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URBAN SETTLEMENTS AS90332 Explain an urban settlement.

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Presentation on theme: "URBAN SETTLEMENTS AS90332 Explain an urban settlement."— Presentation transcript:

1 URBAN SETTLEMENTS AS90332 Explain an urban settlement

2 How Settlements Were Chosen Factors influencing the selection of a site on which to build a settlement Fertile Soil A Government colonising company selected the site Defence Fresh Water Supply Climate Mild Crossing Point of A River e.g. London Trading Opportunities Religious Significance Raw Materials to extract Aspect Coastal Building Materials Available

3 Rural Settlements Rural Settlements (Individual farmhouses/ hamlets/villages)

4 We are Focussing on Urban Settlements Places where people are in close proximity to each other and able to to exchange goods and services

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12 World Cities Selected criteria (amongst other things): Large populations, Significant financial capacity Hosting headquarters for international organisations Significant transport infrastructure Based on quality of life Cities containing World Heritage Sites of historical and cultural significance

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14 Percentage of Tenants in Urban Areas Approximately 70 percent of New Zealand’s 2001 Census usually resident population count (2,654,850 people) lived in main urban areas.

15 Statistics NZ Urban Classification

16 NZ’s Urban Classification Main urban areas are very large and centred on a city or main urban centre. They have a minimum population of 30,000 e.g. Whangarei, Auckland, Hamilton, Palmerston North, Wellington, Nelson, Christchurch, Dunedin Satellite urban communities are defined as urban areas (other than main urban areas) where 20 percent or more of the usually resident employed population's workplace address is in a main urban area. For example, Pukekohe, Lincoln, Rolleston Independent Urban Area This category identifies towns and settlements without significant dependence on main urban centres e.g. Westport

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18 How Settlements Were Chosen Factors influencing the selection of a site on which to build a settlement Fertile Soil A Government colonising company selected the site Defence Fresh Water Supply Climate Mild Crossing Point of A River e.g. London Trading Opportunities Religious Significance Raw Materials to extract Aspect Coastal Building Materials Available

19 Historical Timeline Rank the cards in order Complete the gap – fill activity Complete page 21 in text book ‘Urban Settlements’ If you finish early complete the exercise on page 22 (flow diagram at the bottom of the page)

20 Primate Cities If the largest settlement in a country or region is much larger then other settlements it is a PRIMATE CITY. Has a dominant role in the country’s or region’s political, economic and social life MEXICO CITY →

21 Why use the rank size rule? The rank size rule states mathematically the relationship between a settlement’s size and its rank in the urban order. It suggests what the relationship would be, based on the rank of the settlement. How do we do this? Rank populations of all urban settlements in a country from highest to lowest The population of the third ranked city should be 1/3 the size of the population of the the largest one, the population of the eighth ranked, 1/8 of that of the largest settlement etc. BUT – it is very rare to find that a country’s urban settlements fit the rank size rule closely, but there are three general patterns that do occur…


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