Culture – Shared beliefs, practices, and material traits of a group.
Cultural Landscape – Human-modified environments that reflect culture.
Sequent Occupance – The layering of cultural influences over time.
Cultural Diffusion – The spread of cultural traits.
Culture Hearth – Origin of a cultural trait.
Cultural Convergence – Cultures becoming more alike.
Cultural Divergence – Cultures staying distinct due to isolation.
Culture: The shared practices, technologies, attitudes, and behaviors of a society.
It includes language, religion, customs, traditions, food, art, and social structures.
Material Culture – Tangible things (clothing, architecture, tools).
Non-Material Culture – Beliefs, traditions, values, language, and religion.
Language: Communication system that shapes identity.
Religion: Belief systems that influence traditions.
Customs & Traditions: Social practices passed down through generations.
Social Organization: Family structures, government, education.
The visible imprint of human activity on the landscape.
Coined by geographer Carl Sauer.
Built Environment – Man-made structures (buildings, roads, monuments).
Agricultural Patterns – Farming techniques, types of crops.
Religious & Linguistic Expressions – Temples, churches, mosques, signage.
Economic & Industrial Development – Factories, trade centers, urbanization.
Urban Landscapes – Skyscrapers, highways, public spaces (e.g., New York City).
Rural Landscapes – Farms, small villages, pastoral lands (e.g., Amish communities).
Sacred Landscapes – Religious or spiritual sites (e.g., Jerusalem, Mecca).
Industrial Landscapes – Factories, ports, commercial hubs (e.g., Detroit).
The idea that different cultures leave their mark on a place over time.
Example: Rome has ruins from ancient times, medieval churches, and modern buildings.
The spatial distribution of cultural traits across landscapes.
Relocation Diffusion – People physically move and bring culture (e.g., Spanish language in Latin America).
Expansion Diffusion – Culture spreads outward from a central point.
Hierarchical Diffusion – Spreads from elite or major cities (e.g., fashion from Paris).
Contagious Diffusion – Spreads rapidly, like a virus (e.g., TikTok trends).
Stimulus Diffusion – Cultural idea spreads but is adapted (e.g., McDonald's in India serves veggie burgers).
Culture Hearths – Where cultures originated (e.g., Mesopotamia, China, Egypt).
Cultural Regions:
Formal Region – Defined by shared cultural traits (e.g., Latin America).
Functional Region – Organized around a central point (e.g., New York’s subway system).
Vernacular Region – Perceived regions (e.g., "The South" in the U.S.).
Cultural Convergence: Cultures become more alike due to globalization (e.g., English as a global language).
Cultural Divergence: Cultures remain distinct due to isolation (e.g., Indigenous tribes in the Amazon).