All AP Human Geography Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Population & Migration
Which geographer's work, Laws of Migration, includes a theory highlighting the inverse relationship between the distance and volume of migration between a source and destination?
Kant
Ritter
Al Idrisi
Ravenstein
Faustini
Ravenstein
First published in 1885, Ernst Ravenstein's Laws of Migration includes a theory highlighting the inverse relationship between the distance and volume of migration between a source and destination. Ravenstein's work still forms the basis of modern human migration theory.
Example Question #1 : Types Of Migration
Over a series of generations a family from an isolated farm in Maharashtra State in India migrates first to a nearby village, then to a regional town, and finally to Mumbai. This is most accurately known as a __________.
forced migration
periodic migration
step migration
chain migration
voluntary migration
step migration
This type of gradual migration, from farm to village to town to big city, is known as a “step migration” because it happens in a series of steps. It is a common way by which rural families arrive in an urban setting.
Example Question #1 : Migration
Which of the following statements concerning migration is false?
Migration takes place in stages as opposed to one step
Migrants rarely return to their original source location
Rural migrants often move to small communities before they move to larger ones
Migrants often settle in regions where friends or relatives have previously migrated
Migrants tend to not relocate again after reaching their end destination
Migrants tend to not relocate again after reaching their end destination
Migrants do tend to relocate after they have reached their desired destination. It is also common for migrants to return to their original location. All of the other statements are true.
Example Question #1 : Types Of Migration
Which of the following is an example of internal migration?
Jaymes moves from South Africa to Egypt.
Johnny takes a temporary trip to Israel.
Mikey moves from New York to New Hampshire.
Bonnie moves from Canada to Mexico.
Due to a natural disaster, Dana is forced to relocate from Indonesia to Wales.
Mikey moves from New York to New Hampshire.
Internal migration involves movement within a nation-state (e.g., the United States). Mikey's movement from New York to New Hampshire is a good example of internal migration.
Example Question #1 : Types Of Migration
The ability to move from one place/region to another is called __________.
relocation
mobility
communication
migration
travel
mobility
"Mobility" is the ability of something or someone to move from one place or region to another. "Migration" refers specifically to groups of people or animals moving from one region or country to another. "Travel" is voluntary movement from one region to another.
Example Question #2 : Types Of Migration
Which of the following are different types of diffusion?
- Formal
- Uniform
- Functional
- Nodal
- Perceptual
- Vernacular
- Hearth
- Relocation
- Expansion
- Hierarchical
- Contagious
- Stimulus
- Thematic
- Statistical
- Cartogram
- Dot
- Choropleth
- Isoline
- Dispersed
- Scattered
- Clustered
- Agglomerated
- Absolute
- Relative
- Site
- Situation
- Place name
- Hearth
- Relocation
- Expansion
- Hierarchical
- Contagious
- Stimulus
Hearth, relocation, expansion, hierarchical, contagious, and stimulus are all different types of diffusion.
Example Question #2 : Migration
All of the following were significant factors in migration to Great Britain's North American colonies from Europe EXCEPT __________.
serving criminal punishment
economic and financial necessity
escape from religious persecution
the ability to gain large amounts of wealth
avoidance of political disruptions
the ability to gain large amounts of wealth
Great Britain's North American Colonies saw a wide variety of people take the opportunity to settle America's Atlantic coast. Due to the wide variety of colonies and locations from which people came, the reasons for traveling to the New World ran the gamut from political and religious reasons to simple economic necessity and serving punishment in the colonies. Almost all of the colonists were middle or lower class individuals seeking a better life, rather than individuals trying to get rich quickly.
Example Question #1 : Migration
The Pilgrims who migrated to America aboard the Mayflower did so in order to __________.
take advantage of the economic opportunities in the New World
avoid religious persecution in Europe
settle and colonize lands for the French crown
All of the other answers are correct
escape the environmental degradation of English farmland and find new fertile pastures
avoid religious persecution in Europe
The Pilgrims who migrated to America in the early seventeenth century did so in order to escape religious persecution in Europe. They were motivated by reasons of political repression and a desire for personal freedom.
Example Question #2 : Migration
The Indian Removal Act, which required hundreds of thousands of Native Americans to move west or face extermination, was passed during the Presidency of __________.
Andrew Jackson
Herbert Hoover
Thomas Jefferson
Abraham Lincoln
George Washington
Andrew Jackson
In the early years of the American republic, white settlers and the native population clashed violently and frequently, often resulting in massacres and atrocities (more frequently, but not exclusively, committed by white settlers). In 1830, the American government passed the Indian Removal Act, which forced a large number of Native Americans (most of whom were living in the South) to migrate west of the Mississippi. The subsequent death march is referred to as the Trail of Tears. This took place during the Presidency of Andrew Jackson.
Example Question #4 : Migration
Aside from Brazil, what was the most common destination for enslaved Africans during the era of the Atlantic Slave Trade?
Argentina
English colonies in North America
The Caribbean
Bolivia
Central America
The Caribbean
Brazil and the Caribbean were by far the most common destinations for enslaved Africans during the era of the Atlantic Slave Trade. This is because the climates of Brazil and the Caribbean were perfect for growing all sorts of different plantation-based cash crops like sugar, rubber, and cotton.