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Population
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Where in the World do People Live and Why?
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Many Ways of Measuring Population:
Population Density – measure of total population relative to land size (arithmetic population density).
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World Population Density
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Physiologic Population Density –
number of people per unit area of agriculturally productive land (takes this map into account).
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Physiologic Population Density
Luxor, Egypt Egypt’s arable lands are along the Nile River Valley. Moving away from the river a few blocks, the land becomes sandy and wind-sculpted.
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Population Distribution –
Descriptions of locations on the Earth’s surface where individuals or groups (depending on the scale) live. Dot Map of World Population – On this map, one dot represents 100,000 people
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World Population Distribution and Density
East Asia - ¼ of world population here South Asia - bound by the Himalayas and a desert in Pakistan Europe - population is concentrated in cities North America - megalopolis
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Why do Populations Rise or Fall in Particular Places?
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Approximately 80% of the world’s population lives in the less- developed countries
All of Africa, Asia (excluding Japan), Latin America, and the island nations of the Caribbean and Pacific
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China and India each have over a billion people and together hold 1/3 of the world’s current population 1990s- approximately 80 million people were being added to the population each year 95% lived in the less-developed world
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Growth rates Growth rates currently exceed 3% in parts of sub-Saharan and tropical Africa, the Middle East, and Central America. Population growth is compounded… Example: country with 1 million people this year. Next year add 3% = 1,030,000. The next year add 3% again = 1,060,900. The time it will take for a country’s population to double is less than 25 years! Doubling time..
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Current growth rates Rank Country Growth rate (%) 1 Qatar 9.56 2
Liberia 4.17 3 Niger 3.91 4 Belize 3.39 5 Burkina-Faso 3.38 6 Uganda 3.27 7 Timor-Leste 3.16 8 Benin 3.10 9 Singapore 3.02 10 Eritrea 2.93
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A Population Bomb? Malthus (early 1800s) worried about population growing exponentially and resources growing linearly. Ehrlich (1960s) warned of a population bomb because the world’s population was outpacing food production.
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The domestication of plants and animals and the industrial revolution had dramatic impacts on the number of people the earth could sustain… However… 1300s- Black Plague wiped out 30-40% of entire European continent 1845- Irish Potato Famine eliminated half of the country’s population in just 50 years from starvation or fleeing Natural disasters- earthquakes, floods, hurricanes Epidemic disease- smallpox introduced by European explorers in the Americas AIDS million people living with AIDS in sub-Sarahan Africa, with 4 million people becoming infected each year
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