2013 Population Geography College HUG

50
12/29/21 1 Population Geography Population Geography

description

 

Transcript of 2013 Population Geography College HUG

Page 1: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 1

Population GeographyPopulation Geography

Page 2: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 2

Population Geography:Population Geography:Essential QuestionsEssential Questions

• WhereWhere is the world's population is the world's population distributed? distributed?

• WhereWhere has the world's population has the world's population increased? increased?

• WhyWhy is population increasing at different is population increasing at different rates in different countries? rates in different countries?

• WhyWhy might the world face an might the world face an overpopulation problem?overpopulation problem?

Page 3: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 3

Population GeographyPopulation Geography

• Density refers to the frequency with which something occurs

• Distribution refers to the arrangement of a feature in space

Page 4: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 4

Population DensityPopulation Density

• a measure of the number of people per unit area of land– arithmetic: people per unit area of

land– physiologic: people supported by

arable land– agricultural: farmers to amount of

arable land

Page 5: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 5

World Population DensityWorld Population Density

Page 6: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 6

United States DensityUnited States Density

Page 7: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 7

United States DensityUnited States Density

Page 8: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 8

Minnesota DensityMinnesota Density

Page 9: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 9

ChinaChina

Page 10: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 10

Population DistributionPopulation Distribution

• describes the locations on the Earth’s surface where people live

• Australia• Egypt• Mexico• Canada

Page 11: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 11

BangladeshBangladesh

• Population: 144,000,000• Area: 144,000 sq miles• 62% arable land (89,280 sq miles)• physiologic density=1612 people

per square mile of arable land

Page 12: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 12

Montana/United StatesMontana/United States

• Montana Population: 145,000• Area: 902,195 square miles• 18% arable land = 162,395 square miles• Physiologic density = 1119 per square mile

• US Population: 300,000,000• Area: 3,717,810 square miles• 19% arable land = 706,383 square miles• Physiologic density = 424 per square mile

Page 13: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 13

World Population World Population ConcentrationsConcentrations

• East Asia• South Asia• Southeast Asia• Europe

In the three Asian clusters, more than ½ the world’s population lives on less than 10% of the world’s land.

Page 14: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 14

World Population ClustersWorld Population Clusters

4

1

32

Page 15: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 15

East AsiaEast Asia

• China, Korea, Japan, Taiwan– 1/5 the world’s total population– 5/6 of the region’s population live in China,

mostly river and coastal regions– 2/3 of people in China live as farmers in rural

areas – In Japan and Korean Peninsula, ¾+ live in

urban areas and work in industry and service

Page 16: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 16

South AsiaSouth Asia

• India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka – 1/5 the world’s population– most are rural farmers (3/4), not city

dwellers – centered along Ganges and Indus

river valleys, lowlands and coastal areas

– restrained by mountains

Page 17: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 17

Southeast AsiaSoutheast Asia

• Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Philippines– Island nations in the Pacific– Around river valleys and deltas

Page 18: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 18

EuropeEurope

• Britain, Germany, Poland, Ukraine, Belarus, France, N Italy – ¾ live in cities– Less than 20% are farmers– Highest concentration near coal fields

Page 19: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 19

Subordinate RegionsSubordinate Regions

• Eastern US– Bosnywash, Chicago, Detroit,

Cleveland, California – In Europe and North America, cities

and towns more densely populated that rural areas

– Megalopolis

Page 20: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 20

Subordinate RegionsSubordinate Regions

• Western Africa– Nigeria most populous African country

Page 21: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 21

4

1

32

Page 22: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 22

Population StatsPopulation Stats

• Birth Rate– number of live births per year per 1000

people in the population– +30 is high– highest today in Africa and SW Asia– lowest in Europe– inversely related to modernization,

industrialization, urbanization and economic development

– exception: China– US: 14/1000

Page 23: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 23

Page 24: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 24

Population StatsPopulation Stats

• Death Rate– number of deaths per thousand

people in a given year– highest in tropical Africa– lowest in N America, S America,

Europe, Japan, Australia– high CDR’s tend to reflect high infant

mortality– US: 8/1000

Page 25: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 25

Page 26: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 26

Population StatsPopulation Stats• Natural Increase

– difference between number of births and deaths during a specific time period

– US: .88%

Natural Increase

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

1950-1955

1955-1960

1960-1965

1965-1970

1970-1975

1975-1980

1980-1985

1985-1990

1990-1995

1995-2000

2000-2005

Birth rate Death rate

Page 27: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 27

Page 28: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 28

Page 29: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 29

Population StatsPopulation Stats

• Total Fertility Rate– the number of children born to women of child

bearing age– 15-45 ??– 2.1

Lowest Fertility RatesWorldwide

1.17

1.12

0.94

0.84

1.22

1.24

1.24

1.23

1.23

1.20

Belarus

Bulgaria

Republic of Moldova

Republic of Korea

Slovenia

Slovakia

Czech Republic

Ukraine

China, Hong Kong Special AdministrativeRegion

China, Macao Special Administrative Region

Page 30: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 30

Page 31: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 31

Page 32: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 32

Population StatsPopulation Stats

• Infant Mortality Rate– the number of children who die before

they reach one year– US: 6.3/1000

Page 33: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 33

Page 34: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 34

Page 35: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 35

Measuring GrowthMeasuring Growth

• Linear Growth– increases in a uniform amount during

a series of equal time periods

Page 36: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 36

Measuring GrowthMeasuring Growth

• Exponential Growth– increases in a compounding amount

over a series of equal time periods

Page 37: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 37

Measuring GrowthMeasuring Growth

• Doubling Time– the time it takes to double a country’s

population – 70 / NIR = Doubling Time

Page 38: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 38

Ninth

Eighth

Seventh

Sixth

Fifth

Fourth

Third

Second

First Billion

Number of years to add each billion (year)

All of Human History (1800)

130 (1930)

30 (1960)

15 (1975)

12 (1987)

12 (1999)

14 (2013)

14 (2027)

21 (2048)

Sources: First and second billion: Population Reference Bureau. Third through ninth billion: United Nations, World Population Prospects: The 2004 Revision (medium scenario), 2005.

World Population Growth, in BillionsWorld Population Growth, in Billions

1st Billion: 1800 years2nd Billion: 130 years4th Billion: 45 years8th Billion: 52 years

Page 39: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 39

Measuring GrowthMeasuring Growth

• Population Explosion– refers to the rapid growth of the

world’s population during the last century accompanied by ever shorter doubling times and accelerating rates of increase

Page 40: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 40

Page 41: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 41

Population GeographyPopulation Geography

                                          

Page 42: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 42

Population GeographyPopulation Geography

                                          

Page 43: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 43

Population GeographyPopulation Geography

                                          

Page 44: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 44

Population GeographyPopulation Geography

                                          

Page 45: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 45

Population GeographyPopulation Geography

                                          

Page 46: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 46

Population GeographyPopulation Geography

                                          

Page 47: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 47

Population GeographyPopulation Geography

                                          

Page 48: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 http://desip.igc.org/populationmaps.html

48

Population GeographyPopulation Geography

                                          

Page 49: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 49

Population GeographyPopulation Geography

Page 50: 2013 Population Geography College HUG

04/08/23 50

Population Center of the Population Center of the USUS