Você está na página 1de 5

Geography/World History CBM1 Study Guide

Label the following on the map. You may use the numbers to indicate where each is located. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Antarctica Atlantic Ocean North America South America Australia Africa Asia Europe 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Pacific Ocean Indian Ocean Nile River Yangtze River Arctic Ocean Amazon River Panama Canal Suez Canal 17. Bantu 18. Amerindians 19. Han 20. Polynesians 21. Arabs 22. Germanic

Section 1: Population density maps Key Compass Title Scale Be able to compare population from different locations on the planet

Section 2: Religious Origins and Tenets (know the term, and define it): Confucianism Taoism Hinduism Buddhism Judaism Ten Commandments Three Sects Monotheistic Rejection of Caste System Karma, Samsara, Nirvana 4 Noble Truths 8 Fold Path Caste System and the 5 levels of the system Karma, Dharma, Samsara, Moksha Polytheistic (polytheistic monotheism) Origins Polytheistic Three Jewels and their meaning Wu Wei Harmony with Tao Tao Golden Rule Warring States 5 family relationships (most important, and superior/inferior in each relationship?)

Christianity Islam 5 Pillars of Islam Origins 3 sects Monotheistic Origins Tenets 3 Sects Monotheistic

Section 3: Spread of Religion Trade Conflict Silk road

Section 4: Human Progress Early Humans Hunters and Gatherers Migration Beringia land bridge Subsistence Farming Island Hopping

Early River Valley Civilizations Mesopotamia: Tigris and Euphrates Egypt: Nile River Valley China: Yangtze (Yellow) River Valley Fertile Crescent Agricultural Revolution

Early Agricultural Civilizations in Latin America/Asia/Europe Terraced Farming Chinampas Rice Paddies Crop Rotation Three Field System

Section 5: Islamic Golden Age Innovations: Algebra, Astronomy, Medicine Preservation of Greek and Roman knowledge

European Dark Ages

Section 6: Renaissance/ Scientific Revolution Causes of the Scientific Revolution Renaissance Reformation Age of Exploration Printing Press

Effects of the Scientific Revolution Scientific Method New tools (microscope, telescope, barometer, thermometer) Law of Gravity Physiology

Innovations of the Scientific Revolution Heliocentric theory Darwinism

Causes of the Renaissance Merchant Families (Medici) Sponsored Art (Da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael) Return to Greek and Roman Literature

Effects of the Renaissance Printing Press Spread of Literacy Humanism

Section 7: Industrial Revolution Causes of the Industrial Revolution Second Agricultural Revolution Increased Population Natural Resources and Power Resources Economic and Political Stability

Effects of the Industrial Revolution Growth of Factory system movement away from cottage industry Urbanization large migration of people to the city, looking for jobs Living and Working conditions poor living/working conditions low pay, high hours, unsafe. At home: lack of police, poor education, unsanitary. Unionization unions formed to improve conditions/rights for the workers Class Tensions working class v. factory owners

Economic Philosophies Laissez Faire Unrestricted Capitalism Socialism Mixed Utopia

Você também pode gostar