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Anthropogenic Activities: Historical Settlement, Population, and Economy
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The Beginning?
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European Explorers
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Settlement Patterns Early Settlements –Growth and development depended on their situation –Based on Accessibility: the locational characteristics that permit a place to be reached by the efforts of those at other places AND –Site: The internal attributes of a place Features related to the immediate environment in which the place is located –E.g., topography, drainage, and soil composition
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Settlement Patterns Expansion of Frontier generalizations –Occurred from east to west –Migrations generally followed the paths of least resistance –Distinct migration patterns
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Early Settlement Between 2-10 million American Indians and Inuit 4/5 of the natives in the US Natives migrated westward with European Expansion Not much acculturation
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Emerging Settlement Patterns
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Portuguese & African Settlement
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French Settlement (John Fiske. 1902. New France and New England. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin, and Company.) French In America, by Edward Wells, 1700
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Spanish Settlement Historical Land Grant Boundaries in Texas
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Dutch Settlement Manhattan Island at the time of Dutch
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British Settlement Jamestown (1607) Treaty of Paris Albert Gallatin and “principle of contiguity” William Penn Metes and Bounds
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Cultural Diffusion New England Mid-Atlantic Pennsylvania Tidewater Maryland/ Virginia Frontier Zones by 1810 Hearth Areas (Pre - 1725) Secondary Areas (1740 - 1775) Tertiary Areas (1780 - 1820)
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Continued Expansion
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USPLSS: Jefferson’s Legacy to the West
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Immigration Total immigrants to US & Canada from Europe & Africa = ~60 million Most French came to Canada during the late 1600s (~15,000) First US census in 1790 –2/3 of the white population had British origins –20% had African origins –Sizable % had German and Dutch heritage 1760-1815 –Immigration slowed –Warfare in Europe restricted travel across the Atlantic
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Immigration 1815-1914 –Immigration increased continuously 1920 –U.S. passed its first law to restrict immigration Since 1940s –Steady increases each decade since Current: –US ~900,000/year; Canada ~180,000/year
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182018401860188019001920194019601980 0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 Immigration in Thousands 182018401860188019001920194019601980 Decade British Isles Germany Scandinavia South/East Europe Latin America Asia Push FactorsPull Factors 1840s: Irish Potato FamineEconomic Opportunity 1850-1920: Overpopulation, WarPolitical/Religious Freedom Recent: Overpopulation, War, OppressionLand Availability Immigration 1820-1980
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Population Distribution
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Population Distribution: Canada
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Population Pattern: Religion
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Population Patterns: Native Americans
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Population Patterns: Hispanic
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Population Patterns: Black
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Population Patterns: Asian
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Economic Sectors Primary –Agriculture (and accompanying technology) Secondary –Manufacturing & Industry Tertiary –Service (e.g., health care, retail) Quaternary –Government, Research, Education
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Changing Urban Center
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Rise of Urban Center
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Final Thoughts 20 th century remarkable for North America Global economic and political leadership Basic background for Geography of North America 14 different landscapes to explore!!
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Discussion Questions Why did North America prosper, while South America stagnated? What impacts did the mobility and freedom of the westward movement have on the cultural landscapes and values that characterize and define American and Canadian cultures today? Why has the productivity of individual farms increased so dramatically, while the number of people employed in agriculture continues to decline?
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Related Books Conzen, Michael P. 1994. The Making of the American Landscape. New York and London: Routledge. –Lots of ideas for learning major parts that shaped US cultural landscapes. Fisher, Ron, ed. 2004. National Geographic Historical Atlas of the United States. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society. McIlwraith, Thomas F. and Edward K. Muller, eds. 2001. North America: The Historical Geography of a Changing Continent, Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc. –Everything from French migration and settlement patterns to landscape expressions in early North America. Sauer, Carl Ortwin. 1971. Sixteenth Century North America: The Land and People as Seen by Europeans. Berkeley: University of California Press. –A classic written by a “Classical” Geographer. What North America was like before European arrival. Zelinsky, Wilbur. 1973. rev. 1992. The Cultural Geography of the United States. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall. –A standard in the regional geographer’s arsenal. Zelinsky writes in a very down to earth style, and his maps are luscious.
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Related Books Castells, Manuel. 1996. The Information Age: Economy, Society, and Culture. Vol. I, The Rise of the Network Society. Cambridge: Blackwell. –How nation states—including the US and Canada—are shaping and reshaping the information age. Meyer, David R. 2003. The Roots of Industrialization. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. –Industrialization of North America and its various impacts on landscapes and economy. Wheeler, James, Yuko Aoyama, and Barney Warf, eds. 2000. Cities in the Telecommunication Age: The Fracturing of Geographies. London: Routledge. –Outlines the cities playing a major role in the information age. Zukin, Sharon. 1991. Landscapes of Power: From Detroit to Disneyland. Berkeley: University of California Press. –Probably the most cited source for urban, economic, and cultural landscapes in North America.
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WebSources First Nations http://www.tolatsga.org/Compacts.html United States History Overview http://www.u-s-history.com/ North America Map Archive http://www.uoregon.edu/~atlas/america/maps.html
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