Geography 404 – U.S. & Canada

Exam 1 Study Guide

This shortened exam will be worth 75 points and consists of four sections: multiple choice, true/false, matching, and map (1 point each; 25 total points); definitions (5 points each for 4 out of 6; 20 total points); maps (2 worth 5 points each with 5 things to identify on each; 10 points total); and essay (20 points). This exam draws exclusively from the PowerPoint lectures. If you haven’t already, you should review those lectures with your notes at hand. The list below does not represent all of the questions or subject matter the exam will cover. The exam is take-home, but closed notes. You may hand-write notes on a 3x5 card for referencing while taking the exam.

MULTIPLE CHOICE, TRUE/FALSE, MATCHING – 25 points

Ø  You should be prepared to answer several questions on the physiography of the Bypassed East and the Canadian Core

Ø  You should be ready to answer several questions on the historical and cultural geography of the Bypassed East and the Canadian Core

Ø  You should be able to match the limited agricultural areas of the Bypassed East with their predominant crop (think Maine here)

Ø  You should be prepared to distinguish the characteristics of the three major cities of the Canadian Core in several questions

Ø  Pay particular attention to the peculiar layout of the land division system of French Canada

Ø  There are two questions on which cities grew and which cities stagnated in Megalopolis

Ø  Using the map below, you should be prepared to distinguish between French, English, and non-French/English speaking (Allophone) areas of Montreal

DEFINITIONS – 20 points

There will be 6 terms out of the ones below on the exam. You will define four of those terms:

Acadians

Break-in-bulk point

English Townships

Fall Zone

Long lots

Québécois

Bypassed East

Notch

Hinterland

Poutine

MAP IDENTIFICATION – 10 points

You will be circling and labeling 5 items each on maps of the Bypassed East and French Canada

Bypassed East – Canadian Shield extension, glacial deposition features, earliest settlement, crazy tides, Acadians, and potatoes

French Canada – where the air smells like root beer and pepperoni, cultural capitals, a dastardly American Loyalist refuge, where elevation mimics going poleward, allowing a refuge for Rudolph’s cousins, and where you once had to stop (until jet boats were invented). The map on the exam will be of higher quality.

ESSAY – 20 points

The history and qualities of “Main Street”

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