Human Settlement Key Words
Mapping
Thematic Maps (e.g. Choropleth)
Absolute Location
Absolute location describes the location of a place based on a fixed point on earth.
Longitude
Latitude
Dot Distribution
Land
Land Use
Land use involves the management and modification of natural environment or wilderness into built environment such as settlements and semi-natural habitats such as arable fields, pastures, and managed woods.
Urban Planning
Population
Scattered Population
A scattered population is a population distribution when a small amount of people are living in a big area.
Clustered Population
Linear Population
Population Density
the number of people living in each unit of area (such as a square mile)
Types of Settlement
Rural
in, relating to, or characteristic of the countryside rather than the town.
Urban
Urbanization
Suburban
A residential area on the outskirts of a city.Suburban areas have lower population density than inner city neighborhoods.
Regarding Development and Area
Developing Nations
Developed Nations
Site
physical characteristics of a place (ex. climate, water bodies, topography, soil, vegetation, elevation)
Situation
Regarding Sorts of Immigration
Migration
Immigration
Emigration
The act of leaving one's own country to settle permanently in another; moving abroad.
Push Pull Factors
Pull factor is a geography term that is used to describe factors that attract people to a country, region, religion, organization etc.. It is the opposite of a push factor, which involves conditions that motivate one to leave. Push factors come in many forms. Sometimes these factors leave people with no choice but to leave their country of origin. Below are three examples of push factors that drive people to emigrate from their home countries. Lack of Jobs/Poverty: Economic factors provide the main motivation behind migration.