Chapter 2: Population: The Cultural Landscape
Chapter 2: Population: The Cultural Landscape
Chapter 2: Population: The Cultural Landscape
Includes:
Indonesia
Java (Island in
Indonesia)-Largest
population-1oo million
Sumatra
Borneo
Papua
New Guinea
The Philippines
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Europe,
Including the
European portion
of Russia
-3rd largest
population cluster
-4 dozen countries
-urban dwellers
-highest population
near England,
Germany, and
Belgium.
-not enough food
and resources, so
they import them
Western Hemisphere
-Largest population
cluster is in the
northeastern U.S. and
southeastern Canada.
(2% of the world
people)
-Most American are
urban dwellers.
Africa-2% of the
world’s people live in
West Africa.
Figure 2-2
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Population Distribution –
Descriptions of locations on the Earth’s surface where
individuals or groups (depending on the scale) live.
Figure 2-4
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Where Is the World’s Population
Distributed?
• Population
density
–Arithmetic
density
–Physiological
density
–Agricultural
density
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Arithmetic Density-measure of
total population relative to land
size.
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Physiologic Population Density –
number of people per unit area of
agriculturally productive land (takes
this map into account).
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Physiologic Population
Luxor, Egypt
Density
Egypt - 2,296 persons per
square kilometer of arable
land
U.S.-175 persons per
kilometer of arable land
Table 2-1
Figure 2-8
Figure 2-15
Figure 2-19
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Why Is Population Increasing at Different Rates?
Figure 2-25
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Why Might Overpopulation be a Concern?
• Declining birth rates
– Reasons for declining birth rates
• Reliance on economic development
• Distribution of contraceptives
– Reducing birth rates with contraception
• Sub-Saharan Africa-CDR is
increasing.
Figure 2-30
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Why Might Overpopulation be a Concern?
• World health threats
– The epidemiologic transition
• Stage 1: Pestilence and famine
– The Black Plague
-Pandemics-disease that occurs over a wide
geographic area and affects a very high proportion of
the population.
Figure 2-31
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Why Might Overpopulation be a Concern?
• World health threats
– The epidemiologic transition
• Stage 3: Degenerative diseases
– Most significant: Heart disease and cancer
• Stage 4: Delayed degenerative diseases
– Medical advances prolong life
Figure 2-33
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The End.
Figure 3-1
Up next: Migration
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