All AP Human Geography Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #671 : Ap Human Geography
Which of the following theories is based on the premise that in any given region there can only be one large city and a series of smaller municipalities—cities, towns, and hamlets—that surround the city and depend on the larger city for goods and services?
Central node
Concentric zone
Central place
Multiple nuclei
Outlying spaces
Central place
The “central place theory” states that in any given region there can only be one large central city, which is surrounded by a series of smaller cities, towns, and hamlets. The central city provides goods and services that meet the needs of the people living in the smaller communities; furthermore, the people living in the smaller communities provide part of the labor supply and market required by the city.
Example Question #672 : Ap Human Geography
Which of these geographers developed the central place theory?
Walter Christaller
Alexander von Humboldt
Johann von Thunen
Kevin Lynch
John R. Borchert
Walter Christaller
The “central place theory” was developed in the 1930s by Walter Christaller. According to the “central place theory” in any given region there can only be one large central city which is surrounded by a series of smaller cities, towns, and hamlets. The central city provides the goods and services required by people living in surrounding communities. John R. Borchert is responsible for organizing American urbanization into five different epochs, called Borchert's Epochs. Johann von Thunen developed a model of modern agricultural land use. Alexander von Humboldt's work laid the foundation for biogeography.
Example Question #1 : Models Of Urban Hierarchies
In “central place theory” what name is given to the outlying communities that rely on the central city for support?
Frontier territory
Hinterlands
Wayward lands
Edgelands
Outlands
Hinterlands
In “central place theory” the outlying towns and small communities that rely on the central city for goods and services are known as “hinterlands.”
Example Question #1 : Christaller's Central Place Theory
Which of the following places has the highest-threshold and highest-range central place function?
Gas station
Cancer treatment center
Department store
Ice cream shop
Post office
Cancer treatment center
By definition, a high-threshold function requires a large population to make the economic endeavor profitable; a high-range function draws people from far away to purchase the good or use the service. A cancer treatment center requires a large population since a relatively small proportion of people need cancer treatment, and a high range because it is likely that people who have cancer but live far away from the treatment center would travel further to be treated for cancer. The remaining choices are considered low range and low threshold, since ice cream shops, post offices, and department stores are more ubiquitous in cities than a cancer treatment center.
Example Question #1 : Christaller's Central Place Theory
Walter Christaller developed his "Central Place Theory" in the 1930s. This theory is based on his idea that settlements only existed to function as "central places" to provide services for the surrounding area. This theory is part of the study of urbanization, taking into account the importance of supply and demand. Taking into account Christaller's theory, answer the following question.
Which of these has the highest-threshold, highest-range central place function?
Walgreens pharmacy
technology business center
pediatric cancer-treatment center
shopping mall
coffee Shop
pediatric cancer-treatment center
Having a high-threshold and high-range means that people will travel very far to receive the services that are provided by this particular company. Out of the options provided, people are willing to travel however far they have to, even sometimes traveling more than half-way around the world to bring their child to the best pediatric cancer-treatment center that there is. They do so because of the medical needs and medical opportunities. A family in Afghanistan might travel to Israel or to Europe to seek the medical help they need when their child is diagnosed with Cancer, or perhaps all the way to the United States.
People are not willing to travel as far for any of the other options mentioned. To go to a Walgreens Pharmacy, most people are only willing to travel within 10 miles.
To go to a coffee shop, most people in the world only have to travel 1 mile, and with coffee not being a necessity and being something you could have at home, many people do not travel at all for this service.
While employees might travel 30+ miles in order to have a good job at a technology firm, customers don't usually travel very far to receive the services provided by these companies. In fact, many people simply purchase these products online and have them shipped to their location.
Shopping malls might draw people from a bit of a distance away, but it is subject to the services provided in a particular shopping mall. For example, your typical shopping mall will only draw customers from the surrounding towns, within a 20-30 mile radius at best. However, the "Mall of America" might draw customers from over 1,000 miles away as more of a tourist destination and as a mall that offers specialized "services" such as the roller-coaster theme park within the mall. But as this again is not a necessity, people are not willing to travel as far to visit this specific mall as they are going to travel to seek services for medical needs.
Example Question #11 : Cities & Urban Land Use
Which of these is not an assumption of Central Place Theory?
People will never purchase goods in the closest place they are available.
Thresholds (the minimum number of people necessary) are differing.
There is no difference in farm productivity.
populations are evenly dispersed
no topographic barriers are present
People will never purchase goods in the closest place they are available.
Central Place Theory assumes that people will always buy what they need in the closest place possible.