#2 MCQ Practice Exam AP Human Geo



Question 1

Multiple choice



  • Widespread famine and disease reduce fertility rates

  • Government mandates restrict family size

  • Industrialization and urbanization shift social and economic incentives

  • Access to healthcare improves life expectancy

  • Migration increases due to rural job shortages

Question 2

Multiple choice



  • Birth rates fall rapidly while death rates rise

  • Birth rates remain high while death rates drop quickly

  • Both birth and death rates fall at the same rate

  • Immigration becomes the main cause of population growth

  • Government policies limit family size

Question 3

Multiple choice



  • High birth and death rates with little population change

  • Rapidly growing population due to falling death rates

  • Low birth and death rates with stable or slowly growing population

  • High birth rates and low death rates with exponential growth

  • Decreasing death rates and increasing birth rates

Question 4

Multiple choice



  • They were drawn based on economic zones

  • They reflect long-standing ethnic territories

  • They were imposed by external powers with little regard for cultural divisions

  • They follow clear physical features like rivers and mountains

  • They emerged through democratic self-determination

Question 5

Multiple choice





  • Township and range

  • Metes and bounds

  • Long lot

  • Suburban subdivision

  • Multiple nuclei

Question 6

Multiple choice



  • Decreased agricultural efficiency due to irregular plot shapes

  • High rates of urban sprawl into farming regions

  • Increased transportation access and equitable land distribution

  • Difficulty in accessing irrigation systems due to terrain

  • Concentration of political power in central urban nodes

Question 7

Multiple choice



  • LDCs typically have stronger environmental protection laws

  • LDCs offer a larger pool of highly specialized labor

  • LDCs usually have lower labor costs and fewer regulations

  • LDCs have more developed transportation infrastructure than MDCs

  • LDCs have higher consumer demand for luxury goods

Question 8

Multiple choice



  • Agglomeration

  • Comparative advantage

  • Urban hierarchy

  • Remittance flows

  • Demographic momentum

Question 9

Multiple choice



  • Core-periphery

  • Suburbanization

  • Balkanization

  • Environmental determinism

  • Technopole development

Question 10

Multiple choice



  • Widespread job losses in the manufacturing sector

  • Food shortages due to environmental collapse

  • Political instability and government crackdowns

  • Access to publicly funded health services

  • Discrimination based on religious identity in the origin country

Question 11

Multiple choice



  • Most counties have a majority of residents who speak a language other than English at home.

  • Language diversity is evenly spread across all counties.

  • The majority of counties have a relatively low percentage of non-English speakers.

  • Most counties have over 35% of residents speaking a non-English language at home.

  • Counties with high linguistic diversity are distributed evenly across rural and urban areas.

Question 12

Multiple choice



  • How has the introduction of fast food affected traditional diets in one village in India?

  • What are the commuting patterns of residents in the Chicago metropolitan area?

  • How does international trade impact the economies of developing nations?

  • What types of vegetation are most common in a city park in Seattle?

  • How do school zoning policies affect local housing prices in a suburb?

Question 13

Multiple choice



  • A significant number of U.S. counties have high levels of multilingualism.

  • Nearly all counties have more than 35% of people who speak a non-English language at home.

  • Only a small proportion of counties have a low percentage of non-English speakers.

  • Most counties have fewer than 18% of people who speak a language other than English at home.

  • Language diversity is increasing equally in all counties.

Question 14

Multiple choice



  • Technological innovations in agriculture will permanently solve food scarcity

  • Urban sprawl will reduce the need for high-yield farming practices

  • Rapid population growth could exceed the Earth’s capacity to provide food and clean water

  • Shifts in dietary preferences will increase global crop diversity

  • Global food markets will eliminate hunger through trade

Question 15

Multiple choice



  • Fertility rates falling below replacement level in developed countries

  • Crop yields increasing due to precision agriculture

  • Water shortages in rapidly growing urban areas of developing countries

  • Increased food aid from developed to developing countries

  • Widespread adoption of GMOs in Sub-Saharan Africa

Question 16

Multiple choice



  • The global population has surpassed 8 billion and continues to grow

  • Local food shortages are usually caused by conflict or poor infrastructure

  • Climate change is accelerating resource scarcity in tropical regions

  • High-yield agriculture has caused soil degradation in many regions

  • Birth rates in most developed countries are increasing steadily

Question 17

Multiple choice



  • Nigeria and Brazil both follow the rank-size rule very closely.

  • Nigeria exhibits a primate city pattern, while Brazil has a more balanced urban hierarchy.

  • Both countries have a single megacity and no other significant urban areas.

  • Brazil's cities show evidence of uneven regional development, while Nigeria’s cities are evenly distributed.

  • Neither country has cities large enough to qualify as primate cities.

Question 18

Multiple choice



  • Creating balanced transportation networks among similar-sized cities

  • Managing political tensions between competing megacities

  • Addressing overconcentration of infrastructure and investment in a dominant city

  • Ensuring that rural areas are not more urbanized than core cities

  • Coordinating equal economic development in federal city-states

Question 19

Multiple choice



  • A wheat farmer in Brazil

  • A textile worker in Vietnam

  • A marketing consultant in Germany

  • A car factory technician in Mexico

  • A coal miner in Vietnam

Question 20

Multiple choice



  • Germany

  • United States

  • Brazil

  • Sweden

  • Canada

Question 21

Multiple choice



  • Germany

  • Mexico

  • United States

  • Sweden

  • Canada

Question 22

Multiple choice



  • Sikhism – Southeast Asia

  • Islam – Southwest Asia

  • Christianity – Sub-Saharan Africa

  • Hinduism – East Asia

  • Judaism – Northern Europe

Question 23

Multiple choice



  • A UN military body draws a neutral zone between them

  • The boundary follows each country’s continental shelf

  • A compromise is made at the International Court of Justice

  • The boundary is drawn at the midpoint between their coastlines

  • Both countries lose EEZ rights in that area

Question 24

Multiple choice



  • EEZs are the only maritime areas where foreign navies can legally operate.

  • EEZs contain fertile farmland needed for global food production.

  • EEZs grant exclusive rights to marine resources like oil, fish, and natural gas.

  • EEZs allow unrestricted immigration and settlement beyond territorial seas.

  • EEZs prevent international shipping routes from entering coastal waters.

Question 25

Multiple choice



  • Competing claims to uninhabited islands far outside any country’s EEZ

  • Disagreements over inland river navigation rights

  • Conflicts between coastal countries and international refugee law

  • Cultural disagreements over naming conventions for bodies of water

  • The inability of landlocked countries to access global trade routes

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