Geography Graphic Organizer By: Michael Ellinger
Location- a particular place or position. An example is Jefferson City of relative but absolute is latitude and longitude an example is 38.5767° N, 92.1736° W.
Place- a particular position or point in space. A physical place is Mout Everest, a human one is The Empire State building.
Human Enviormental Interaction- how people adapt to their enviorments. An example is the increase of oxygen in peoples blood who live at higher locations.
Movement- an act of changing physical location or position or of having this changed. An example is migration.
Regions- an area or division, especially part of a country or the world having definable characteristics but not always fixed boundaries. An example is the United States of America.

Physical Geography- the branch of geography dealing with natural features and processes

Human Geography- the branch of geography dealing with how human activity affects or is influenced by the earth's surface.
Economic Geography- Economic geographers examine the distribution of production and distribution of goods, the distribution of wealth, and the spatial structure of economic conditions.

Population geography- often equated with demography but population geography is more than just patters of birth, death, and marriage. Population geographers are concerned with the distribution, migration, and growth of population in geographic areas.

Political geography- investigates all aspects of boundaries, country, state, and nation development, international organizations, diplomacy, internal country subdivisions, voting, and more.

Military Geography- Practitioners of military geography are most often found within the military but the branch looks not only at the geographic distribution of military facilities and troops but also utilizes geographic tools to develop military solutions.

Religon Geography- This branch of geography studies the geographic distribution of religious groups, their cultures, and built environments

Medical geographers- study the geographic distribution of disease (including epidemics and pandemics), illness, death and health care.

Recreation, Tourism, and Sport Geography- The study of leisure-time activities and their impact on local environments. As tourism is one of the world's largest industries, it involves a great number of people making very temporary migrations and is thus of great interest to geographers.

Biographers- study the geographic distribution of plants and animals on the earth in the subject known as biogeography.
