Labour -lit.
work or the workforce. An input to any production system. It is important to geographers as many aspects of labour
have spatial variations:
-
Availability: certain
types of industry may require certain types of labour and companies
may locate into areas where they can find the right kind of workers in
the right numbers.
-
Cost: regional and
international differences in living costs leads labour to demand
different wages for the same work.
-
Expertise: many
modern industries locate into areas with a high level of expertise in
a particular field such as near universities.
-
Politics: companies
may avoid highly unionized workforces backed with strict labour laws
in favour of areas with little or no protection for workers rights.
Labour
flexibility -how easy it is for a company to change the
work that its staff does.
Labour-intensive -an economic activity where labour is the largest input by value, as opposed to capital.
Labour
mobility -two kinds:
-
Ability
or propensity of labour to move from place to place to
seek employment -geographical mobility.
-
Ability
or propensity of labour to move between different kinds of
employment -occupational mobility.
Lacustrine -lit. of lakes. Used to refer to waters, deposits and biota.
Lagoon -
calm, protected area of water between a barrier beach or coral
reef and a coastline, or in the centre of an atoll.
Lag time -
time that passes between the point when precipitation is at its highest over a particular drainage basin during a particular precipitation event, and the point when discharge in the river channel is at its highest in
that drainage basin for that precipitation event.
Lahar -
mudflow associated with volcanic activity. Surface water
mixes with volcanic ash to produce the lahar.
Laissez-faire -the belief that markets should be left to
run free from government intervention as business and
consumer needs will find their balance in the market place.
Lake -a body of water on a continental mass. Usually refers to
surface water stores which are still and composed of fresh
water. However, can be used for saltwater bodies or
underground stores if they are in cavities such as caverns.
Laminar
flow -parallel flow of different portions of an overall
flow.
Land breeze -a wind blowing from the land towards the sea. Often found
at night under anticyclonic conditions when heat is lost
rapidly from the land and the air above is cooled and
increases in pressure. The relative warmth of air over the
sea leads to rising air which draws wind from the land.
Landfill -
a location for the disposal of human waste be it domestic,
commercial or industrial. May be a brownfield site such as an old quarry which is filled in, or a
purpose-built hole in the ground.
Land reform -imposed redistribution of land and/or changes in land
ownership designed to increase agricultural productivity
under the philosophy that owner-occupiers make more of an
effort therefore as much agricultural land as possible
should be owner-occupied.
LandSat -a remote-sensing satellite program run by NASA and the
U.S. Geological Survey. The first satellite was launched in
1972 and lasted until 1978. In total, six LandSat vehicles
have been put into orbit and two remain today (L5 and L7, L6
failed to launch).
Landscape -
comprises the visible features of an area
of land, including physical elements such as landforms,
living elements of flora and fauna, abstract elements such
as lighting and weather conditions, and human elements.
Landslide (also landslip) -a rapid downslope mass movement where water in the soil and rock has accumulated to
sufficiently increase stress and lubricate bedding planes.
The bedding planes will usually be (near) parallel to the
angle of slope.
Land
reclamation -the improving or recovering or even creation
of land for human use. Marshy land may be drained; derelict
land may be cleared; rock material may be dumped into
shallow coastal waters to extend existing land out into the
sea.
Land use -
the dominant activity taking place on an area of land.
La Niٌa -
opposite of El Niٌo.
Lapse rates -the rates at which air temperature decreases with
altitude. Three types:
Latent heat -release of heat during a change of state. Condensation of water releases latent heat to the atmosphere because it no longer needs the heat energy that was put in
to change it from liquid to gas in the first place.
Lateral
plate margin -see conservative plate margin.
Laterite -
see hardpan.
Latifundia -system of landholding found most commonly in Latin
America. Land is held in ownership on a large, estate scale
by a small elite class. The work is carried out by local
people employed as farm labourers.
Latitude -
the angular distance north or south of the equator on
any meridian. Joining points of the same angle on all
the meridians creates a line of latitude encircling the
globe. Measured in degrees, minutes and seconds. Excellent
explanation here: http://www.phy6.org/stargaze/Slatlong.htm
Lava -
molten rock flowing on the surface. Until it reaches the
surface it is still called magma.
Leaching -
the removal of minerals in solution from soils when water
moves down through the soil and drains away.
Least-cost
location -the place where raw material and transport costs
are minimized for a particular business, according to Weber.
Lee -
sheltered side of a slope.
Leeward -
the downwind area from a slope.
Leisure -
time free from work or other obligation. In the EMDW,
average time available for leisure is increasing as income
thresholds are more easily reached and as priorities change.
Leisure
industry -the goods and services provided for consumption
during leisure. Worldwide, the leisure industry has expanded
rapidly since the 1970s as people have more time and more disposable income for leisure activities, as well as a
tendency towards consumption rather than saving.
Less
developed - see economically less developed countries.
Less
economically developed country (LEDC) - see economically
less developed countries.
Lessivage -
downward movement of clay particles through a soil in
suspension as water passes through.
Levée -the
naturally raised bank of a river. When flooding occurs, the water immediately begins to lose energy and
deposits the larger load. With distance from the
channel the deposited load is increasingly smaller. This
leaves the banks higher than the rest of the floodplain. Deposition in the channel itself can then lead to the
river being higher than the floodplain and the Levée may be
artificially strengthened and/or heightened to protect from
catastrophic collapse.
Lichen -an
organism created by the joining of fungus and algae.
Life
expectancy -average number of years that individuals are
expected to live depending on where and when they are born
and spend their lives. May be derived on national, regional
or local scale.
Light
industry -an industry in which the physical mass of raw
materials used is relatively low. This can be misleading
for an industry that uses large amounts of electricity drawn
from a power grid rather than produced on-site as it removes
the need for fuel to be delivered to the site. Generally
however, light industries are low polluting and use fewer resources.
Limestone -
a sedimentary rock formed from at least 80% calcium
carbonate. This may have been deposited in the skeletal
remains of marine creatures or from ooliths. E.g.s: chalk, carboniferous limestone, oolitic
limestone.
Limestone
pavement -a lagstone-pattern appearing on exposed, flat
upper surfaces of a mass of limestone. Water runs
along joints and cracks in the rock and rapidly
enlarges them through carbonation. These cracks are called
grikes. The blocks they leave defined are called clints.
Linear -
lit. in or along a line. In geography, used to describe
features of the landscape, both natural and human,
which have a clear extension along a linear axis.
Linkages -
relationships between industries.
Literacy -
the ability to read and write. More accurately defined by UNESCO as:
"the ability to identify, understand, interpret, create,
communicate and compute, using printed and written materials
associated with varying contexts. Literacy involves a
continuum of learning to enable an individual to achieve his
or her goals, to develop his or her knowledge and potential,
and to participate fully in the wider society."
Lithification -the cementing of sediments to form rock.
Lithosphere -the crust and upper mantle. Either solid or highly viscous, this layer is not easily deformed or
manipulated.
Litter
layer -dead organic matter lying on the surface and waiting
for/in the process of decomposition.
Littoral -
most properly the area at a coast between the highest and
lowest tides. Generally used simply to refer to the shore.
Livestock -
animals domesticated and kept by humans either for food or
to do work.
Load -rock
material being transported by an agent of erosion.
Loam -a
soil having roughly equal proportions of clay, sand and
silt.
Localized -
restricted to a point in space in a landscape. Particularly
used by Weber to describe raw materials.
Locational
factor -any factor which has an influence in an entrepreneurial decision to locate industry in a
particular place.
Location
quotient -a statistical measure of concentration. The
quotient indicates the geographical concentration of a
particular activity in a particular region as a function of
the expected concentration based on national average. The
formula can be presented as:
LQ=%total workforce in region A
working in industry X
%total national workforce
working in industry X
so if an
area has 15% of its workforce in agriculture when only 5% of
the national workforce is employed in agriculture, the LQ=15/5=3.
LQ>1 indicates over-representation, or a concentration of
that industry.
LQ=1 indicates expected concentration based on national
average.
LQ<1 indicates under-representation, or a lack of that
industry.
Loess -in glacial environments there is a large amount of
small, fine-grained material found in the outwash plain.
Strong winds often blow out from glacial areas as the cold
surface cools the air above creating high pressure. These
winds carry material away and deposit it elsewhere across
wide areas to form loess deposits which are easily weathered
into well-drained, fertile soils. Loess is not known to be
forming at present and is associated with the Pleistocene.
Longevity -
lit. long life. In geography, usually refers to humans
living beyond 60 years of age.
Longitude
-the angular distance east or west of the prime meridian on any meridian. Joining points of the same angle on
all the meridians creates a line of longitude encircling the
globe. Measured in degrees, minutes and seconds. Excellent
explanation here: http://www.phy6.org/stargaze/Slatlong.htm
Longshore
drift -the net movement of sediment along a coast.
The direction of swash is usually not perpendicular
to the coastline. Sediment is thus moved up a beach and
across at the same time. As backwash occurs under
gravity, its direction is more directly down to the sea
(more perpendicular to the coastline), thus material it
carries has a net sideways movement.
Long
profile -the side view of a river course from source to mouth which shows how the gradient of the
river changes as it flows.
Lorenz
curve -a line graph that portrays the (un)evenness of a
geographical distribution. The vertical axis is cumulative
percentage of the variable being examined. The horizontal
axis is the rank order of the values. A perfectly even
distribution will give a 45˚ line rising left to right. The
more the line diverges from this, the more uneven, or more
highly concentrated, the variable is.
Low tide -
the lowest point to which the sea falls against the land in
its daily vertical movement.