Human geography:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Don Mills, Ontario
Oxford Univ. Press
2004
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Ausgabe: | 5. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XIII,538 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
ISBN: | 0195419081 |
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100 | 1 | |a Norton, William |d 1944- |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Human geography |c William Norton |
250 | |a 5. ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Don Mills, Ontario |b Oxford Univ. Press |c 2004 | |
300 | |a XIII,538 S. |b Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
650 | 4 | |a Géographie humaine - Manuels | |
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650 | 4 | |a Human geography |v Textbooks | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Figures, Tables, and Boxes vii
PREFACE xi
Fifth Edition: Special Features xi
To the Student xii
To the Instructor xii
Acknowledgements xiii
INTRODUCTION 1
Three Recurring Themes 1
Why Human Geography? 3
The Goal of Human Geography 3
The Human Geographer at Work 4
About This Book 9
About Being a Human Geographer 12
Summary 12
Further Explorations 13
On the Web 13
1 WHAT IS HUMAN GEOGRAPHY? 15
Preclassical Geography 16
Classical Geography 17
The Fifth to Fifteenth Centuries: Geography in
Europe, China, and the Islamic World 19
The Age of European Exploration and Discovery 22
Geography Rethought 25
Institutionalization: 1874 1903 30
Prelude to the Present: 1903 1970 33
Contemporary Geography 35
Postscript 38
Summary 40
Links to Other Chapters 41
Further Explorations 41
On the Web 42
2 STUDYING HUMAN GEOGRAPHY 45
Philosophical Options 46
Human Geographic Concepts 55
Techniques of Analysis 65
A Concluding Comment 75
Summary 76
Links to Other Chapters 77
Further Explorations 78
On the Web 79
3 THE EARTH: A HUMAN ENVIRONMENT 81
Planet Earth 82
Physical Processes 83
Making the Physical Landscape 86
Global Environments 90
CONTENTS
Life on Earth 94
Human Origins 95
Understanding Human Evolution: Three Myths 99
Conclusion 100
Summary 101
Links to Other Chapters 102
Further Explorations 102
On the Web 103
4 THE EARTH: A FRAGILE HOME 105
A Global Perspective 106
Humans as Simplifiers of Ecosystems 107
Environmental Ethics 110
Human Impacts 113
Earth s Vital Signs 130
Sustainability and Sustainable Development 132
Summary 135
Links to Other Chapters 136
Further Explorations 137
On the Web 138
5 THE HUMAN POPULATION: HISTORY
AND CONCEPTS 141
Fertility and Mortality 142
History of Population Growth 163
Explaining Population Growth 166
The Need for Better Explanations 170
Summary 172
Links to Other Chapters 174
Further Explorations 174
On the Web 175
6 THE HUMAN POPULATION:
AN UNEQUAL WORLD 177
Distribution and Density 178
Migration 181
Refugees 192
The Less Developed World 196
Summary 212
Links to Other Chapters 213
Further Explorations 214
On the Web 215
7 CULTURES: THE EVOLUTION AND
REGIONALIZATION OF LANDSCAPE 217
A World Divided by Culture? 218
Humans in Groups 218
The Evolution of Culture 221
Cultural Regions 224
The Making of Cultural Landscapes 229
VI Human Geography
Language 232
Religion 240
Cultural Globalization 247
Summary 250
Links to Other Chapters 251
Further Explorations 252
On the Web 253
8 CULTURES: SYMBOLIC AND SOCIAL
LANDSCAPES 255
Rethinking Culture 256
Types of Society 257
Social Theory 259
Landscape as Place 264
Vernacular Regions 266
Ethnicity 268
Landscapes and Power Relations 270
Folk Culture and Popular Culture 277
Group Engineering in a Globalizing World? 281
Summary 282
Links to Other Chapters 283
Further Explorations 284
On the Web 285
9 THE POLITICAL WORLD 287
State Creation 288
Geopolitics (and Geopolitik) 296
The Stability of States 298
The Role of the State 312
Elections: Geography Matters 315
The Geography of Peace and War 317
Our Geopolitical Future? 320
Summary 326
Links to Other Chapters 327
Further Explorations 328
On the Web 329
10 INTERACTION AND ECONOMIC
GLOBALIZATION 331
Distance Friction and Frictionless Distance 332
Concepts of Distance and Space 333
Diffusion 339
Transportation 343
Trade 348
Towards One World 351
Economic Globalization 354
A Global Village? 360
Summary 361
Links to Other Chapters 362
Further Explorations 362
On the Web 363
11 AGRICULTURE 365
Inventing and Reinventing Economic Geography 366
The Agricultural Location Problem 371
Distance, Land Value, and Land Use 379
World Agriculture: Origins and Evolution 382
World Agriculture: Types and Regions 391
A Marxist Perspective on Agriculture 396
Political Ecology and Agriculture 401
Consuming Food 403
Summary 405
Links to Other Chapters 407
Further Explorations 407
On the Web 409
12 SETTLEMENT 411
Rural Settlement 412
Origins and Growth of Cities 419
Urban Locations I: Historical Explanations 424
Urban Locations II: Central Place Theory 426
Cities in the More Developed World 431
Cities in the Less Developed World 446
Summary 452
Links to Other Chapters 454
Further Explorations 455
On the Web 457
13 INDUSTRY AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT 459
The Industrial Location Problem 460
The Industrial Revolution 465
World Industrial Patterns 469
Recreation and Tourism 486
The Geography of Uneven Development 491
Summary 495
Links to Other Chapters 497
Further Explorations 498
On the Web 500
CONCLUSION: THE HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
OF THE FUTURE...AND THE FUTURE OF
HUMAN GEOGRAPHY 501
Changing Human Landscapes 502
Changing Human Geography 506
Being Human Geographers: Where We Began 508
Summary 509
Further Explorations 509
On the Web 510
References 511
Glossary 520
Credits 529
Index 531
FIGURES, TA[
FIGURES
Intro. 1 World political divisions, 2000 4
Intro.2 World political divisions, 1938 5
1.1 The world according to Eratosthenes 17
1.2 The world according to Ptolemy 18
1.3 An example of a T O map 19
1.4 An example of a Portolano chart 19
2.1 The scientific method 48
2.2 The site ofWinnipeg 57
2.3 The situation ofWinnipeg within North America
57
2.4 Clustered, random, and uniform point patterns 60
2.5 A typical distance decay curve 60
2.6 Impact of spatial scale on descriptions of point
patterns 61
2.7 Urban centres in Manitoba 61
2.8 A typical S shaped growth curve 62
2.9 Images of North America in 1763 63
2.10 Mapping at a scale of 1:250,000 66
2.11 Mapping at a scale of 1:50,000 67
2.12 Schematic representation of a dot map 67
2.13 Schematic representation of a choropleth map 67
2.14 Schematic representation of an isopleth map 67
2.15 Mercator projection 68
2.16 Mollweide projection 68
2.17 Robinson projection 68
2.18 Two topographic maps of the Love Canal Area,
Niagara Falls, New York 69
3.1 Revolution of the Earth around the Sun 83
3.2 Moving continents 84
3.3 Major ocean currents 85
3.4 Global cordilleran belts 87
3.5 Global distribution of soil types 88
3.6 Global distribution of natural vegetation 89
3.7 Global distribution of climate 89
3.8 Generalized global environments 90
4.1 Chemical cycling and energy flows 107
4.2 Some consequences of human induced vegetation
change 116
4.3 Location of tropical rain forests 118
4.4 Protecting Australian agriculture from rabbits and
dingoes 120
4.5 The global water cycle 123
4.6 Impact of sea level change on Bangladesh 128
4.7 Global distribution of some major environmental
problems 130
5.1 World distribution of crude birth rates, 2002 148
5.2 Generalized J shaped curve of death rates and age
149
3 L E S , AND BOXES
5.3 World distribution of crude death rates, 2002 150
5.4 World distribution of life expectancy, 2002 151
5.5 World distribution of rates of natural increase, 2002
155
5.6 Age and sex structure in China, 1990 158
5.7 Age structure of populations 159
5.8 Age sex structure in Brazil: 1950, 1970, 1987 160
5.9 Age ^ex structure in Canada: 1861, 1921,1981, 2036
162
5.10 World population growth 165
5.11 The demographic transition model 168
6.1 World population distribution and density 178
6.2 Mental maps 185
6.3 The push pull concept and relevant obstacles 186
6.4 Major world migrations, 1500 1900 187
6.5 Refugee numbers, 1960 2002 192
6.6 Refugee outflows by origin, 1997 2001 194
6.7 Refugee population by country of asylum, 2001
195
6.8 The Horn of Africa 197
6.9 The Third World 198
6.10 North and South 198
6.11 Groups of economies 200
6.12 The world system 202
6.13 The construction of entitlements: selected factors
and mechanisms at different scales 206
7.1 Civilizations in the ancient world 224
7.2 Cultural regions of the world 225
7.3 Europe defined 226
7.4 Regions of North America 227
7.5 Cultural regions of the United States 228
7.6 Regions of Canada 228
7.7 Core, domain, and sphere 230
7.8 World distribution of language families 233
7.9 Initial diffusion of Indo European languages 235
7.10 Diffusion of Indo European languages into England
235
7.11 Four official languages in Switzerland 236
7.12 Dutch, French, and German in Belgium 236
7.13 French and English in North America 237
7.14 Hearth areas and diffusion of four major religions
240
7.15 World distribution of major religions 241
8.1 Components of place as a historically contingent
process 261
8.2 North American vernacular regions 267
8.3 Apartheid on the national scale in 1975 273
9.1 The British Empire in the late nineteenth century
290
Vlii Human Geography
9.2 Principal elements in the process of exploration 292
9.3 Territorial expansion of the United States 293
9.4 Jones field theory 294
9.5 Mackinder heartland theory 297
9.6 African ethnic regions 300
9.7 African political areas in the sixteenth, eighteenth,
and nineteenth centuries 301
9.8 Areas with nationalist/separatist movements in
Europe 302
9.9 The former Yugoslavia 303
9.10 The former USSR 306
9.11 Some areas of conflict in South Asia 307
9.12 European ethnic regions 311
9.13 World distribution of state types 314
9.14 The original gerrymander 316
9.15 Congressional districts in 1960s Mississippi 316
9.16 World civilizations 321
10.1 A non straight line, shortest distance route 333
10.2 A one way system 333
10.3 Time distance in Edmonton 334
10.4 Toronto in physical space and time space 334
10.5 Logarithmic transformation of distances from
Asby, Sweden 336
10.6 The London underground system 337
10.7 Distribution of innovativeness 341
10.8 Effects of pre emption on the adoption curve 343
10.9 Diffusion of transport innovations in Britain,
1650 1930 344
10.10 Evolution of a transport network 345
10.11 The road network of Martinique 347
10.12 Conventional international trade and intra firm
trade within a transnational corporation 354
10.13 The contemporary geo economy 356
11.1 Relationship between mean annual rainfall and
wheat yield, 1909 371
11.2 Crop and livestock associations, US Canada border
374
11.3 Supply and demand curves 375
11.4 Rent paying abilities of selected land uses 375
11.5 Economic rent lines for three crops and related
zones of land use 376
11.6 Agricultural land use in the isolated state 377
11.7 Relaxing a von Thiinen assumption: a navigable
waterway 378
11.8 Relaxing two von Thiinen assumptions: multiple
markets and a transport network 378
11.9 Scatter graphs, best fit lines, and r values 380
11.10 Agricultural land use in Uruguay: (a) as predicted
by von Thiinen theory; (b) actual 381
11.11 World agricultural regions 392
11.12 Percentage of labour force in agriculture by country
397
11.13 The food supply system 400
11.14 Global dietary patterns 403
12.1 Growth of urban population relative to growth of
world population 413
12.2 Township survey in the Canadian prairies 414
12.3 Examples of nucleated rural settlement patterns 415
12.4 Approved urban areas in the regional municipality
of Niagara, 1989 419
12.5 Percentage urban population by country, 1996 422
12.6 British new towns 425
12.7 A triangular lattice 429
12.8 Theoretical trading areas 429
12.9 A central place system: the marketing principle 430
12.10 A central place system: the transportation principle
430
12.11 A central place system: the administration principle
431
12.12 Urban land values 433
12.13 Three models of the internal structure of urban
areas 433
12.14 Three images of Los Angeles 441
12.15 A model of postmodern urban structure 444
12.16 Cities with 10 million or more population 444
12.17 World cities and spheres of influence 446
12.18 Cities in the less developed world with more than
2 million population 448
12.19 Cities in China 449
13.1 A locational triangle 462
13.2 A simple isotim map 463
13.3 An isodapane map 463
13.4 Transport cost and distance 464
13.5 Stepped transport costs 464
13.6 Major oil trade movements (million tonnes) 471
13.7 Major world industrial regions 473
13.8 Export processing zones in Asia 476
13.9 Special economic zones in China 478
13.10 Relationship between economic growth and
distribution of employment 482
13.11 Percentage of labour force in industry by country
483
13.12 Percentage of labour force in services by country
484
13.13 The tourism system of place construction 491
TABLES
Intro. 1 Selected demographic data 7
3.1 Basic chronology of life on earth 95
3.2 Basic chronology of human evolution 97
4.1 Shallow and deep ecology compared 115
4.2 Global deforestation: estimated areas cleared
(000s km2) 116
5.1 Contraceptive use, by regions, 2002 145
5.2 Population data, Canada, 2002 149
5.3 Countries with highest levels of HIV/AIDS
prevalence, 2001 153
5.4 Countries with highest rates of natural increase
(3.0 and above), 2002 154
5.5 Countries with lowest rates of natural increase
(less than 0.0), 2002 155
5.6 Projected population growth, 2002 2050 156
5.7 Global aging, 1950 2050 161
5.8 Major epidemics, 1500 1700 164
5.9 Adding the billions: actual and projected 165
5.10 Anticipated population declines greater than
five million, 2002 2050 166
6.1 World population distribution by major area
(percentages): actual and projected 178
6.2 The ten most populous countries, current and
projected 179
6.3 Population densities of the ten most populous
countries, 2002 179
6.4 Some push and pull factors 182
6.5 Some typical moorings 186
6.6 Refugees and persons of concern to UNHCR,
worldwide, 1980 2001 193
6.7 Persons of concern to UNHCR, 2001 194
6.8 Refugee numbers by country of origin and country
of asylum, 2001: the ten largest groups 195
6.9 Countries of asylum with more than 100,000
refugees, 2001 196
6.10 Extremes of human development, 2000 200
6.11 Population densities, selected countries, 2002 204
6.12 Natural events and human disasters, regional data,
1947 1967 and 1969 1989 209
7.1 A unilinear evolutionary model of culture 223
7.2 Basic chronology of early civilizations 224
7.3 Language families 234
7.4 Numbers of speakers, major languages 234
7.5 Major world religions: numbers of adherents
(thousands), 2001 241
8.1 Gender related development index 272
9.1 Ethnic groups in the former Yugoslavia 303
9.2 Ethnic groups in the former USSR 306
9.3 Disputes and conflicts involving the UN, 1945 1990
319
10.1 From protectionism to free trade: a chronology 355
10.2 Sales data for transnational compared to GDP for
selected countries, 1997 357
10.3 Net foreign direct investment flows: selected
countries and groupings, 1989 and 1997 358
11.1 Contrasting farming types in Illinois 373
11.2 Average distances from London, England, to regions
of import derivation (miles) 382
11.3 Multinationals and crops in the less developed world
399
11.4 Determinants of peasant herder conflicts in northern
Ivory Coast 402
12.1 Some definitions of urban centres 412
12.2 Percentage change in rural population by region,
Canada, 1981 1986 418
12.3 Factors influential in the decision to move to
exurban locations around Woodstock, Ont. 419
12.4 Seven stages of premodern urban development
426
12.5 Three global cities 445
12.6 Five tiers of global cities 445
Contents IX
13.1 Outlook for world total primary energy supply,
2010 and 2020 (%) 470
13.2 Regional shares of energy production by type,
1973 and 2000 (%) 470
13.3 Location of R D facilities and plants of nine
Japanese electronics firms, 1975 and 1991 481
13.4 Mineral production in the less developed world 483
13.5 Summary of world employment 485
13.6 Labour markets: from Fordism to post Fordism 486
13.7 Characteristic tendencies: conventional mass
tourism vs alternative tourism 490
Concl.l Disappearing peoples 506
BOXES
Intro. 1 Germany: a new country 5
Intro. 2 Less developed Canada? 7
Intro.3 This book and some subdisciplines of human
geography 11
1.1 Did China discover the world in 1421? 20
1.2 Evaluating our place in the world 22
1.3 Exploration or invasion? 23
1.4 The southern continent 25
1.5 Varenius 26
1.6 Humboldt 28
1.7 Ritter 29
1.8 Ratzel 30
1.9 Vidal 32
1.10 Taylor 33
1.11 Sauer 34
1.12 Hartshorne 35
2.1 Environmental determinism 47
2.2 Positivistic human geography 49
2.3 The Schaefer Hartshorne debate 50
2.4 Humanistic human geography 51
2.5 Marxist thought and practice 53
2.6 Marxist human geography 55
2.7 Map projections 68
2.8 The power of maps 69
2.9 UsingaGIS 71
2.10 Some qualitative resources 74
3.1 Earthquakes and volcanic eruptions 85
3.2 The geomorphology of Canada 86
3.3 Gaia 96
3.4 Species and races 99
3.5 A history of racism 100
4.1 Lessons from Easter Island 108
4.2 The tragedy of the commons or collective
responsibility? 114
4.3 The threatening forest 117
4.4 Defeating desertification 119
4.5 Unwanted guests 121
4.6 A tale of three water bodies 124
4.7 Chloro fluorocarbons and the atmosphere 126
4.8 Rising sea levels 128
4.9 The skeptical environmentalist 131
4.10 Clayoquot sound: the case for sustainability 133
X Human Geography
5.1 Fertility in tropical Africa 144
5.2 Primitive abortion 146
5.3 Declining fertility in the less developed world 147
5.4 Declining fertility in the more developed world 149
5.5 Problems in central Asia and Russia 151
5.6 Fertility in Romania, 1966 1989 157
5.7 Population in China 158
5.8 The prospect of underpopulation 166
5.9 Fertility, population growth, and the changing status
of women 171
6.1 The 1991 Nigerian census 180
6.2 The Ravenstein laws 183
6.3 A new system of slavery : Indian indentured labour
in Mauritius 188
6.4 Scandinavian migration to North America 189
6.5 Migration and ethnic diversity in Canada 190
6.6 Restrictive immigration policies 191
6.7 Refugees in the Horn of Africa 197
6.8 The less developed world: Ethiopia 199
6.9 The less developed world: Sri Lanka 201
6.10 The less developed world: Haiti 203
6.11 The Grameen Bank, Bangladesh 208
6.12 Flooding in Bangladesh 210
6.13 The best or the worst of times? 211
7.1 The concepts of culture and society 219
7.2 The superorganic concept of culture 220
7.3 Defining civilization 222
7.4 Europe as a cultural region 226
7.5 The Mormon landscape 231
7.6 Linguistic territorialization in Belgium and Canada
237
7.7 The Celtic languages 238
7.8 The Mithila cultural region 245
7.9 Religion and irrational choices 247
7.10 Religious landscapes: Hutterites and Doukhobors
in the Canadian west 249
8.1 The concept of alienation 258
8.2 An application of structuration theory 261
8.3 A positivist response to postmodernism 262
8.4 A Marxist response to postmodernism 263
8.5 The iconography of landscape 265
8.6 Psychogeography: the sense of Oklahomaness 268
8.7 The origins of apartheid 273
8.8 The geography of fear 276
8.9 Consigned to the shadows 278
8.10 Geophagy 279
9.1 Remnants of empire 291
9.2 Laws of the spatial growth of states 294
9.3 The Jewish state 295
9.4 A different Canada? 296
9.5 The plight of the Kurds 299
9.6 Tribes, ethnicity, political states, and conflict
in Africa 301
9.7 Conflicts in the former Yugoslavia 303
9.8 The collapse of the USSR 306
9.9 Regional identities and political aspirations 308
9.10 The Maghreb union 312
9.11 Some traditional rivalries 318
9.12 Naturally aggressive? 322
10.1 Ekistics: a science of human settlements 332
10.2 The tyranny of distance 338
10.3 Cholera diffusion 340
10.4 Port system evolution 346
10.5 Railways and economic growth 347
10.6 Explaining commodity flows: Ullman 349
10.7 Looking back at the twentieth century 353
10.8 The World Trade Organization 356
11.1 Human geography and economics 366
11.2 The economic operator concept 368
11.3 Marxist political economy 369
11.4 Government and the agricultural landscape 374
11.5 Calculating economic rent 376
11.6 Correlation and regression analysis 380
11.7 Agricultural core areas, c. 500 BCE 384
11.8 Frontier agriculture: subsistence or commerce? 385
11.9 The pastoral frontier 386
11.10 Organic farming 388
11.11 The green revolution in India 389
11.12 Pastoral nomadism in the Sahara and Mongolia
393
11.13 Canadian farmers: fewer and older 396
11.14 Agricultural change in Bhutan 398
11.15 Peasant—herder conflict in Ivory Coast 402
12.1 Rural settlement in the Canadian Prairies 414
12.2 Exurbanization in southwestern Ontario 419
12.3 Theory construction by Christaller 427
12.4 Nearest neighbour analysis 428
12.5 Testing central place theory 431
12.6 Modern and postmodern urban theory 432
12.7 A Marxist interpretation of the urban experience in
a capitalist world 438
12.8 Slums and the cycle of poverty 439
12.9 Suburbia and postsuburbia 440
12.10 Urbanization in the less developed world: Brazil
450
13.1 Factors related to industrial location 461
13.2 Testing Weberian theory 464
13.3 Locational interdependence: the Hotelling model
465
13.4 The period of the industrial revolution 466
13.5 Geographical change and industrial growth:
the Tyneside coalfield 468
13.6 Oil producing countries 471
13.7 An energy crisis : New Zealand in 1992 472
13.8 Explaining local industrial change 473
13.9 Industry in Canada 474
13.10 Industry in Japan 475
13.11 Deindustrialization and reindustrialization 480
13.12 Tourism in Sri Lanka 489
13.13 The Rostow model of economic growth 492
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Norton, William 1944- |
author_facet | Norton, William 1944- |
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dewey-search | 304.2 |
dewey-sort | 3304.2 |
dewey-tens | 300 - Social sciences |
discipline | Geowissenschaften Soziologie Geographie |
edition | 5. ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV019387673 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T19:59:08Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0195419081 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-012850518 |
oclc_num | 53846485 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-384 DE-824 |
owner_facet | DE-384 DE-824 |
physical | XIII,538 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
publishDate | 2004 |
publishDateSearch | 2004 |
publishDateSort | 2004 |
publisher | Oxford Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Norton, William 1944- Verfasser aut Human geography William Norton 5. ed. Don Mills, Ontario Oxford Univ. Press 2004 XIII,538 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Géographie humaine - Manuels Géographie humaine rasuqam Relation homme-nature rasuqam Human geography Textbooks Anthropogeografie (DE-588)4133695-1 gnd rswk-swf Anthropogeografie (DE-588)4133695-1 s DE-604 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=012850518&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Norton, William 1944- Human geography Géographie humaine - Manuels Géographie humaine rasuqam Relation homme-nature rasuqam Human geography Textbooks Anthropogeografie (DE-588)4133695-1 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4133695-1 |
title | Human geography |
title_auth | Human geography |
title_exact_search | Human geography |
title_full | Human geography William Norton |
title_fullStr | Human geography William Norton |
title_full_unstemmed | Human geography William Norton |
title_short | Human geography |
title_sort | human geography |
topic | Géographie humaine - Manuels Géographie humaine rasuqam Relation homme-nature rasuqam Human geography Textbooks Anthropogeografie (DE-588)4133695-1 gnd |
topic_facet | Géographie humaine - Manuels Géographie humaine Relation homme-nature Human geography Textbooks Anthropogeografie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=012850518&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT nortonwilliam humangeography |