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  2. Environmental determinism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_determinism

    The lack of change leads them to wear the same clothes, eat the same fame, breathe the same damp air, and refrain from labor. This continuity and the lack of strong shifts in climate is what Hippocrates identifies as the cause for their appearance.

  3. Change and continuity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Change_and_continuity

    The question of change and continuity is considered a classic discussion in the study of historical developments. [1] The dichotomy is used to discuss and evaluate the extent to which a historical development or event represents a decisive historical change or whether a situation remains largely unchanged.

  4. Attack patterns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attack_patterns

    Another way is to group them into general categories. Another way of categorizing attack patterns is to group them by a specific technology or type of technology (e.g. database attack patterns, web application attack patterns, network attack patterns, etc. or SQL Server attack patterns, Oracle Attack Patterns, .Net attack patterns, Java attack patterns, etc.)

  5. Time geography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_geography

    Time geography or time-space geography is an evolving transdisciplinary perspective on spatial and temporal processes and events such as social interaction, ecological interaction, social and environmental change, and biographies of individuals. [1] Time geography "is not a subject area per se", [2] but rather an integrative ontological ...

  6. Historical geography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_geography

    A 1740 map of Paris. Ortelius World Map, 1570. Historical geography is the branch of geography that studies the ways in which geographic phenomena have changed over time. [1] In its modern form, it is a synthesizing discipline which shares both topical and methodological similarities with history, anthropology, ecology, geology, environmental studies, literary studies, and other fields.

  7. Tobler's first law of geography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobler's_first_law_of...

    Waldo Tobler in front of the Newberry Library. Chicago, November 2007. The First Law of Geography, according to Waldo Tobler, is "everything is related to everything else, but near things are more related than distant things." [1] This first law is the foundation of the fundamental concepts of spatial dependence and spatial autocorrelation and is utilized specifically for the inverse distance ...

  8. Spatial ecology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spatial_ecology

    Spatial ecology studies the ultimate distributional or spatial unit occupied by a species.In a particular habitat shared by several species, each of the species is usually confined to its own microhabitat or spatial niche because two species in the same general territory cannot usually occupy the same ecological niche for any significant length of time.

  9. Zelinsky Model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zelinsky_Model

    The Zelinsky Model of Migration Transition, [1] also known as the Migration Transition Model or Zelinsky's Migration Transition Model, claims that the type of migration that occurs within a country depends on its development level and its society type.