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1
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2
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- Western extremity of Eurasia
- Lingering world influence
- High degrees of specialization
- Manufacturing dominance
- Numerous nation-states
- Urbanized population
- High standards of living
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3
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- Western Europe
- Eastern Europe
- British Isles
- Northern Europe
- Mediterranean Europe
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4
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5
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- At the heart of the land hemisphere
- Maximum efficiency for contact with the rest of the world
- Every part of Europe is close to the sea.
- Navigable waterways
- Moderate distances
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6
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7
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- Began in Europe in the 1750s
- Based on new agricultural innovations
- Enabled increased food production
- Enabled sustained population increase
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8
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- A classic model in geography
- Fashioned in 1826 to explain the economic patterns developing in Europe
- Based on four concentric land use rings surrounding a market place
- Land use was a function of transportation costs.
- The Isolated State became the foundation for modern location theory.
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9
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10
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- Developed in the UK between 1750-1850
- Evolved from technical innovations that occurred in British industry
- Proved to be a major catalyst towards increased urbanization
- Produced a distinct spatial pattern in Europe
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11
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- Alfred Weber published his work in 1909.
- Examined the influences that affect industrial location
- Focused on activities that occur at specific points
- Identified agglomerative and deglomerative forces
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12
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- Particular peoples and particular places concentrating on the production
of particular goods
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13
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- Movement across geographic space
- Involves contact of people in two or more places for the purposes of exchanging
goods or ideas
- Principles
- Complementarity
- Transferability
- Intervening opportunity
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14
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- Two places, through an exchange of goods, can specifically satisfy each
other’s demands.
- One area has a surplus of an item demanded by a second area.
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15
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16
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- The ease with which a commodity may be transported or the capacity to
move a good at a bearable cost
- Rivers, Mountain Passes, Road networks
- Advances in transportation technology
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17
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- The presence of a nearer source of supply or opportunity that acts to
diminish the attractiveness of more distant sources and sites
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18
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- Urbanization
- Related concepts
- Primate city
- Metropolis
- CBD
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19
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20
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- The term is a political designation.
- Refers to a municipal entity that is governed by some kind of
administrative organization
- The largest cities (especially capitals) are:
- the foci of the state
- complete microcosms of their national cultures
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21
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- A country’s largest city
- Jefferson’s criteria:
- Always disproportionately larger than the second largest urban center
-- more than twice the size
- Expressive of the national culture
- Usually (but not always) the capital
- Examples: Paris, London, Athens
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22
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23
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24
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25
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26
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