Mesoamenta, Peru, Nile Valley, Mesopotamia, Indus Valley, Huang He Valley
Site factors
Characteristics of a place that are specific to that location: Climate, absolute location, natural resources
The internet has allowed people and businesses to leave urban areas in favor of the suburbs, which decreases the amount of traffic downtown and leads to more urban sprawl
1) Allows people to live farther away from an urban area 2) Changes settlement patterns and business locations 3) Increases the amount of goods and services for people across a geographic area
Situation factors
Characteristics that are near a place and impact its growth, development, or daily life: Rivers, roads, relative location
Explain. People emigrate from rural areas in favor of urban areas. Urbanization occurs due to the amount of economic and social opportunities large urban areas offer
1) The cost of living in the city increases 2) People are looking for more land but still want to be connected to the city
1) Implement price ceilings 2) Shift tax policies to increase public services in a city 3) Provide more resources and tax breaks for residents
A metacity is a metropolitan area with a population higher than 20 million people. A megacity has a population higher than 10 million
Many of the world’s most populous cities are located in core countries. However, that is starting to change as more countries move into stages 2 and 3 of the demographic transition model, creating a population boom in cities in the periphery and semi-periphery
Exurb
A settlement that exists outside of a suburban area but remains connected to the metropolitan area
Edge City
A settlement that has its own economic district and is located on the outskirts of a city near a beltway or
Boomburb
A rapidly growing suburban city that has developed its own unique identity
A system that classifies cities based on their population size, economic activity, and the level of global connectivity
The movement of a population away from an urban area to the peripheral areas, resulting in power and money shifting to the peripheral areas. This happens due to shifts in migration, specifically counter-urbanization
Hierarchical diffusion. Information, goods/services, and cultures often move between different global cities first, then diffuse down to smaller settlements in the region and other large settlements in the state, eventually making it down to the state’s smaller settlements
These cities have a high degree of influence on the rest of the world; traditionally act as centers of global trade, finance, and culture; and tend to have a diverse population with a large variety of goods and services
1) New York 2) London 3) Paris 4) Tokyo
The connection between different places or regions (e.g., transportation linkages involve movement of goods and people)
1) Transportation linkages (e.g., the movement of goods and people) 2) Economic linkages (e.g., connections between countries or regions in terms of trade and/or investment)
1) Unequal distribution of goods and services 2) The state will often become reliant on the primate citys economy
A city that has twice the population of the next-largest city in the state
1) Mexico City 2) Seoul
The population of the second-largest city in the state is half that of the largest city, with the third largest city being one-third the size, and the fourth being one-quarter the size