AP Human Geography Chapter 2 Study Guide Terms: · population density - a measurement of the number of people per given unit of land · arithmetic population density - the population of a country or region expressed as an average per unit area · physiologic population density - the number of people per unit area of arable land · population distribution - description of locations on the Earth’s surface where populations live · dot maps - maps where one dot represents a certain number of a phenomenon
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and the Stars Osborne‚ John. 1957. Look Back in Anger. A Play in Three Acts. Salgado‚ Gamini‚ ed. 1965. Three Jacobean Tragedies. Harmondsworth: Penguin. Shaffer‚ Peter. 1974. Equus. Harmondsworth: Penguin. Banham‚ Martin‚ ed. 1995. The Cambridge Guide to Theatre. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Bevington‚ David. 1996. “‘But We Are Spirits of Another Sort’: The Dark Side of Love and Magic in A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” New Berry‚ Ralph. 1985. Shakespeare and the Awareness of the Audience.
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A.P. World History Guided Reading 1 "The Origins of Agriculture to the First River-Valley Civilizations” TERMS: Culture - Socially transmitted patterns of action and expression Foragers - Hunting and food gathering people Animal domestication - The killing of animals for food Pastorialism - Way of life dependent on large herds of grazing livestock Matrilineal - Kinship with mother Patrilineal - Kinship with father Lineages - the holding of land by large kinship (blood relationship)
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Chapter 1: Exploring Life Key Concepts: 1-1 Biologists explore life from the microscopic to the global scale 1-2 Biological systems are much more than sums of their parts 1-3 Biologists explore life across the diversity of species 1-4 Evolution accounts for life’s unity and diversity 1-5 Biologists uses various forms of inquiry to explore life 1-6 A set themes connects the concepts of biology Overview: Biology- the study of life (Page 2) Concept 1-1: • The study extends from the
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AP: CHAPTER 43: IMMUNE SYSTEM 1. List the two lines of nonspecific defense mechanisms with examples of each. • External defense‚ which includes the skin and mucous membranes in the body. • Internal defense which includes phagocytic cells and antimicrobial proteins. 2. What is meant by specific defense? Defense mechanisms are said to be specific because depending on which one they focus on one specific part of the body or a specific type of pathogen. 3. Give examples of “barrier defense
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Biology Review and Study Guide Cell Division and Cancer Cells divide for two main reasons: first‚ the larger a cell becomes‚ the more demands the cell has on its DNA. Second‚ a large cell has more trouble moving enough food in and enough waste out. Before it becomes too large‚ a growing cell divides. The two new cells are referred to as daughter cells. The process by which a cell divides into two cells is called cell division. Mitosis is part of the eukaryotic cell cycle during which the
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Name______________________________ Class __________________ Date ______________ Chapter 4 Ecosystems and Communities Section 4–1 The Role of Climate (pages 87–89) This section explains how the greenhouse effect maintains the biosphere’s temperature range. It also describes Earth’s three main climate zones. What Is Climate? (page 87) 1. How is weather different from climate? Weather is the day-to-day condition of Earth’s atmosphere at a particular time and place
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Biology Midterm Outline Topics: * Topic One: Chemistry of Living Things (p2-4) * Topic Two: The Cell (p5-6) * Topic Seven: Evolution (p23-27) * Topic Ten: State Labs (37-40) Topic One: Chemistry of Living Things I. All living things must maintain homeostasis in order to stay alive. A) Homeostasis: A balanced state in an organism’s body. B) Failure to maintain homeostasis results in disease or death. C) Homeostasis is often maintained using feedback mechanisms. 1. Feedback mechanisms
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Organismal Biology Study Guide for Test # 4 (4 MAY 2005 – Wed) Chapter 34 – Section F – Primates and the Evolution of Homo sapiens Opposable thumb – in primates; but fully opposable only in anthropoid primates Prosimians – example – lemurs Anthropoidea (anthropoids) – includes moneys‚ apes‚ humans Brachiating – swinging through the trees by the arms Overlapping fields of vision (3-D) – advantage for brachiating Old World vs New World monkeys – differences and similarities Know 4 genera
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References: 55 Broberg‚ O and Posniak‚ I (2001) ‘Integrating aspects of work environment into a national research and development programme on food technology’‚ Human Factors and Ergonomics in Manufacturing‚ 11(2): 117-130 57 Hale‚ A (2003) ‘Safety management in production’
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