B. Human impact on the environment, service activities, geographic techniques and skills
C. Human interaction, weather and climate, human impact on the environment
D. Primary activities, political, landforms


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Themes and Standards

20. Physical systems in geography include


A. Landforms, primary activities
B. Weather and climate, landforms
C. Human interaction, urban
D. Natural resources, population


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Themes and Standards

21. Geography may be described as the study of spatial variation.


TRUE


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Section: 01.01 What is Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

22. Because geographers deal with patterns of spatial interaction that remain constant, scale is not important.


FALSE


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

23. Absolute location is determined by reference to an agreed-upon system of coordinates.


TRUE


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

24. The only true formal geographic regions are recognized political entities such as states, provinces, and countries.


FALSE


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Types of Regions

25. Geography means "measurement of the earth."


FALSE


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Section: 01.02 Evolution of Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

26. A place may be described by its physical or its cultural characteristics, but not by both.


FALSE


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Physical Attributes and Cultural Attributes

27. Scale implies the degree of generalization permissible or supportable.


TRUE


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

28. The term cultural landscape suggests the visible imprint of human activity upon the natural environment.


TRUE


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Physical Attributes and Cultural Attributes

29. To a geographer, site and situation are interchangeable concepts.


FALSE


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Bloom's Level: 2. Understand
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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

30. Globalization refers to the increasing spatial interconnection of the world's social, cultural, and economic activities.


TRUE


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Interrelation between Places and Spatial Distribution

31. Between the Middle Ages and the revival of geography in the 17th century, Muslim scholars were engaged in describing and analyzing their known world and its physical, cultural, and regional variation.


TRUE


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Section: 01.02 Evolution of Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

32. What do geographers call an area that throughout its extent possesses similar characteristics?

Region


Bloom's Level: 2. Understand
Gradable: manual
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Interrelation between Places and Spatial Distribution

33. What are the two ways in which geographical location is described? Use them to describe the location of your campus.

Absolute location and relative location; answer varies to second part.


Bloom's Level: 4. Analyze
Gradable: manual
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

34. Explain the concept of "friction of distance" and give an example of the friction of distance from everyday life.

The barrier of time and space separating places which must be overcome; answer varies to second part, possible answers might be the number of trips they take versus the distance, the frequency of interaction with relatives versus distance, etc.


Bloom's Level: 3. Apply
Gradable: manual
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Interrelation between Places and Spatial Distribution

35. Discuss the ways that changes in communications or transportation technology can change the friction of distance and thus change processes of spatial interaction.

Answer varies. Possible answers for technologies that reduce the friction of distance might include new highway construction, container ships, fiber optic cables, communications satellites, and the internet.


Bloom's Level: 4. Analyze
Gradable: manual
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Interrelation between Places and Spatial Distribution

36. Explain how perceptual (also known as vernacular or popular) regions are different from functional and formal regions.

Perceptual regions persist in people's mind as they are the mental maps as perceived by their inhabitants. Formal and functional regions are constructs of geographers and researchers. The characteristics used in delimitating formal regions are uniform everywhere throughout the territory. Functional regions are defined on the basis of interactions and interdependence.


Bloom's Level: 2. Understand
Gradable: manual
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Types of Regions

37. In describing the processes and patterns of spatial interaction, geographers employ the ideas of


A. distance, absolute location, and size.
B. distance, location, accessibility, and connectivity.
C. distance decay, absolute location and scale.
D. relative location, connectivity, and cultural landscape.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

38. By combining the words 'geo' and 'graphein', the name "geography" was reputedly coined over 2,200 years ago by the Greek scientist


A. Herodotus.
B. Strabo.
C. Eratosthenes.
D. Plato.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.02 Evolution of Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

39. Which of the following is not a dominating interest characterizing all of geography's subdivisions?


A. The spatial variation of physical and human phenomena
B. Study of place names
C. Regional analysis
D. Spatial systems that link the physical environment and human activities


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Section: 01.01 What is Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

40. Which of the following would not identify an absolute location?


A. Township 7 North, Range 2 West
B. 38° North, 79° East
C. Lower East Side of New York
D. 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue


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Bloom's Level: 3. Apply
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

41. Which of the following statements regarding the physical characteristics of a place is not correct?


A. They can simultaneously present advantages and disadvantages with which humans must deal
B. They dictate exactly the manner in which people will live in an area
C. They may be changed by human intervention
D. They may refer to a locality's climate and soil


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Physical Attributes and Cultural Attributes

42. The term "formal region" implies


A. a dynamic organizational unit.
B. a hierarchy of territories.
C. a system where individual parts are interdependent.
D. a uniformity of the attributes within an area.


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Types of Regions

43. The visible imprint of human activity is known as


A. spatial interaction.
B. the attributes of the setting.
C. the cultural landscape.
D. the natural landscape.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.02 Evolution of Geography
Topic: Physical Attributes and Cultural Attributes

44. As opposed to absolute location, the concept of relative location


A. expresses spatial interconnection and interdependence.
B. is defined by an established measurement system.
C. is the same as mathematical location.
D. provides a legal description.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

45. Diffusion rates of ideas or things are least affected by


A. distance.
B. weather.
C. population density.
D. means of communication.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Interrelation between Places and Spatial Distribution

46. The term "location matters" refers to


A. absolute location.
B. connectivity.
C. distance decay.
D. relative location.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

47. Distance can be measured


A. as linear, time, cost, or psychological distances.
B. only as bridging spaces.
C. only as a distance decay principle.
D. only by established units of measurement.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

48. According to Strabo, the purpose of geography was to


A. caution civilizations against the assumption that the nature and actions of humans were determined by the physical environment.
B. create a global grid system.
C. describe known parts of the world and to assess the differences among countries.
D. explore the apparent latitudinal variations in climate.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.02 Evolution of Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

49. The term scale implies


A. the degree of generalization represented.
B. the degree to which places develop and change.
C. the size of the map.
D. the size of the place.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

50. The cultural landscape


A. cannot be affected by the physical environment.
B. exists at different scales and levels of visibility.
C. is always detrimental to the physical landscape.
D. is static and unchanging.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Physical Attributes and Cultural Attributes

51. Earth areas that display significant elements of uniformity are called


A. absolute locations.
B. formal regions.
C. the cultural landscape.
D. traditions.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Types of Regions

52. An example of a functional region is


A. a tropical rain forest.
B. the Corn Belt.
C. French-speaking Canada.
D. the trade area of a city.


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Types of Regions

53. Which of the following is not true with respect to "places?"


A. They are unable to interact with other places
B. They have location
C. They may be large or small
D. They may have both physical and cultural characteristics


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Interrelation between Places and Spatial Distribution

54. Absolute location


A. expresses spatial interaction and interdependence.
B. is the basis for the expression "location matters."
C. makes the distinction between physical and cultural characteristics.
D. records a precise position on the surface of the earth.


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

55. Geographers believe that the essential starting point for understanding how people live on and shape the earth's surface is recognizing


A. absolute locations.
B. spatial patterns.
C. relative locations.
D. human interactions.


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Interrelation between Places and Spatial Distribution

56. Regional boundaries are marked by


A. arbitrary decisions based upon the scale of the map.
B. significant changes in the region's unifying characteristics.
C. spatial reality.
D. the boundaries of a city or incorporated political unit.


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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Types of Regions

57. "Site" refers to the


A. external features of a place.
B. situational location of a place.
C. proximity to other places.
D. the physical and cultural characteristics of a place.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

58. What term refers to how easy or difficult it is to overcome the friction of distance?


A. Accessibility
B. Connectivity
C. Distance decay
D. Spatial interaction


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Interrelation between Places and Spatial Distribution

59. Modern geography had its origins in the surge of European scholarly inquiry that began in which century?


A. 20th century
B. 19th century
C. 18th century
D. 17th century


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Section: 01.02 Evolution of Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

60. Which of the following is not considered a feature of the natural landscape?


A. Canal
B. Lake
C. River
D. Brook


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Bloom's Level: 2. Understand
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Physical Attributes and Cultural Attributes

61. What term refers to the increasing interconnection of all societies in all parts of the world?


A. Spatial diffusion
B. Networking
C. Globalization
D. Spatial interaction


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Interrelation between Places and Spatial Distribution

62. With regard to spatial interaction, telephone lines, road systems, and pipelines are all examples of


A. accessibility.
B. spatial diffusion.
C. movement.
D. connectivity.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Interrelation between Places and Spatial Distribution

63. Which of the following is not true about perceptual regions?


A. They reflect feelings and images rather than objective data
B. They are less rigorously structured than formal or functional regions
C. They are based on the mental maps of ordinary people
D. They are only expressed at a local scale


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Types of Regions

64. Which of the following is not considered a feature of the cultural landscape?


A. Cornfield
B. Soil
C. Farmhouse
D. Hydroelectric Dam


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Bloom's Level: 2. Understand
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Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Physical Attributes and Cultural Attributes

65. "Out West" and "down South" are examples of


A. absolute direction.
B. relative location.
C. relative direction.
D. absolute location.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

66. Which of the following is not one of the three good reasons identified in the textbook as to why people study geography?


A. Geography as a discipline is a natural science that has at its core, a focus on flora and fauna
B. Geography is the only discipline concerned with differing physical and cultural phenomena on the surface of the earth
C. A grasp of geography is vital to understanding the national and international problems highlighted in news reports
D. Geographic training opens the way to careers in a wide array of fields


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
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Section: 01.02 Evolution of Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

67. The concept that, in a spatial sense, everything is related to everything else but relationships are stronger when things are near one another is known as


A. Ptolemy's Fundamental Edict.
B. The Original Decree of Geography.
C. The Golden Rule of Geography.
D. Tobler's First Law of Geography.


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Interrelation between Places and Spatial Distribution

68. The distinctive and distinguishing physical and human characteristics of locales are associated with which of the five fundamental themes of geography?


A. Location
B. Place
C. Movement
D. Regions


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Section: 01.04 Geographys Themes and Standards
Topic: Themes and Standards

69. Which of the following correctly lists the five fundamental themes of geography?


A. Global, national, regional, local, micro
B. Skills and techniques, physical, cultural, environmental, location
C. Movement, regions, relationships within places, location, place
D. Area, space, trends, patterns, time


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Section: 01.04 Geographys Themes and Standards
Topic: Themes and Standards

70. The discipline of geography traces its roots back to the early


A. Egyptians.
B. Babylonians.
C. Mesopotamians.
D. Greeks.


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Section: 01.02 Evolution of Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

71. Many buildings collapsed when the country of Nepal was rocked by a powerful earthquake in 2015 due to the fact that


A. there was no reason to expect an earthquake in that region.
B. Nepal is among the world’s least developed countries and builders could not afford the cost of earthquake safety measures.
C. scientists do not monitor earthquake hazards in Nepal.
D. Nepal has no earthquake safety regulations for buildings.


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Section: 01.01 What is Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

72. By leading ambitious scientific expeditions and synthesizing vast amounts of geographic data, a key figure during the period of early modern geographic research was


A. Carl O. Sauer.
B. Nicholas Spykman.
C. Alexander von Humboldt.
D. John Harrison.


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Section: 01.02 Evolution of Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

73. Geographers who focus their studies on one or a few related aspects of the physical environment or of human populations and societies are known as


A. systematic geographers.
B. regional geographers.
C. physical geographers.
D. human geographers.


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Section: 01.02 Evolution of Geography
Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution

74. Which of the following is not one of the three everyday ways of assessing the space around us and identifying our position in relation to other things?


A. Location
B. Distance
C. Direction
D. Perception


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Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

75. Which map would have the largest scale?


A. A regional map of the United States
B. A state map of Oregon
C. A county map of Multnomah County, Oregon
D. A city map of Portland, Oregon


Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Bloom's Level: 3. Apply
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance

76. The dispersion of an idea or thing from a center of origin to more distant points is known as


A. spatial diffusion.
B. static movement.
C. centrifugal force.
D. spatial creep.


Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Interrelation between Places and Spatial Distribution

77. What geographic unit is based on the recognition and mapping of spatial distributions – the spatial arrangement of environmental, human, or organizational features?


A. Areal extents
B. Regions
C. Dynamic districts
D. Locales


Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Bloom's Level: 2. Understand
Gradable: automatic
Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts
Topic: Types of Regions

Chapter 01 Test Bank: Introduction Summary

Category-# of Questions

Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation-72

Bloom's Level: 1. Remember-54

Bloom's Level: 2. Understand-14

Bloom's Level: 3. Apply-7

Bloom's Level: 4. Analyze-2

Gradable: automatic-72

Gradable: manual-5

Section: 01.01 What is Geography-5

Section: 01.02 Evolution of Geography-13

Section: 01.03 Core Geographic Concepts-57

Section: 01.04 Geographys Themes and Standards-2

Topic: Interrelation between Places and Spatial Distribution-12

Topic: Location, Direction, and Distance-22

Topic: Physical Attributes and Cultural Attributes-11

Topic: Themes and Standards-4

Topic: Types of Regions-9

Topic: Understanding Geography and its Evolution-19

Document Information

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Chapter Number:
01
Created Date:
Aug 21, 2025
Chapter Name:
Chapter 01 Test Bank Introduction Key
Author:
Arthur Getis

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