Factor of production – capital, labour, land. Combine with entrepreneurship in the attempt to make profit.
Factory farming – see battery farming.
Family planning – the move to having pregnancy by choice rather than chance achieved through the education and empowerment of women, altered attitudes in society and the availability and affordability of contraceptives.
Famine – reduced availability of food causing starvation and malnutrition, often leading to deaths on a large scale. Famines occur due to a devastating combination of natural and human conditions. It should be noted that globally, if not regionally, there is always enough food to feed everybody regardless of regional success/failure of crop yields. The controlling factors in famines are therefore the human ones that limit availability of food, usually to the poorest, most vulnerable members of the affected society.
FAO -see Food and
Agriculture Organisation.
Farm
Diversification Scheme -in UK, grants available to
farmers to develop supplementary income from alternative,
non-farming activities on their land. An attempt to
alleviate the impact of set-aside.
Fault -a break in the continuity of rock strata.
May be due to tension, compression, and/or horizontal
tearing.
Faulting - tectonic movements which create faults in rock strata.
Fauna -animal life.
Federalism -the combination of smaller states under a
larger, national (federal) government to improve ability and
efficiency in providing some administrative functions e.g.
military services. Best known examples are the USA and
Australia.
Feedback -in a system,
an output which causes changes to that system inputs.
Two kinds:
Feldspar -the generic class="d-title" name for a group of minerals made up of
aluminium silicate along with calcium, potassium or sodium.
A component of granite.
Felsenmeer-see blockfield.
Fen -a wetland area composed of swamp and some low density
woodland. Usually of low elevation and relatively flat.
Fermentation layer -the lower layer of the litter where decomposition is in progress.
Ferrel
cell -the mid-latitude cell in the tricellular model of atmospheric circulation.
Ferralitic -a soil in which the heavy leaching of silica leaves a higher concentration of iron giving the
soil a rich red colour. Found in tropical areas where
rainfall is high.
Ferruginous -a soil in which a hard layer of laterite forms due to alternating periods of leaching and capillary action. These occur due to seasonal
rainfall such as in a savanna biome.
Fertiliser-a substance containing plant nutrients
which is added to agricultural land to maintain or increase
its fertility. Two kinds:
-
organic -
manure from livestock, compost from crop cast-offs.
-
inorganic
-man-made chemical additives especially nitrogen,
potassium and phosphorous.
Fertility -two kinds:
-
in soil,
the ability of the soil to deliver high crop yields.
-
in a
population, the average number of children per woman.
Fertility rate - The number of live births per 1,000
women of reproductive age, usually taken as 15-44 years, in
a given year.
Fetch -distance wind has travelled over open water to create
waves.
Field
capacity -water in the soil once gravitational water has fully drained out i.e. capillary and hygroscopic water.
Finite -lit. limited. In geography, usually applied to resources
which are non-renewable i.e. they are likely to be exhausted in the future.
Firn -partially packed snow which lasts through at least one
summer. The partial melting of the upper layer increases the
density of the snow below. After a couple of decades of
compaction and the addition of meltwater to squeeze out air,
the firn becomes ice.
First World -old term for the Economically More Developed World.
Fiscal
policy -those government policies relating to raising
revenue (through taxation and other measures) and government
spending (on what it should spend and to what level).
Fissure -a crack in the crust through which lava may erupt.
Fjord -a narrow, steep-sided coastal inlet which can extend up to
a couple of hundred kilometres inland. During a glacial period sea levels are lower and so glaciers that reach the
sea erode valleys down to this sea level. After the glacial
has ended, the sea level will rise and flood this glacial
valley to form a fjord.
Flash flood -when flooding is very sudden and high volume compared to the channel
involved.
Floating-leaved plants -see aquatic plants.
Flocculation -the clustering of clay particles when
river load meets sea water. The resultant larger particles sink more
easily.
Flood (flooding) -the overflow of water onto the land when:
Flood
control -measures used to reduce the frequency and the
magnitude of flooding.
Two approaches:
-
hard
engineering projects which build up banks, straighten and
deepen channels, divert channels, build overflow channels
or dam rivers altogether -all attempts to deal with
large volumes of water which have already reached the
channel.
-
soft
engineering projects which involve afforestation or reforestation of the drainage basin or farming techniques which reduce
surface run-off such as contour ploughing or stone
lines -all attempt to deal with large volumes of water
before they even get to the channel.
Floodplain -the part of the valley floor occasionally
flooded by the river. Over time sediment or alluvium builds the elevation of the plain.
Flora -plant life.
Flow
line -a mapping technique using a line to show volume
of a movement along a route. The width of the line is
proportional to the size of the volume (i.e. a thicker line
represents a higher volume). Could be used to show volume of
movement of people or goods on a map.
Flow
production-on a production-line, where the goods being
made/assembled never stop moving along the line.
Workers/robots must complete their task in a fixed time or
the chance will pass and goods will be defective. Perhaps
the best known example is car assembly lines.
Flume -a
small, U-shaped channel built into a river to aid the
measurement of discharge.
Fluvial -lit. of a river. Used to distinguish processes and
landforms from similar ones that may be produced by a
different agent, e.g. fluvial deposition rather than glacial deposition.
Fluvioglacial - lit. of a meltwater river. Important when distinguishing fluvioglacial landforms.
Fluvioglacial landforms -meltwater transports and deposits
material both in and adjacent to glacial environments. These deposits may be left behind after glacial
retreat. They are characterized by sorted
deposits showing their origins in water (see Stokes-Law).
Focus -in an earthquake, the actual point within the crust where
the energy was released.
Fog -ground-level condensation caused if the dew
point is reached in this part of the atmosphere by advection, evaporation, radiation or at a warm front or over ice. Typically,
the density of the water droplets needs to be such that visibility is reduced to 1 km or less before it is
termed fog.
Fohn -warm, dry wind descending in the Alps. When air is drawn
into the Alps from the Mediterranean it will rise and, if it
reaches the dew
point, its rate of cooling will be slowed due to the
release of latent
heat. This means that when it descends on the other
side it is at a warmer temperature than if it had risen
without reaching the dew point. If it reaches sea level it
will be warmer than when it left the Mediterranean.
Folding - compression of the crust due to tectonic movements can lead to the crumpling of rock, particularly when layered such as sedimentary rock. The process must be slow and must not exceed the internal strength of the rock or else it will fault.
Sedimentary
rock - layers which are uplifted to form
higher land areas or mountain ranges. Forces may be great
enough to cause metamorphic changes in the rock structure.
Fold
mountains -mountains produced by folding.
Most commonly formed where a continental plate collides with another or with an oceanic plate.
Food and
Agricultural Organisation -an agency of the United
Nations charged with eradicating hunger and malnutrition
globally.
Food
chain -the transfer/flow of energy through an ecosystem. Energy is made available to the system by
plants or autotrophs and then moves through the system as each trophic level above feeds on the level below. At
each level energy is ost-to detritivores and through respiration. More detailed breakdowns of the
particular species in any one ecosystem may lead to a more
accurate but far more complex food web.
Food
processing -preserving food through canning, freezing,
refrigeration, salting, smoking or vacuum packing. Allows
food to be consumed further away from where it is produced
and/or after a delay that would usually mean the food
becoming inedible. Can be considered as one of the vital
underlying components of modern population growth.
Food
surplus -when food stores build up in certain areas.
This occurs because supply has exceeded demand due to one or
more of a number of reasons:
-
yields
are so high the population cannot consume the food
available
-
prices
are such that some people may consume less than they would
like
-
competition from imports has left domestic produce unsold
-
supplies
are deliberately withheld from the market either to
maintain higher prices or as a precautionary measure
against future shortages.
Food web -where food
chains overlap and intertwine with each other within
and between ecosystems. Many organisms have a varied diet which
may include foods from different trophic
levels thus complicating the food chain. Many
organisms move between ecosystems thus providing transfers
of energy in and out of a particular food chain.
– an adaptation of
pedestrian flow for
the retailing sector,
footfall is the number of shoppers entering a shop or shopping mall in a designated timeframe.
Usually measured on a daily, weekly or monthly basis.
Footloose -industries that do not rely on the location
of raw materials or the cost of transporting them for
their own locational decision-making. This is based more on
the location of markets and labour pools which, as they are
more widespread, increases the range of locational choice.
Foreset
beds -in a delta, the deposits of silts and clays found
to the seaward side of the feature beyond the topset
beds but above and before the bottomset beds. Usually lie at an angle as a result.
Forestry -see forest
management.
Forest
management -the strict control of forest areas either
to maintain them in a particular form (usually as forest
parks for recreation and leisure) or for the purpose of
farming the trees in a sustainable manner.
Forminifera -a protozoan, microscopic shellfish which
proliferates in warm marine environments and whose
sedimentation leads eventually to the formation of chalk.
Forward
integration - vertical
integration in a downstream direction e.g. a
manufacturer controlling retail outlets, or a plantation
having a canning factory.
Fosse -a long narrow trench often found at an old fortified site.
Fossil
fuel -coal, oil and gas. So called as they have been
produced over millions of years after prehistoric forests
were flooded and then overlain with sediments which
compacted the material. As they are produced from
hydrocarbons they can be burned to produce energy and they
provide the vast bulk of energy worldwide for power
production and vehicle fuels.
Fossil water -water that has become detached from the hydrological cycle having lain, untouched and
without addition, in deep aquifers since prehistoric times.
Fragmentation -in agriculture, the splitting of a
landholding into smaller, more disparate parts usually due
to inheritance being applied inefficiently.
Free-floating plants -see aquatic plants.
Freeport -an area at a sea or air port where commercial activity is
allowed free of any taxation regardless of origins or
destinations of goods or profits. The host country derives
benefits from the employment of local workers.
Free
trade -trade taking place between countries free of any
barrier such as taxation, tariffs or quotas.
Freeze-thaw weathering -a process of physical or
mechanical weathering. In areas which experience a diurnal temperature range above and below 0蚓 then water is
frozen and thawed on a daily basis. As it expands when
freezing, it can widen cracks in which it is held which then
capture more water during the thaw period. This is repeated
until the stresses within the rock cause it to fracture.
Freshwater – all water
with a low concentration of dissolved salts (<0.5 ppt) and other solids not in the sea or brackish.
Friable -lit. easily crumbled. In geography, used when describing
soils.
Frictional unemployment -period of unemployment when a
worker is between jobs.
Friedmann, J-architect of a model of economic
development at national level. He suggested 4 stages:
-
initially
a country contains several relatively similar and
independent settlement centres (pre-industrial stage)
-
an
advantage leads to one centre becoming the core region through cumulative causation. The rest of the country is
left as periphery (transitional stage)
-
some of
the peripheral centres begin to develop into sub-cores due
to greater connections between centres and diffusion of
growth associated with increasing costs in the core
(industrial stage)
-
a
multi-core, interdependent network of urban areas is
linked across the national area by highly efficient
communication links (post-industrial stage).
Front -the boundary where two air
masses meet.
Frost - sublimation of water vapour directly onto surfaces such
as plants, cars and pavements when very rapid heat loss
occurs during an anticyclone during winter when
temperatures allow the formation of ice crystals.
Frost creep -a form of mass movement where expansion due to
freezing of water in the upper soil leads to downslope
collapse on thawing and thus a net downslope movement.
Frost
shattering -see freeze-thaw weathering.
Fuelwood -
as it suggests, the use of wood as a fuel. Usually for
cooking and heating.
Full
employment -the level at which all those of legal age who
wish to work are actually employed, with the exception of
the frictionally unemployed. A standard benchmark for
full employment is 5% or less unemployed though this is
hotly debated.
Function -
the main purpose of, or dominant activity in, a settlement.
Examples might be: administrative, educational, industrial,
market, military garrison, religious, or residential among
others. Small settlements can easily be classified. As
settlements grow and/or change the idea is too simple and
they can only be described as multi-functional.
Functional
zone -a portion of an urban area have a clearly defined
dominant function such as the CBD.
Fungicide -
a chemical used in farming to kill funguses which
inhibit plant growth.
Fungus -a
non-photosynthetic organism which feeds on organic matter
e.g. mould, mushrooms, yeast.