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Bird migration

Chapter 3 Key issue 2

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Chapter 3 - Key Issue 2: Where do people migrate within a country? Two main types of internal migrations are: interregional (between regions of a country) and intraregional (within a region) In past ? search for farmland; today ? interregional migration is from rural areas to urban areas for jobs Recent immigrants - more than ? immigrate to California, Florida, New York, or Texas Interregional Migration in the United States Population Center ? the average location of everyone in the country, the ?center of population gravity? The changing location of the population center graphically demonstrated the march of American people across the North American continent over the past 200 years; the center consistently shifted westward

Chapter 3 Key issue 1

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Chapter 3 - Key Issue 1: Where are the World?s Migrants Distributed? Introducing Migration Migration ? a permanent move to a new location; specific type of relocation diffusion Geographers document the migration of people across Earth and reasons for the migration Relocation diffusion ? the spread of a characteristic through the bodily movement of people from one place to another Residence ? where they sleep, store their possessions, and receive legal documents Mobility ? a more general term covering all types of movement from one place to another Examples: journeying every weekday from their homes to places of work or education and once a week to shops, places of worship, or recreation areas Circulation ? short-term, repetitive, or cyclical movements that recur on a regular basis

chapter 3 vocabulary biology

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Ch 3 Migration Due: __October 10th_________ ? Standard of Living Sustainability Chain Migration Cyclic Movement Forced Migration Voluntary Migration Gravity Model Intervening Opportunity Periodic Movement Place Utility Push Factor Pull Factor Refugee Chinese Exclusion Act Step Migration Transhumance Remittances Forward Capital Migration International migration Interregional migration Intraregional migration Guest Worker Migration Transition Indigenous Genocide ?
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AP Human Geography Chapter 3 Section 4

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Chapter 3, Section 4 AP Human Geography 2012-13 School Year Chad Guge, Instructor Key Concepts/Terms Information NOT covered in this presentation that you SHOULD know? Historical migration trends within the United States between regions Migration patterns and examples from other countries including: Russia, Brazil, Indonesia, India, and the region of Europe Information COVERED in this presentation? Migration within a region Concept of ?counterurbanization? Migration Within a Region Migration patterns that occur within a region usually fall under? Rural-to-Urban Urban-to-Suburban Metropolitan-to-Nonmetropolitan (also known as ?counterurbanization?) Rural-To-Urban Migration

AP Human Geography Migration Theories Study Guide

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Theories in Migration Additional Content APHG Fall 2013 Zelinsky?s Migration Transition Model Pre-Modern small in volume but lots of circulation type movements Rural to rural migration dominates Transitional (LDCs now in varying stages) Rural to Urban migration dominates: Urban Pull (jobs) & Rural Push Increase in transportation technology Decrease in cost of long-distance movement Post-Transitional: ?advanced societies? Increase in circulation for leisure (summer homes etc.) Rural to urban transition finished International Labor Migration from LDCs to MDCs High rate of International urban to urban (job relocation) Future ?Post Industrial? (Is the Future here?) communications technology possibly reduces the need to migrate

AP Human Geography Chapter 3 Study Guide

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Why do People Migrate? Reasons for Migration Effect of Distance for Migration Characteristics of Migrants Where are Migrants Distributed? Global Migration Patterns U.S. Migration Patterns Impact of Immigration on the United States Why do Migrants Face Obstacles? Immigration Policies of Host Countries Cultural Problems Living in Other Countries Why Do People Migrate Within A Country? Migration Between Regions of a Country Migration Within One Region in a Country Vocabulary You Need To Know You should be able to define, explain, and use real-world examples (when possible) for the terms below. Term/Concept Definition Example(s) (Real-world)

AP Biology Notes on Animal Behavior

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Unit 16 - Animal Behavior List of Terms Fixed Action Pattern (FAP): innate, highly stereotypic behavior, that must be finished even if it is utterly useless. Initiated by external stimuli called sign stimuli e.g. stickleback fish attack other males (which have a red belly) who enter their territory if the stimuli are exchanged between the same species, it?s called a releaser Migration Animals migrate in response to external stimuli e.g. changes in day length, precipitation, temperature environment also gives cues for navigation Some animals track their position relative to sun Animals monitor changes in position of sun against internal circadian clock to tell where they are Nocturnal animals use the North star, which has a fixed position Pigeons use the magnetic field of the earth

Ch7 outline

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Chapter 7, Ethnicity, Key Issue I ? CREATEDATE ?7/30/08 7:22 AM? I. Where Are Ethnicities Distributed? A. Distribution of Ethnicities in the United States 1. Clustering of Ethnicities a. Regional Concentrations of Ethnicities b. Concentration of Ethnicities in Cities 2. African American Migration Patterns a. Forced Migration from Africa b. Immigration to the North c. Expansion of the ghetto B. Differentiating Ethnicity and Race 1. Race in the United States a. ?Separate But Equal? Doctrine b. ?White Flight? 2. Division by Race in South Africa a. Apartheid System b. Dismantling of Aparteid ? II. Why Have Ethnicities Been Transformed into Nationalities? A. Rise of Nationalities 1. Nation-States a. Nation-States in Europe

Gravity Models

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E.G. Ravensteins's (1885) ?Laws of Migration? 1. Most migrants move only a short distance, and then typically to major cities. 2. Rapidly growing cities are populated by migrants from nearby rural areas; in turn, the ?gaps? left in the rural population are filled by migrants from more distant areas. 3. The process of dispersion is the inverse of the process of absorption and exhibits similar features. 4. Each main current of migration produces a compensating counter current. Continued? 5. Long-distance migrants tend to move to major cities. 6. Rural people have a higher propensity to migrate than urban people. 7. Women have a higher propensity to migrate than men.

Migration

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Human Migration How and why did early humans migrate? Over population. Africa- deepest roots traced to. Ice ages caused migration Environmental changes What kinds of evidence do scholars use to trace migration paths? How have the reasons for human migration changed over time?
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