GEOGRAPHY Revision Booklet
GEOGRAPHY Revision Booklet
GEOGRAPHY Revision Booklet
GRADE 12
2018
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Geography Revision Guide Gr 12/2018
Module 1
Climate & Weather
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Geography Revision Guide Gr 12/2018
1. Mid-latitude Cyclones
Origin:
o Polar front (60° N/S)
o Cold polar easterlies meet warm westerlies and move parallel but do not mix.
Alternate names:
o Extra tropical cyclone
o frontal depression
o temperate cyclone
General characteristics:
o Forms between 30°-60° N/S
o Moves eastward
o Has two fronts (warm and cold)
o Steered by westerlies
o Affects SA in winter
Stages in formation:
o Initial:
• Cold polar air and warm tropical air move parallel to each other but in opposite directions at the
polar front.
o Wave formation:
• Frictional drag takes place.
• Warm air becomes uplifted.
• Fronts begin to form as air converges to the centre low pressure.
o Mature:
• Wave deepens.
• Cold and warm sectors and fronts fully developed.
• Warm air moves up steep pressure gradient of cold front to form towering cumulonimbus clouds.
(heavy rain over a small area)
• Rapid uplift of warm air to great heights and large-scale condensation.
• Steep gradient of cold front forces warm air to rise very high
• Warm air moves up gentle pressure gradient of warm front to form a broad band of stratus
clouds. (light rain over a large area)
o Occlusion:
• Cold front catches up to the warm front at the apex. (apex is the shortest distance between the
fronts)
• Cold front occlusion: warm air moves up the cold front. (cold front on the ground)
-Coldest air behind the warm front
• Warm front occlusion: cold air moves up the warm front. (warm front on the ground)
-Coldest air in front of the warm front
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Geography Revision Guide Gr 12/2018
Cyclone families:
o Mid-latitude cyclones form in groups.
2. Tropical Cyclones
Origin:
o Warm oceans
o Between 5°-25° N/S where the Coriolis force is strong enough to form a vortex.
Alternate names:
o Hurricanes
o Willy Willies
o Typhoons
o Cyclones
General Characteristics:
o Shown by circular isobars enclosing intense low pressure
o Moves westwards
o Steered by tropical easterlies
o Diameter: 300-500 km
o Follows erratic paths; unpredictable due to
• Ocean heating and cooling differently to land
• Variating wind direction
o Problems with erratic path:
• Unsure of when the cyclone will reach land making it difficult to prepare
• Insufficient time to predict
• Cost implications of unnecessary evacuations
Stages in formation:
o Initial
• Centre pressure above 1000 mb
• Isobars far apart
• Gale force winds
• Cirrus and cumulous clouds
o Immature
• Pressure drops below 1000 mb
• Eye forms
• Wind reaches hurricane strength
• Diameter ±100 km
• Cumulonimbus clouds around the eye
o Mature
• Centre pressure well below 1000 mb
• Isobars very close together
• Diameter between 300-500 km
• Dangerous semicircle: effects of intense winds combine with force of cyclone moving forward
(bottom left).
o Dissipating
• Centre pressure rises above 1000 mb
• Occurs when cyclone encounters land or moves over cold oceans
• Downgraded to tropical depression
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Geography Revision Guide Gr 12/2018
Kalahari High
o On the interior
o Dominates land in winter
o Interacts with SIH to influence climate of SA differently in summer and winter
Thermal low
o Occurs in summer
o Causes convective thunderstorms over the interior
o Usually more than one over the interior
Cut-off low
o Ridging of SAH and SIH prevents the mid-latitude cyclone from moving east
o Cold front is cut off from the cyclone and extends over the land.
o Moist air is then drawn onto the land resulting in rainfall for several days
Coastal low
o Originates on the west coast
o Fog on west coast
o Unstable weather on east coast
7. Valley climate
Slope aspect:
o The direction in which a slope faces
o Slopes facing the equator are warmer since they receive direct sunlight
o Shadow zones do not receive sunlight due to blocking relief
Influence of aspect:
o Economic:
• Farmers plant their crops on the slopes as they are above frost zone.
• Frost will damage crops that’s not frost resistant
• Avoid planting certain crops too close to the valley floor.
• Use valley for livestock farming.
• Use colder valley slopes lower down for frost resistant crops.
o Settlement:
• Warmer north facing slopes have higher value
• Middle of slopes usually used
o Vegetation:
• South facing- cool and moist- densely vegetated
• North facing- warm and dry- sparsely vegetated
Katabatic winds:
o Downslope movement of air in a valley
o Slopes cool because of terrestrial radiation during night
o Cold air on slopes descends to valley floor
o Cold air forces warm air on valley floor to rise in the centre of valley
o Results in temperature inversion within the valley
o Zone of accumulated warm air midway of a slope- thermal belt
o When valley air cools to below dew point temperature- radiation fog is formed
o Influence on:
• Farming:
" citrus farms on valley floor for maturation of fruit and insect resistance
" deciduous fruit planted on middle slope (warm), ideal for ripening
" frost resistant crops on valley floor
• Settlement:
" Land value at middle slope is high since it is located within the thermal belt. Less money
spent on heating
" Land value on valley floor is low since winds trap pollutants here
• Transport:
" Fog may reduce driver visibility which increases the chance of vehicular accidents
Anabatic winds:
o Upslope winds
o Occurs during the day when slopes are heated causing warm air to rise
o Significance: smoke released during the day is carried away by anabatic winds
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Geography Revision Guide Gr 12/2018
8. Urban climate
The climate in urban areas that differs from that in neighbouring rural areas as a result of urban
development
Reasons for differences between urban and rural climates:
o Cloud cover:
• More in urban area
• Pollutants act as condensation nuclei
o Precipitation:
• More in urban area
• The urban area is warmer than the rural area and therefore has a lower pressure.
• Stronger convection currents result in more condensation.
• Air moves from the rural area (HP) to the urban area (LP) bringing in humidity.
• Condenses around the large amount of condensation nuclei (dust particles) resulting in more
rainfall
o Humidity:
• More in rural area
• More vegetation and water bodies (surface water) encourages evaporation
o Wind speed:
• Higher in rural area
• In urban areas, tall buildings obstruct air flow
o Temperature:
• Higher in urban area
• Higher population- more use of geysers, stoves, heaters and more carbon dioxide
• Artificial substances- concrete and metal absorbs heat and glass reflects heat
• Geometric shapes of buildings- reflects and absorbs heat
• Urban activities- generates heat and pollution
• Building density- less air flow to distribute heat
• Efficient drainage- less surface water for evaporation (atmosphere remains hot)
Urban areas receive less insolation due to pollution and cloud cover.
Heat island:
o Occurs during the day
o Region of higher temperature in an urban area surrounded by lower temperatures in rural areas
o Isotherms: lines joining places with the same temperature
o Factors influencing heat islands:
• Decentralisation
• Clusters of tall buildings
• Rivers and dams
Pollution dome:
o dominant at night
o subsiding cold air traps pollutants and compresses it over the city
o strongly developed in winter months
o can be dispersed by strong winds
Effects of heat island and pollution dome:
o Smog and fog
o Visibility reduced
o Acid rain
o Quality of life reduced
o Respiratory problems
o Global warming
Strategies to reduce the effects of heat island and pollution dome:
o Plant trees
o Rooftop gardens
o Reflective paints
o Decentralisation
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Module 2
Geomorphology
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Geography Revision Guide Gr 12/2018
Types of rivers:
o Permanent (perennial)
• Flows all year
• Associated with high rainfall areas
o Periodic (seasonal)
• Flows only in rainy season
• Associated with semiarid and arid areas
o Episodic
• Flows only after heavy rain
• Lasts for a few hours
o Exotic
• Originates in high rainfall area but flows through dry areas
Stream ordering:
o Fingertip streams are stream order 1
o Confluence of two stream order 1 streams results in stream order 2
o Confluence of two stream order 2 streams results in stream order 3
o The system continues until the main stream is reached
o When a lower order stream meets a higher order stream, the resultant stream is the same as the
higher order stream
o Effect of drought on stream order:
• All first order streams will dry up
• This changes stream order of subsequent streams
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Drainage density:
o A measure of the total length of streams per unit area.
2. Fluvial processes
A: River profiles
Cross profile:
o Bank to bank
o Shows depth and width of river
Longitudinal profile:
o From source to mouth
o Shows gradient and length
B: River grading
Graded profile:
o Smooth concave profile
o Rate of erosion and deposition are equal
o Laminar flow
Ungraded profile:
o Has many obstacles
o Young river
o Turbulent flow
C: River rejuvenation
The process whereby a river which has reached a base level, regains energy and begins to erode vertically
once again
D: Fluvial landforms
Meander:
o Lower course:
• Gentle gradient
• Dynamic equilibrium condition
• River weaves from side to side over floodplain
• Lateral erosion occurs
• Stream velocity is low
• Material deposits unevenly
• Uneven deposition causes stream to move from side to side
Ox-bow lake:
o Form from meanders
o Meander neck becomes narrow over time
o During periods of prolonged rainfall, water flows straight, avoiding the meander
o Meander scar: dried up ox-bow lake due to no water supply
Braided stream:
o Seasonal river with abundant bed-load deposited in the lower course
o Gentle gradient and decreased river flow forces deposition of sand islands
o Sand islands obstruct the river’s own path and branches into distributaries
Flood plain:
o Flat land on banks of river made up of layers of silt
o How flooding assists in maintaining floodplain and river:
• Deposits silt on floodplain
• Increases volume of water
• Removes waterborne diseases
• Unblocks river mouth
• Maintains levees
• Maintains and improves biodiversity
Natural levees:
o Forms on riverbanks subjected to repeated flooding
o After water recedes, a raised bank is left behind (higher than flood plain)
o Yazoo streams: tributaries that cannot join the main river due to the obstruction of levees
Waterfalls:
o Upper course of river
o Hard rock overlies soft rock
o The less resistant rocks erode faster than the more resistant rocks
o Plunge pool forms base of waterfall
Rapids:
o Sections of turbulent water
o Upper course
o Alternating hard and soft rock causes riverbed to become uneven resulting in turbulent flow
Delta:
o River enters the sea and deposits its load
o Sediments are kept in suspension in fresh water but flocculate in salt water
o Conditions for formation:
• Weak ocean currents
• Large amounts of sediment
• Shallow river mouth
Use of landforms:
o Flood plain:
• Fertile soil for farming
• Flat land allows for use of machinery
• Good water supply for farming
o Waterfalls:
• It will attract more ecotourism adventure tourism bringing in more revenue
• Development of holiday resorts
• It will improve the infrastructure of the area
• Create more employment opportunities
• It will stimulate the growth of the local arts and crafts market in the areas
• Development of hydro-electrical power station
• Due to the hydro-electrical power station the local community will become less reliant on the
national grid
o Rapids:
• Tourist attraction
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o Delta:
• Fertile land for farming
• Fishing
• Drinking water
• Domestic use of water
• Tourist attraction
• Transport
Disadvantages of landforms:
o Floodplain: difficult for construction
o Waterfalls and rapids: dangerous due to fast flowing water
o Deltas:
• Water is dirty and polluted and attracts mosquitoes
• Vulnerable to see levels
E: River Capture
o Abstraction:
• process whereby watershed changes its position due to uneven steepness on either side.
o River capture:
• one river captures the headwater of another river thereby increasing the size of its own drainage
basin.
Features:
o Captor stream:
• River that has captured the headwater of another river
o Captured stream:
• River that has its water diverted into another river
o Misfit stream:
• Stream that has too little water for the valley in which it flows
o Elbow of capture:
• Right angle bend indicating the point where one river captures the water of another
o Wind gap:
• Dry river valley found immediately after the elbow of capture
Conditions for river capture:
o Difference in gradients of rivers
o One river must receive higher rainfall
o One river must flow down softer rock
Importance:
o Transport of goods using rivers
o Hydroelectric power needs rivers
o Ecosystems in rivers
o Flood control
o Farming uses rivers
o Leisure activities in rivers
o Sustainable use of water from rivers
o Tourist attraction
o Domestic and industrial use of rivers
o River pollution:
• Domestic sewage
• Agricultural wastes (herbicides and pesticides)
• Industrial wastes (including heated water)
o Impact of river pollution:
• Loss of oxygen in rivers due to excessive decomposition of pollution
• Eutrophication
Management strategies:
o Buffer zones
o Awareness campaigns
o Recycling
o Fines
o Testing of water quality
o Vegetate
o Educate farmers
o Wetlands must be conserved
o Community clean-ups
Module 3
Rural & Urban Settlements
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1. Study of Settlements
o Settlement: a place where people live which includes buildings, economic activities and transport
networks
o Site: the exact physical land on which a settlement is placed
o Situation: the location of a settlement in relation to its surrounding area
o Rural: farmsteads, villages or hamlets where there is limited development and technology
o Urban: densely populated settlements with a lot of manmade structures and a few open spaces
such as towns or cities
o Site factors:
• Water
• Relief
• Soil
• Climate
• Accessibility
• Tradition
• Natural resources
o Situation factors:
• Access to markets to sell products
• Access to shops to purchase resources
• Access to banks and other services
• Saves travel time and cost
2. Rural Settlements
o dispersed
• houses or farms are far apart or scattered and isolated
• advantages:
ü farmers can experiment with new machinery
ü larger profit capability
ü privacy
• disadvantages:
û lack of social life
û easy target for criminals
û services far
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o nucleated
• houses or farms found close together
• advantages:
ü ability to share equipment
ü social advantages
ü safety higher
• disadvantages:
û lack of privacy
û small profits
û smaller plots of land
o linear/ ribbon
• houses located in a line along a road, narrow valley or river
o planned
• houses are grouped around a specific feature e.g. Market
o crossroads
• accessibility to transport causes settlements to develop along meeting roads
o semi-circular
• settlement found along the coast
• sea acts as a physical barrier
access to resources:
Water
o reasons for water shortages
• low rainfall
• few lakes
• rivers are non-perennial
• high evaporation
• dams dry up
• domestic wastage
• pollution of clean water
o conserving water
• farmers should use drip irrigation
• mix fertilisers with water
• use treated wastewater
• use tanks to catch and store rainwater
• use boreholes
Soil
o reasons for soil erosion
• deforestation
• overgrazing
• over-cropping and monoculture
• high rainfall
o soil management strategies
• afforestation on steep slopes
• terracing
• contour ploughing
• use of natural manure
Land reform:
o land restitution:
• compensating people for the land they lost due to forced removals
• compensation by money or land
o land tenure reform:
• provides security to South Africans regarding land ownership
• prevents unfair eviction
o land redistribution:
• providing land to previously disadvantaged people for housing or farming
5. Urban Hierarchies
Urban hierarchy:
o hierarchy refers to the arrangement of settlements in an area from smallest to largest
o based on population, range and number of offered services and sphere of influence
Central place:
o refers to a settlement that provides goods and services to the surrounding rural population
o central place theory explains the relative size and spacing of settlements
Threshold population:
o the minimum number of customers needed to make a business profitable
Sphere of influence:
o the market area from where an urban settlement draws its customers
o dependent on the size and number of functions offered by the centre
o overlap due to:
• zone of competition
• variety of goods offered
• en-route to work/home
range of goods:
o maximum distance that people are willing to travel to buy goods or services
low order goods and services:
o goods used daily
o have a small range
o have a small sphere of influence
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A: Street Patterns
o grid iron/rectangular
• streets intersect at right angles
• found on land that is flat
• hampers traffic flow
• does not work on steep land
o radial
• roads radiate away from central point
• joined by ring roads
• traffic congestion at the centre
• ring roads allow for traffic bypass
o unplanned/irregular
• maze of streets with no order
• associated with broken relief
o planned irregular
• new urban developments
• ensures a smooth flow of traffic
• hilly relief
B: Building Density
C: Urban Profile
o the side view of a city showing building density and building height
o land value influences the shape of an urban profile
o building density and height is greatest where land value is highest
o Compatibility:
• Degree to which functions attract each other
• Recreational areas are found near residential areas- high compatibility
o Specialised requirements:
• Some land use zones require special features to develop e.g. a water source
o Land values
o Centrifugal force (push factors)
o Centripetal forces (pull factors):
• Functional magnetism: functions that benefit each other
• Functional convenience: CBD highly convenient since close to work
• Functional prestige: a certain area becomes well known for a specific function offered
Urban land use zones: urban land set aside for a specific purpose
industries
low income
housing
middle income
housing
high income
housing
o inner zones invade outer zones in a process called invasion and succession
o does not have all land use zones
o no commercial decentralisation
o no consideration of relief
o little accessibility
o Solutions:
• Monitoring of public transport
• Introduce rapid and safe transport
• Decentralisation
• Cycle lanes
• Ring roads
• Park and ride facilities
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
o Easier mode of public transport o Can only accommodate small number
o Can get through traffic easily of people
o Relieves being caught up in traffic o Travels at low speed
congestion o Conflict with other taxi-drivers
o Travel short distances at low costs o Operates and transports within a small
o Creates employment radius
Service provision:
o Municipalities are struggling to provide basic services due to rapid urbanisation
o Resulting in protests for better service delivery
B: Informal Settlements
Social injustices:
o Causes of unequal access to resources and services
• Greed and corruption
• Nepotism
• Lack of public participation
o Impact
• Xenophobia
• Violent protests
• Crime
Economic injustices:
o Poverty o Poor public transport
• Causes • Impact
" Lack of education " Frequent accidents
" Wages in primary sector too low " Pollution
" Unemployment " Traffic congestion
• Solutions • Solutions
" Basic income grant " Improve bus routing
" Increase support to farmers " Upgrade taxi ranks
" Skills programmes " Dedicated public transport lanes
• Impact " Introduce eco-friendly transport
" Increased crime systems
" Malnutrition " Subsidies for public transport
" Increased illness improvement
" Low standard of living
Environmental injustices:
Type cause effect solution
o CO o Health problems o Electricity saving
o Sulphur o Acid rain campaigns
o Power stations o Destruction of o Strict control of
Air pollution o Domestic activities ecosystems pollution by
o Global warming government
o Use ozone friendly
products
o Extend green belts
o Industries o Hypertension and o Noise barriers
o Airplanes hearing loss o Altering flight paths
o Traffic o Reduces quality of o Restrict times of day
Noise pollution o Fire crackers life for certain noise
levels
Destruction of o Population growth o Soil erosion o Legislation
ecosystems o Settlement o Pollution of o Education
expansion freshwater o Buffering
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Module 4
Economic Geography
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Geography Revision Guide Gr 12/2018
Primary sector:
o Concerned with extraction of raw materials from the environment
o E.g. farming, fishing, forestry, mining
Secondary sector:
o Activities that process raw materials into useful goods
o E.g. steel making, food canning, construction
Tertiary sector:
o Provision of services
o E.g. doctors, accountants, teachers, lawyers
Quaternary sector:
o Hi-tech sector linked to research and development
o E.g. scientists and researchers
2. Agriculture
Contribution to SA economy:
o Food production- sufficient to meet demand rids need of imports
o Earner of foreign exchange- 10% of exports
o Contribution to GDP- farmers pay taxes
o Job creation- 10% of labour force employed
o Industrial development- stimulation of industries by high volume of raw materials
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Food security:
o When enough nutritious food is produced to meet the needs of people
o Famine: lack of food, giving rise to starvation and malnutrition
o Importance:
• Needed to maintain good health of people
• Prevents social uprising
• Prevents hunger and famine
• Malnutrition can be prevented
o Factors affecting food security:
Negatively Positively
o Thin and infertile soils, soil erosion o Greater variety of crops due to climatic
o Droughts and floods variation
o Pests and diseases o Government incentives
o Deforestation o GM seeds
o Lack of capital
o Poor infrastructure in rural areas
o HIV infected workers
3. Mining
Contribution to SA economy:
o Contribution to GDP:
• mining companies pay tax
• employment
• foreign investment
• increased skills development
• generates infrastructure
• production of raw material to country
o Industrial development:
• demand for tools and machinery stimulates industries
• community develops around mine
• promotes industries that process products obtained from mining
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Geography Revision Guide Gr 12/2018
o infrastructure development:
• development of transport networks
• better electricity supply due to demand
• telecommunication networks improved
4. Secondary Sector
A: Contribution to SA economy
B: Types of industries
Heavy industries:
o large scale
o generates pollution
o outskirts of settlement
o close to bulk transport facilities
o uses lots of raw materials and energy
o e.g. Iscor (steel), oil refining, engineering
Light industries:
o small products manufactured
o close to CBD
o small areas used
o little pollution generated
o road transport used
o e.g. clothing manufacturers
Market orientated:
o locate close to market/customers since goods produced are perishable
o e.g. cheese industry
Footloose industries:
o location not dictated by access to materials or markets
o service orientated
o no pollution generated
o highly skilled
o e.g. research companies
Ubiquitous industries:
o can locate anywhere
o fulltime services offered
o e.g. telecommunication services
Break-of-bulk industries:
o located between source of raw materials and customers, where transport type changes
o e.g. sugar refineries
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Raw materials:
o wide range available in abundance
Labour supply:
o access to skilled and semiskilled labour
o access to tertiary education to skill labour force
water supply:
o close to water supply for industrial use (manufacturing or cooling machinery)
o water transfer schemes supplement water supply
Energy supply:
o large coal reserves for electricity generation
o industries locate close to source of energy
transport:
o well established transport infrastructure
o 8 seaports and 4 international airports
Political intervention:
o Government policies in place to support local industries
o Incentives given to industries
Over-concentration:
o Traffic congestion
o Higher rentals due to demand for land- lower profits
o Higher salary demands
Transport:
o Unreliable
o Repair of roads and railways is costly
o Markets are far away
o Isolated from most world markets
o High export costs make it hard for local industries to compete with industries close to large
international markets
Labour supply:
o Brain drain results in loss of skilled workers, making it necessary to employ foreigners at high costs
o Lack of funding to uplift education results in lack of skilled labour force
o Workers demand higher pay by striking which hinders production
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Air pollution:
o Industries have the responsibility to reduce air pollution since it is the main contributor.
o Effects of industrial pollution:
• Negative impact on human health
• Kills animals and plants
• Causes imbalance in ecosystems
• Degrades air quality
• Damages buildings
• Reduces quality of life
o Causes of air pollution:
• Lack of policies to control air pollution:
Allows industries to bypass laws
• Unplanned industrial growth:
In industrial towns, pollution level increases above norm
• Use of outdated technology:
Industries rely on old technology that generates large amounts of waste
• May small scale industries:
Escape environmental regulations and release more pollution than normal
Water supply:
o Water is scarce in SA
o Large companies forced to recycle water
o Pollution is dumped into usable water
o Solutions:
• Recycling and reusing water
• Lowering toxicity in operations involving water
• Make production process more water efficient
Raw materials:
o Use of imported raw materials increases production costs
o Cost of imports fluctuates with foreign exchange rate
Durban-Pinetown (eThekwini)
Factors favouring location Factors hindering Main industrial activities
development
o Market o Capacity of harbour is o Oil and sugar refining
• Densely populated limited o Ship building
• High demand for o Hilly topography restricts o Food and drink
manufactured goods growth of harbour o Textiles
o Transport o Footwear
• Harbour o Soap making
• Many links to rest of
the country
o Labour
• Large labour force
due to large
population
o Raw materials
• Sugarcane
• Dairy
• Meat
• Subtropical fruit
o Water
• Abundant rain
• Presence of perennial
rivers (Tugela &
Umgeni)
o Relief
• Flat along coast
o Phalaborwa SDI
o Limpopo
Location o Favourably situated for economic links with other
countries
o Runs through Great North Road
o Platinum, iron ore, coal, diamonds
Resources o Wood
o Mangoes, papayas, avocados, potatoes
o Use underutilised resources sustainably
Objectives o Develop small-scale mining
o Integrate urban and rural areas
o Promote tourism
o Poverty and unemployment
Challenges o Unmaintained roads
o Poor infrastructure
o Lack of clean water
POSITIVE NEGATIVE
o More conservation will take place, e.g. o Removal of natural vegetation to build
national parks infrastructure
o More money will be made available for o Damage to natural environment by
conserving the natural environment tourists
o Importance of conserving the natural o Development of illegal game farms
environment by the locals will be (canned hunting)
emphasised
o Ecosystems will be protected
o Biodiversity will be protected
Decentralisation
Reasons to move out Effects Reasons to move into Effects
of urban areas rural areas
o Depletion of o Job losses o Available land o Improved
primary o New office parks o Cheaper land infrastructure
resources o Urban blight o Closer to market o Improved
o Decreased services
demand o Job creation
o Functional
magnetism
Benefits of decentralisation on core areas:
o Relieves pressure on infrastructure
o Less pollution
o Less pressure on services
o Reduces rural-urban migration
o Reduces overcrowding
impact of decentralisation on CBD:
POSITIVE NEGATIVE
o CBD less overcrowded o Urban decay
o Less traffic o Illegal occupation of vacant buildings
o CBD attractive for investors o City is unattractive
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5. Tertiary sector
o Involve selling of goods and provision of services
o Hairdressers, doctors, internet cafes, repair companies
Contribution to SA economy:
o Provides employment to skilled population
o Contributes to GDP via tax
o Provides population with higher incomes and better standard of living
o Encourages growth of financial and business services
ECONOMIC SOCIAL
o More investments in the country o More money available to build schools
o Foreign currency entering the country and health services
o Stronger value of the rand o More money available for social grants
o More job opportunities available in the
o More job opportunities therefore less
country
o Larger domestic market available poverty
o More houses can be built
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6. Informal sector
Written by Zaid Ganie, in accordance with The Department of Basic Education, Geography Examination Guidelines, Grade 12,
2017.