ALPINE SCHOOL DISTRICT – KNOWLEDGE BOWL
GEOGRAPHY
3rd/4th GRADE STUDY GUIDE
and
5th/6th GRADE STUDY GUIDE SECTION 1 of 2
Students should know the following terms, concepts, and their applications.
SECTION ONE: GEOGRAPHIC TERMS
(know the meanings of and/or be able to identify these terms)
airport altitude atlas bank basin bay beach biome butte canal canyon cape cave channel cliff climate coast community compass compass rose
continent country creek current
dam desert divide downstream elevation equator field foothill forest geyser glacier globe gulf harbor hemisphere highway
hill horizon iceberg indigenous interstate irrigated land island junction
key, map lake latitude legend, map locks longitude map marsh meadow mesa mine mountain
mouth, river natural North Pole oasis ocean pass peak peninsula physical map plain plateau point political map pond power plant
prairie railroad range rapids reef reservoir resources ridge river road road map rural sandbar sand dune scale sea sea level seaport shoreline slope
snowline source South Pole strait swamp timber timberline town tropic tunnel urban upstream valley village wetland
SECTION TWO: GENERAL INFORMATION / MAP SKILLS
Interpret information shown on maps and globes using legends and symbols
Location and names of the seven continents
Location and names of the five oceans: Atlantic, Arctic, Indian, Pacific, Southern
Locate the northern and southern hemispheres using the equator
Locate the eastern and western hemispheres using the prime meridian
Identify global features: Equator, North Pole, Arctic Circle, Antarctic Circle,
Tropic of Cancer, Tropic of Capricorn, Prime Meridian, International Date
Line, 180 longitude (dividing eastern and western hemispheres), lines of
latitude (parallels), lines of longitude (meridians)
Find location of places using cardinal directions: north, south, east, west
Find location of places using intermediate directions: northwest, northeast,
southeast, southwest
Interpret simple legends or keys on maps
Use grids, scales, and symbols to identify physical and political features
Compare natural and human-made boundaries
Identify different types of political boundaries: city, county, state, national,
international
Interpret different types of maps: road, relief, population, resource, climate
Differentiate among towns, cities, counties, states, countries, regions, and
continents
Identify and differentiate physical features (rivers, mountains, lakes, etc.) and
human made features (reservoirs, dams, canals, bridges, etc.)
SECTION THREE: UTAH
Names and locations of Utah’s 29 counties and their county seats
The five most populated counties in ranked order
Locations and names of Utah’s national parks, national monuments, national
forests, major rivers, major deserts, major mountain ranges, and major
bodies of water
County and local cities associated with these mountains: Signal Peak, Mount
Timpanogos, Navajo Mountain, Mount Nebo, Delano Peak, Deseret Peak,
Brian Head Peak
Highest and lowest points in Utah
Hottest and coldest locations in Utah
Utah’s ranking among the other fifty states in land size and population
Major religions of Utah
Locate on a map the regional settlements of indigenous communities of Utah:
Fremont, Ancestral Puebloans (Anasazi), Ute, Paiute, Goshute, Shoshone,
Navajo
Given a map of Utah, identify the latitude and longitude for a given location, to
the nearest whole degree
Given a map of Utah, identify a location given its latitude and longitude
Given a map of Utah, identify a location utilizing the map’s grid system
Latitude and longitude ranges for Utah
Major interstate and U.S. highways running through Utah
Be familiar with and identify the city and/or county of significant landmarks:
Delicate Arch, Temple Square, Kennecott Copper Mine, Big Rock Candy Mountain, Utah Olympic Park, Newspaper Rock, Bonneville Speedway, Promontory Point (Golden Spike), Cove Fort, Dead Horse Point, Goblin Valley, Cleveland Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry, Bullfrog Basin
Names and locations of cities along the Wasatch Front
Names and locations of other major Utah communities: Logan, Cedar City,
St. George, Vernal, Price, Delta, Moab
SECTION FOUR: UNITED STATES
Locations and names of major rivers: Mississippi, Colorado, Missouri, Ohio, Snake,
Hudson, Yukon, Rio Grande, St. Lawrence, Platte, Columbia, Sacramento
Locations and names of major lakes: Lake Superior, Lake Michigan, Lake Huron,
Lake Erie, Lake Ontario, Lake Tahoe (Utah lakes are included in the section above.)
Locations and names of major mountains and ranges: Cascade, Sierra Nevada,
Rocky Mountains, Appalachian, Mt. McKinley, Mt. Whitney, Mt. Rainier
Location and names of the 50 states and their capitals
Location and names of other major cities: New York City, Philadelphia, Miami,
New Orleans, Chicago, Houston, St. Louis, Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Seattle, Las Vegas
Location of the District of Columbia
Location and names of major national parks in the western United States:
Yellowstone, Grand Canyon, Mesa Verde, Glacier, Sequoia, Yosemite,
Redwood, Death Valley, Petrified Forest, Mt. Rainier, Grand Teton, Rocky Mountain, Carlsbad Caverns
SECTION FIVE: WORLD
Identify the continent of these major world rivers: Nile, Amazon, Danube,
Chang Jiang (Yangtze), Huang Ho (Yellow), Ganges, Volga, Zaire (Congo)
(Major U.S. rivers are included in the section above.)
Identify the continent for these world mountains and ranges: Andes Mountains,
Atlas Mountains, Himalayas, Urals, Alps, Aconcagua, Kilimanjaro, Mount
Everest, Mont Blanc
Locate and name the countries of South America
Locate and name Japan and China along with their capitals
SECTION SIX: RESOURCES TO BE USED IN GAMES
9-inch Political Globe
Utah Desk Map
5th/6th GRADE STUDY GUIDE SECTION 2 of 2
Students should know the following terms, concepts, and their applications.
SECTION ONE: GEOGRAPHIC TERMS
(know the meanings of and/or be able to identify these terms)
archipelago arctic region arm atoll
axis bayou breakwater
continental divide cove delta dike
drainage basin estuary ford fjord
gorge grid headland inlet
International Date Line isthmus lagoon
levee Pangaea parallel piedmont
plate tectonics precipice projection savanna
shoal sound sphere spit
steppe topographical map topography tributary
tundra watershed
SECTION TWO: GENERAL INFORMATION / MAP SKILLS
Given a map of one of the following, be able to identify major cities, states, provinces, capitals, rivers, physical features, neighbors, countries, continents, major bodies of water, major land forms, time zones, direction: Africa, Asia, Australia, Canada, Eastern Hemisphere, Eurasia, Europe, Middle East, North America, Northern Hemisphere, South America, Southern Hemisphere, United States, Utah, World, Western Hemisphere
SECTION THREE: UNITED STATES
Recognize the Flags of the 50 states Nicknames of the 50 states
U.S. Census Regions and Divisions:
Northeast: New England, Mid-Atlantic
Midwest: East North Central, West North Central
South: South Atlantic, East South Central, West South Central
West: Mountain, Pacific
Locations (state and/or region) of famous landmarks:
The Alamo, Liberty Bell, Mt. Rushmore, Golden Gate Bridge, Monticello,
Statue of Liberty, Brooklyn Bridge, Rose Bowl, Washington Monument,
Lincoln Memorial, Gateway Arch, Space Needle, Death Valley, Niagara Falls,
Mammoth Cave, Old Faithful Geyser, Independence Rock, Grand Canyon,
Hollywood, Alcatraz
Countries and bodies of water that border the United States
States with the largest and smallest land areas and populations
Highest and lowest points of elevation
Locations of major deserts: Great Basin, Mojave, Sonoran, Chihuahuan
SECTION FOUR: WORLD
Names, locations (by continent and hemisphere), flags, principal language and
capitals of these countries of the world: Afghanistan, Algeria, Angola,
Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Bangladesh, Belgium, Belize, Bolivia, Bosnia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Canada, Chad, Chile, China, Columbia, Croatia, Cuba, Czech Republic, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, England, Ethiopia, Fiji, Finland, France, Germany, Ghana, Great Britain, Greece, Guatemala, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kenya, Kuwait, Laos, Lebanon, Liberia, Libya, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Mexico, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, North Korea, Norway, Pakistan, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, The Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Samoa, Saudi Arabia, Serbia and Montenegro, Singapore, Slovakia, South Korea, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Switzerland, Syria, Taiwan, Tanzania, Thailand, Tonga, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom (England, Scotland, Wales; and Northern Ireland), United States, Uruguay, Venezuela, Vietnam, Yemen, Zambia, Zimbabwe
Names and locations of these major cities: Alexandria, Atlantic City, Cannes,
Chicago, Florence, Hong Kong, Los Angeles, Milan, Montreal, Munich,
Nazareth, New York, Nice, Osaka, Philadelphia, Rio de Janeiro,
San Francisco, Sao Paulo, Shanghai, Sydney, Venice, Zurich
Names and locations of the highest and lowest points of land elevation on the
earth, including the highest elevation to the nearest 1,000 feet and the
lowest elevation to the nearest 100 feet
Names of the highest and lowest points on each continent
Approximate and relative land area of each of the continents, to the nearest
million square miles
Estimated population of each continent in 2010 to the nearest 100 million
Africa: 1 billion; Asia: 3 billion, 900 million; Europe: 700 million;
Latin America and the Caribbean: 600 million; Northern America: 300 million; Australia: 22 million
The top five most populated countries in the world
The largest country in land area on each continent
The largest country in population on each continent
Names of the highest mountain peaks, and their elevation to the nearest 1,000
feet, for these mountain ranges: Atlas, Alps, Himalayas, Andes, Rocky,
Alaska, Ural, Caucasus
Names of the deepest place in each of the five world oceans
Names and location of the deepest lake
Names and locations of Australia’s six states and two major mainland territories
Names, capitals, and locations of Canada’s ten provinces and three territories
Names and locations (by continent and hemispheres) of these deserts: Sahara,
Chihuahuan, Kalahari, Mojave, Sonoran, Arabian, Gobi, Artic, Patagonian,
Great Victoria, Atacama, Great Basin, Colorado Plateau (Painted Desert)
Names and locations of these major seas: Andaman, Arabian, Baltic, Bering, Black,
Caribbean, East China, Gulf of Mexico, Hudson Bay, Mediterranean, Red,
Sea of Japan, Sea of Okhotsk, South China
Locations of Cape Horn, Cape Cod, Cape Canaveral, Kanyakumari (Cape Comorin),
Cape of Good Hope
Locations of these peninsulas: Balkan, Iberian, Scandinavian, Sinai, Korean,
Olympic, Baja California
Location of the Great Barrier Reef
Locations of these straits: English Channel, Strait of Gibraltar, Bosporus, Dardanelles, Straits of Malacca,
Locations of these canals: Erie, Suez, Panama, Venice
Locations of these islands: Greenland, Barbados, Trinidad, Sicily, Sumatra, New
Guinea, Tasmania, Madagascar, Aleutian, Hawaiian, Bora Bora, Azores,
Spice Islands
Koeppen’s Five Major Climate Zones: tropical, dry, temperate (mild), cold, polar
and their association with world regions
Locations (by country) of famous world landmarks: The Leaning Tower of Pisa,
Stonehenge, Versailles, Great Wall of China, The Pyramids, Taj Mahal, The
Colosseum, Chichen Itza, The Tower of London, Big Ben, Dome of the Rock,
Eiffel Tower, Forbidden City, Red Square, Sydney Opera House, Vatican,
Gibraltar Rock, The Great Sphinx
Former names of the following countries: Zambia, Democratic Republic of the
Congo, Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka, Russia, Germany, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania,
Ukraine, Croatia, Slovenia, Bosnia, Czech Republic, Belize, Myanmar, Iran, Thailand
Former names of the following cities: Istanbul, St. Petersburg, Gdansk, Yangon,
Beijing, Mumbai, Tokyo
Additional terms and locations: The Buried City, Khyber Pass, Polders, Hispaniola,
Low Countries, Scandinavia, Ulster, Bavaria, The Eternal City, Middle East,
Fertile Crescent
SECTION FIVE: RESOURCES TO BE USED DURING GAMES
9-inch Political Globe
U.S. Physical and World Political Desk Map
Utah Desk Map
World Atlas
GEOGRAPHY
3rd/4th GRADE STUDY GUIDE
and
5th/6th GRADE STUDY GUIDE SECTION 1 of 2
Students should know the following terms, concepts, and their applications.
SECTION ONE: GEOGRAPHIC TERMS
(know the meanings of and/or be able to identify these terms)
airport altitude atlas bank basin bay beach biome butte canal canyon cape cave channel cliff climate coast community compass compass rose
continent country creek current
dam desert divide downstream elevation equator field foothill forest geyser glacier globe gulf harbor hemisphere highway
hill horizon iceberg indigenous interstate irrigated land island junction
key, map lake latitude legend, map locks longitude map marsh meadow mesa mine mountain
mouth, river natural North Pole oasis ocean pass peak peninsula physical map plain plateau point political map pond power plant
prairie railroad range rapids reef reservoir resources ridge river road road map rural sandbar sand dune scale sea sea level seaport shoreline slope
snowline source South Pole strait swamp timber timberline town tropic tunnel urban upstream valley village wetland
SECTION TWO: GENERAL INFORMATION / MAP SKILLS
Interpret information shown on maps and globes using legends and symbols
Location and names of the seven continents
Location and names of the five oceans: Atlantic, Arctic, Indian, Pacific, Southern
Locate the northern and southern hemispheres using the equator
Locate the eastern and western hemispheres using the prime meridian
Identify global features: Equator, North Pole, Arctic Circle, Antarctic Circle,
Tropic of Cancer, Tropic of Capricorn, Prime Meridian, International Date
Line, 180 longitude (dividing eastern and western hemispheres), lines of
latitude (parallels), lines of longitude (meridians)
Find location of places using cardinal directions: north, south, east, west
Find location of places using intermediate directions: northwest, northeast,
southeast, southwest
Interpret simple legends or keys on maps
Use grids, scales, and symbols to identify physical and political features
Compare natural and human-made boundaries
Identify different types of political boundaries: city, county, state, national,
international
Interpret different types of maps: road, relief, population, resource, climate
Differentiate among towns, cities, counties, states, countries, regions, and
continents
Identify and differentiate physical features (rivers, mountains, lakes, etc.) and
human made features (reservoirs, dams, canals, bridges, etc.)
SECTION THREE: UTAH
Names and locations of Utah’s 29 counties and their county seats
The five most populated counties in ranked order
Locations and names of Utah’s national parks, national monuments, national
forests, major rivers, major deserts, major mountain ranges, and major
bodies of water
County and local cities associated with these mountains: Signal Peak, Mount
Timpanogos, Navajo Mountain, Mount Nebo, Delano Peak, Deseret Peak,
Brian Head Peak
Highest and lowest points in Utah
Hottest and coldest locations in Utah
Utah’s ranking among the other fifty states in land size and population
Major religions of Utah
Locate on a map the regional settlements of indigenous communities of Utah:
Fremont, Ancestral Puebloans (Anasazi), Ute, Paiute, Goshute, Shoshone,
Navajo
Given a map of Utah, identify the latitude and longitude for a given location, to
the nearest whole degree
Given a map of Utah, identify a location given its latitude and longitude
Given a map of Utah, identify a location utilizing the map’s grid system
Latitude and longitude ranges for Utah
Major interstate and U.S. highways running through Utah
Be familiar with and identify the city and/or county of significant landmarks:
Delicate Arch, Temple Square, Kennecott Copper Mine, Big Rock Candy Mountain, Utah Olympic Park, Newspaper Rock, Bonneville Speedway, Promontory Point (Golden Spike), Cove Fort, Dead Horse Point, Goblin Valley, Cleveland Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry, Bullfrog Basin
Names and locations of cities along the Wasatch Front
Names and locations of other major Utah communities: Logan, Cedar City,
St. George, Vernal, Price, Delta, Moab
SECTION FOUR: UNITED STATES
Locations and names of major rivers: Mississippi, Colorado, Missouri, Ohio, Snake,
Hudson, Yukon, Rio Grande, St. Lawrence, Platte, Columbia, Sacramento
Locations and names of major lakes: Lake Superior, Lake Michigan, Lake Huron,
Lake Erie, Lake Ontario, Lake Tahoe (Utah lakes are included in the section above.)
Locations and names of major mountains and ranges: Cascade, Sierra Nevada,
Rocky Mountains, Appalachian, Mt. McKinley, Mt. Whitney, Mt. Rainier
Location and names of the 50 states and their capitals
Location and names of other major cities: New York City, Philadelphia, Miami,
New Orleans, Chicago, Houston, St. Louis, Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Seattle, Las Vegas
Location of the District of Columbia
Location and names of major national parks in the western United States:
Yellowstone, Grand Canyon, Mesa Verde, Glacier, Sequoia, Yosemite,
Redwood, Death Valley, Petrified Forest, Mt. Rainier, Grand Teton, Rocky Mountain, Carlsbad Caverns
SECTION FIVE: WORLD
Identify the continent of these major world rivers: Nile, Amazon, Danube,
Chang Jiang (Yangtze), Huang Ho (Yellow), Ganges, Volga, Zaire (Congo)
(Major U.S. rivers are included in the section above.)
Identify the continent for these world mountains and ranges: Andes Mountains,
Atlas Mountains, Himalayas, Urals, Alps, Aconcagua, Kilimanjaro, Mount
Everest, Mont Blanc
Locate and name the countries of South America
Locate and name Japan and China along with their capitals
SECTION SIX: RESOURCES TO BE USED IN GAMES
9-inch Political Globe
Utah Desk Map
5th/6th GRADE STUDY GUIDE SECTION 2 of 2
Students should know the following terms, concepts, and their applications.
SECTION ONE: GEOGRAPHIC TERMS
(know the meanings of and/or be able to identify these terms)
archipelago arctic region arm atoll
axis bayou breakwater
continental divide cove delta dike
drainage basin estuary ford fjord
gorge grid headland inlet
International Date Line isthmus lagoon
levee Pangaea parallel piedmont
plate tectonics precipice projection savanna
shoal sound sphere spit
steppe topographical map topography tributary
tundra watershed
SECTION TWO: GENERAL INFORMATION / MAP SKILLS
Given a map of one of the following, be able to identify major cities, states, provinces, capitals, rivers, physical features, neighbors, countries, continents, major bodies of water, major land forms, time zones, direction: Africa, Asia, Australia, Canada, Eastern Hemisphere, Eurasia, Europe, Middle East, North America, Northern Hemisphere, South America, Southern Hemisphere, United States, Utah, World, Western Hemisphere
SECTION THREE: UNITED STATES
Recognize the Flags of the 50 states Nicknames of the 50 states
U.S. Census Regions and Divisions:
Northeast: New England, Mid-Atlantic
Midwest: East North Central, West North Central
South: South Atlantic, East South Central, West South Central
West: Mountain, Pacific
Locations (state and/or region) of famous landmarks:
The Alamo, Liberty Bell, Mt. Rushmore, Golden Gate Bridge, Monticello,
Statue of Liberty, Brooklyn Bridge, Rose Bowl, Washington Monument,
Lincoln Memorial, Gateway Arch, Space Needle, Death Valley, Niagara Falls,
Mammoth Cave, Old Faithful Geyser, Independence Rock, Grand Canyon,
Hollywood, Alcatraz
Countries and bodies of water that border the United States
States with the largest and smallest land areas and populations
Highest and lowest points of elevation
Locations of major deserts: Great Basin, Mojave, Sonoran, Chihuahuan
SECTION FOUR: WORLD
Names, locations (by continent and hemisphere), flags, principal language and
capitals of these countries of the world: Afghanistan, Algeria, Angola,
Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Bangladesh, Belgium, Belize, Bolivia, Bosnia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Canada, Chad, Chile, China, Columbia, Croatia, Cuba, Czech Republic, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, England, Ethiopia, Fiji, Finland, France, Germany, Ghana, Great Britain, Greece, Guatemala, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kenya, Kuwait, Laos, Lebanon, Liberia, Libya, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Mexico, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, North Korea, Norway, Pakistan, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, The Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Samoa, Saudi Arabia, Serbia and Montenegro, Singapore, Slovakia, South Korea, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Switzerland, Syria, Taiwan, Tanzania, Thailand, Tonga, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom (England, Scotland, Wales; and Northern Ireland), United States, Uruguay, Venezuela, Vietnam, Yemen, Zambia, Zimbabwe
Names and locations of these major cities: Alexandria, Atlantic City, Cannes,
Chicago, Florence, Hong Kong, Los Angeles, Milan, Montreal, Munich,
Nazareth, New York, Nice, Osaka, Philadelphia, Rio de Janeiro,
San Francisco, Sao Paulo, Shanghai, Sydney, Venice, Zurich
Names and locations of the highest and lowest points of land elevation on the
earth, including the highest elevation to the nearest 1,000 feet and the
lowest elevation to the nearest 100 feet
Names of the highest and lowest points on each continent
Approximate and relative land area of each of the continents, to the nearest
million square miles
Estimated population of each continent in 2010 to the nearest 100 million
Africa: 1 billion; Asia: 3 billion, 900 million; Europe: 700 million;
Latin America and the Caribbean: 600 million; Northern America: 300 million; Australia: 22 million
The top five most populated countries in the world
The largest country in land area on each continent
The largest country in population on each continent
Names of the highest mountain peaks, and their elevation to the nearest 1,000
feet, for these mountain ranges: Atlas, Alps, Himalayas, Andes, Rocky,
Alaska, Ural, Caucasus
Names of the deepest place in each of the five world oceans
Names and location of the deepest lake
Names and locations of Australia’s six states and two major mainland territories
Names, capitals, and locations of Canada’s ten provinces and three territories
Names and locations (by continent and hemispheres) of these deserts: Sahara,
Chihuahuan, Kalahari, Mojave, Sonoran, Arabian, Gobi, Artic, Patagonian,
Great Victoria, Atacama, Great Basin, Colorado Plateau (Painted Desert)
Names and locations of these major seas: Andaman, Arabian, Baltic, Bering, Black,
Caribbean, East China, Gulf of Mexico, Hudson Bay, Mediterranean, Red,
Sea of Japan, Sea of Okhotsk, South China
Locations of Cape Horn, Cape Cod, Cape Canaveral, Kanyakumari (Cape Comorin),
Cape of Good Hope
Locations of these peninsulas: Balkan, Iberian, Scandinavian, Sinai, Korean,
Olympic, Baja California
Location of the Great Barrier Reef
Locations of these straits: English Channel, Strait of Gibraltar, Bosporus, Dardanelles, Straits of Malacca,
Locations of these canals: Erie, Suez, Panama, Venice
Locations of these islands: Greenland, Barbados, Trinidad, Sicily, Sumatra, New
Guinea, Tasmania, Madagascar, Aleutian, Hawaiian, Bora Bora, Azores,
Spice Islands
Koeppen’s Five Major Climate Zones: tropical, dry, temperate (mild), cold, polar
and their association with world regions
Locations (by country) of famous world landmarks: The Leaning Tower of Pisa,
Stonehenge, Versailles, Great Wall of China, The Pyramids, Taj Mahal, The
Colosseum, Chichen Itza, The Tower of London, Big Ben, Dome of the Rock,
Eiffel Tower, Forbidden City, Red Square, Sydney Opera House, Vatican,
Gibraltar Rock, The Great Sphinx
Former names of the following countries: Zambia, Democratic Republic of the
Congo, Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka, Russia, Germany, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania,
Ukraine, Croatia, Slovenia, Bosnia, Czech Republic, Belize, Myanmar, Iran, Thailand
Former names of the following cities: Istanbul, St. Petersburg, Gdansk, Yangon,
Beijing, Mumbai, Tokyo
Additional terms and locations: The Buried City, Khyber Pass, Polders, Hispaniola,
Low Countries, Scandinavia, Ulster, Bavaria, The Eternal City, Middle East,
Fertile Crescent
SECTION FIVE: RESOURCES TO BE USED DURING GAMES
9-inch Political Globe
U.S. Physical and World Political Desk Map
Utah Desk Map
World Atlas