The six main population clusters are... East Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Nigeria, Europe, Northeast United States.

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Presentation transcript:

The six main population clusters are..

East Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Nigeria, Europe, Northeast United States.

What is population distribution?

The way people are spread out across the earth’s surface

What is arable land?

Land used for agriculture

What is agricultural density?

The ratio of the number of farmers to the amount of arable land

What us arithmetic density?

The number of people per unit of land

Nearly 70% of the worlds population lives within ___ kilometers of a coast

400

What is Physiological density?

The number of people per unit of arable land

What is a population pyramid?

A bar graph that shows the composition (primarily gender and age) of a population

Describe the stages of a demographic transition model

a stage one - narrowing of the wide base, showing a lot of people being born and dying at a young age. (THERE ARE NO COUNTRIES IN STAGE ONE) Stage two (Afghanistan) - wide base, rapid growth (early expanding) Stage three (Saudi Arabia) - smaller base as growth slows and a high life expectancy (late expanding) Stage four (U.S.A) – narrow base because of very slow growth and aging. (low fluctuating) Stage five (Japan) – top heavy pyramid, due to few children and lots of elderly

What us the Demographic Transition Model?

A theoretical model used to estimate a country’s population projection. Based on Crude Birth Rate and Death Rate

What are the stages in a DTM?

Stage one- high stationary Stage two – early expanding Stage three – late expanding Stage four – low stationary Stage five - declining

What is crude birth rate?

Total number of live births in a year for every 1,000 people living in the region

Doubling time is..

Amount of time it takes for the region to double in population; assuming that is a constant rate.

What is Net Migration?

The difference between immigrants and emigrants

What is Replacement Rate?

A TFR of 2.1; rate so that women have enough babies for the next generation

Who is Thomas Malthus? What was his theory?

He was an English economist who concluded population would exceed carrying capacity; while food supply increases arithmetically (1,2,3,4,etc.) population increases geometrically (1,2,4,8,etc.).

Who is Ester Boserup? What was her theory?

Opposed to Malthusian theory; believed that with more people to provide labor, food production would increase

What was the Cornucopian theory?

Human population growth will result new technologies that will make it possible to increase food supply and the carrying capacity

A Pro-Natalist is also known as

Expansive

An Anti-Natalist is also known as

Restrictive

Women are less educated worldwide in..

LDCs

Contrast fertility on MDCs and LDCs

MDCs have lower FRs due to more wealth, education, urbanization, etc. LDCs have higher FRs due to the opposite: less wealth, education, urbanization, etc.

What is a push factor?

A factor that causes you to move out of a country

What is a pull factor?

A factor that causes you to move to a country

Examples of push and pull factors

Push: poverty, lack of jobs, natural disasters Pull: religious freedom, job opportunities, higher standard of life

Population/migration question What are some of the reasons why population is clustered in places like East Asia, Nigeria, Europe, & Northeast United states?

Population/migration answer The place might have factors such as good climate where moderate rainfalls are comon to help support agriculture, landforms with lowland areas or bodies of water, certain ethnic groups that want to live near each other, places with good infrastructure and a strong government. Answer is found on page 7 on the big ideas packet!

Question 1 Why is it that women are usually less educated worldwide?

Answer 1 Education and fertility have an inverse relationship. More education= less fertility, vise versa

Question 2 What are some push and pulls factors of migration?

Answer 2 Push- unfavorable conditions that encourage people to emigrate. Ex. Lack of jobs, poverty and natural disasters Pull- favorable conditions that encourage people to immigrate. Ex. Job opportunities, higher standard of life, religious freedom, etc.