SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Chapter 2 Key 1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed?
I Where are the people People are not evenly distributed.  Half live in cities (URBAN), the other half in rural areas. 9/10 live on 20% of land, half live on only 5%.  Humans occupy only a small portion of the land on earth There are 4 generalizations when it comes to how population distributed around our planet
1. 90% live north of the Equator and 2/3 live in the mid latitudes. People live in low elevations.  Between 50-60% of population lives below 1,000 ft. and nearly 80% live below 1650 ft. People live near the coasts. 2/3 of all people live within 300 miles of an ocean. People live near fertile land along rivers.
II 4 Areas of Large Populations A East Asia, including Japan, China,  Korea, Taiwan, 25% of people on earth B South Asia, including India, Pakistan,  Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. 21% C Europe contains another 12% D Northeast USA and Southeast Canada E other notable areas include Egypt,  Java, S.E. South American coast and  parts of Africa.
 
III Ecumene A. The ecumene is the part of the world  that Is permanently inhabited. B. People locally extend the ecumene  through irrigation, terracing fields, etc. C. Nonecumene is the uninhabited or  sparsely occupied areas of earth. D. 35 to 40% of all land does not have any  significant human settlement.
IV Non-Ecumene Dry Lands Major deserts include the Sahara, Arabian, Thar, Takla Makan, Gobi, Atacama, S.W. USA, and much of Australia Wet Lands Amazon basin, Congo Basin, and along the Equator Cold Lands Polar Regions High Lands Major Mountain ranges include Rockies, Alps, Himalayas, and Andes
V Population Density A. Population density is the relationship  between the number of inhabitants and  the area they occupy. B. There are three types of density figures  that geographers look at
1. Crude density or Arithmetic density.  Number of people per unit of land.  This  is easy to obtain, is only an average of  total land, and often does not give a  proper image of  a place. 2. Physiological density is the number of  people divided by the arable land (land  that is good for farming) 3. Agricultural density only takes into  account rural residents and arable  land.
China Population Case Study Arithmetic density 350 people/square mile physiological density 3,500 people/square mile. Only 10% of China is cultivable, and 80% of the population lives on this land. Distribution: western 2/3s of China (mostly minorities) is sparsely populated.    Why?
 
Chapter 2 Key 2 Where Has the World’s Population Increased?
I Birth Rates A. CBR = Crude Birth Rate.  How many  babies are born for every 1000 people B. TFR= Total Fertility Rate.  How many  babies the average woman of a country  could expect to have.  This gives a  better idea of reproduction rates. C. TFR of 2.1 to 2.3 is the replacement  level of fertility.
 
II Death Rates A. CDR= Crude Death Rate.  Also called  mortality rate is deaths per 1000 people B. Pre WWII, death rates were much higher in  developing countries than developed  countries.  Post WWII,  that is not true due to  modern medicines. C. Life expectancy is what age you can expect  to live.  In developing countries CDR  has gone down while life expectancy has  gone up. D. Countries with high AIDS rates are the  exception.
 
IV Natural Increase A. Rate of Natural Increase shows rate of  population growth without factoring in  migration B. Figured by starting with birth rate and  subtracting death rate.  It is usually  shown as a percentage.  Example.  CB  is 22 and CD is  12, 22-12=10 Natural  increase would be 1% (of 1000)
 
V Doubling Times A. Doubling time is the time it would take for a  population to double at the current  natural increase rate. B. Populations grow exponentially rather than  arithmetically.  This is sometimes  called a J-curve.  C. Doubling time predictions are almost never  accurate because so much can change  in a population over time. Immigration and  emigration rates change as does life  expectancy and social policies or practices.
 

More Related Content

DOCX
Por qué soy miembro de la iglesia de Cristo
PPTX
Ch 2, key issue 3 (demographic transition)
PPT
Population (world geog unit 4)
PPTX
Chapter 13, key 4 (use with skeletal notes)
PPT
World cities pwr pnt
PDF
Rubenstein ch 2_notes
PPTX
human resources.pptx
DOC
Por qué soy miembro de la iglesia de Cristo
Ch 2, key issue 3 (demographic transition)
Population (world geog unit 4)
Chapter 13, key 4 (use with skeletal notes)
World cities pwr pnt
Rubenstein ch 2_notes
human resources.pptx

Similar to Ch 2, key issue 1 & 2 (20)

PPT
Population geography
PPT
8.2 human population
PPTX
POPULATION 1 helpful geography students.pptx
PPT
GEOG101 Chapt06 lecture
PPT
GEOG101 Chapter 6 Lecture
PPTX
Human population and the environment
PPTX
Human population and the environment
PPTX
Global Demography-The tools of demography
PPTX
Global demography
PPT
Дэлхийн хүн ам
PPT
Neb population
PPTX
Geo23.1102 winter2015 session3
PPTX
3.1 Human population dynamics
PPTX
ch 5.pptx of chapter Humans Resources class 8th NCERT
PDF
Chapter 1_part 2.pdfHuman Population and the environment
PDF
Chapter 1_part MULTIDISCIPLINARY-NATURE-OF-ENVIRONMENTAL-STUDIES.pdf
PDF
Chapter 1.pptxthe Interdisciplinary nature of environmental science Chapter 1...
PPT
Population 3 Intro To Population Change
PPT
Populationgeography 111003125010-phpapp01
PPT
Human Population Dynamics
Population geography
8.2 human population
POPULATION 1 helpful geography students.pptx
GEOG101 Chapt06 lecture
GEOG101 Chapter 6 Lecture
Human population and the environment
Human population and the environment
Global Demography-The tools of demography
Global demography
Дэлхийн хүн ам
Neb population
Geo23.1102 winter2015 session3
3.1 Human population dynamics
ch 5.pptx of chapter Humans Resources class 8th NCERT
Chapter 1_part 2.pdfHuman Population and the environment
Chapter 1_part MULTIDISCIPLINARY-NATURE-OF-ENVIRONMENTAL-STUDIES.pdf
Chapter 1.pptxthe Interdisciplinary nature of environmental science Chapter 1...
Population 3 Intro To Population Change
Populationgeography 111003125010-phpapp01
Human Population Dynamics
Ad

More from montathomas (20)

PPTX
Unit 1, part 2
PPTX
Unit 1 Vocabulary
PPTX
Unit 1, part 1, the study of geography
PPTX
Unit 1, part 4, the study of geography, earth
PPTX
Unit 1, part 3 the study of geography, cartographers' tools
PPTX
Ch. 12 review
PPT
Von Thunen Art Activity
PPTX
The kurds
PPT
Sacred space
PPT
Choropleth maps & generalization
PPTX
Review -pwr pnt assignment
PPT
Chapter 12, Key 3 by David Palmer
PPT
Chapter 10 key 2
PPT
Chapter 10 key 4
PPT
Chapter 10 key 1
PPTX
Lee's model and step migration
PPTX
6 Major World Religions
PPT
Celtic Languages by Chris Hall
PPTX
Culture realms (use with culture realms core map)
PPTX
What is culture
Unit 1, part 2
Unit 1 Vocabulary
Unit 1, part 1, the study of geography
Unit 1, part 4, the study of geography, earth
Unit 1, part 3 the study of geography, cartographers' tools
Ch. 12 review
Von Thunen Art Activity
The kurds
Sacred space
Choropleth maps & generalization
Review -pwr pnt assignment
Chapter 12, Key 3 by David Palmer
Chapter 10 key 2
Chapter 10 key 4
Chapter 10 key 1
Lee's model and step migration
6 Major World Religions
Celtic Languages by Chris Hall
Culture realms (use with culture realms core map)
What is culture
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
NewMind AI Weekly Chronicles - August'25 Week I
PPTX
Big Data Technologies - Introduction.pptx
PDF
Peak of Data & AI Encore- AI for Metadata and Smarter Workflows
PPTX
Understanding_Digital_Forensics_Presentation.pptx
PPTX
KOM of Painting work and Equipment Insulation REV00 update 25-dec.pptx
PPTX
Effective Security Operations Center (SOC) A Modern, Strategic, and Threat-In...
PDF
7 ChatGPT Prompts to Help You Define Your Ideal Customer Profile.pdf
PDF
Agricultural_Statistics_at_a_Glance_2022_0.pdf
PDF
Mobile App Security Testing_ A Comprehensive Guide.pdf
PPTX
Spectroscopy.pptx food analysis technology
DOCX
The AUB Centre for AI in Media Proposal.docx
PPT
Teaching material agriculture food technology
PPTX
Detection-First SIEM: Rule Types, Dashboards, and Threat-Informed Strategy
PPTX
VMware vSphere Foundation How to Sell Presentation-Ver1.4-2-14-2024.pptx
PDF
Reach Out and Touch Someone: Haptics and Empathic Computing
PDF
Build a system with the filesystem maintained by OSTree @ COSCUP 2025
PDF
Electronic commerce courselecture one. Pdf
PDF
The Rise and Fall of 3GPP – Time for a Sabbatical?
PPT
“AI and Expert System Decision Support & Business Intelligence Systems”
PDF
Chapter 3 Spatial Domain Image Processing.pdf
NewMind AI Weekly Chronicles - August'25 Week I
Big Data Technologies - Introduction.pptx
Peak of Data & AI Encore- AI for Metadata and Smarter Workflows
Understanding_Digital_Forensics_Presentation.pptx
KOM of Painting work and Equipment Insulation REV00 update 25-dec.pptx
Effective Security Operations Center (SOC) A Modern, Strategic, and Threat-In...
7 ChatGPT Prompts to Help You Define Your Ideal Customer Profile.pdf
Agricultural_Statistics_at_a_Glance_2022_0.pdf
Mobile App Security Testing_ A Comprehensive Guide.pdf
Spectroscopy.pptx food analysis technology
The AUB Centre for AI in Media Proposal.docx
Teaching material agriculture food technology
Detection-First SIEM: Rule Types, Dashboards, and Threat-Informed Strategy
VMware vSphere Foundation How to Sell Presentation-Ver1.4-2-14-2024.pptx
Reach Out and Touch Someone: Haptics and Empathic Computing
Build a system with the filesystem maintained by OSTree @ COSCUP 2025
Electronic commerce courselecture one. Pdf
The Rise and Fall of 3GPP – Time for a Sabbatical?
“AI and Expert System Decision Support & Business Intelligence Systems”
Chapter 3 Spatial Domain Image Processing.pdf

Ch 2, key issue 1 & 2

  • 1. Chapter 2 Key 1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed?
  • 2. I Where are the people People are not evenly distributed. Half live in cities (URBAN), the other half in rural areas. 9/10 live on 20% of land, half live on only 5%. Humans occupy only a small portion of the land on earth There are 4 generalizations when it comes to how population distributed around our planet
  • 3. 1. 90% live north of the Equator and 2/3 live in the mid latitudes. People live in low elevations. Between 50-60% of population lives below 1,000 ft. and nearly 80% live below 1650 ft. People live near the coasts. 2/3 of all people live within 300 miles of an ocean. People live near fertile land along rivers.
  • 4. II 4 Areas of Large Populations A East Asia, including Japan, China, Korea, Taiwan, 25% of people on earth B South Asia, including India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. 21% C Europe contains another 12% D Northeast USA and Southeast Canada E other notable areas include Egypt, Java, S.E. South American coast and parts of Africa.
  • 5.  
  • 6. III Ecumene A. The ecumene is the part of the world that Is permanently inhabited. B. People locally extend the ecumene through irrigation, terracing fields, etc. C. Nonecumene is the uninhabited or sparsely occupied areas of earth. D. 35 to 40% of all land does not have any significant human settlement.
  • 7. IV Non-Ecumene Dry Lands Major deserts include the Sahara, Arabian, Thar, Takla Makan, Gobi, Atacama, S.W. USA, and much of Australia Wet Lands Amazon basin, Congo Basin, and along the Equator Cold Lands Polar Regions High Lands Major Mountain ranges include Rockies, Alps, Himalayas, and Andes
  • 8. V Population Density A. Population density is the relationship between the number of inhabitants and the area they occupy. B. There are three types of density figures that geographers look at
  • 9. 1. Crude density or Arithmetic density. Number of people per unit of land. This is easy to obtain, is only an average of total land, and often does not give a proper image of a place. 2. Physiological density is the number of people divided by the arable land (land that is good for farming) 3. Agricultural density only takes into account rural residents and arable land.
  • 10. China Population Case Study Arithmetic density 350 people/square mile physiological density 3,500 people/square mile. Only 10% of China is cultivable, and 80% of the population lives on this land. Distribution: western 2/3s of China (mostly minorities) is sparsely populated.   Why?
  • 11.  
  • 12. Chapter 2 Key 2 Where Has the World’s Population Increased?
  • 13. I Birth Rates A. CBR = Crude Birth Rate. How many babies are born for every 1000 people B. TFR= Total Fertility Rate. How many babies the average woman of a country could expect to have. This gives a better idea of reproduction rates. C. TFR of 2.1 to 2.3 is the replacement level of fertility.
  • 14.  
  • 15. II Death Rates A. CDR= Crude Death Rate. Also called mortality rate is deaths per 1000 people B. Pre WWII, death rates were much higher in developing countries than developed countries. Post WWII, that is not true due to modern medicines. C. Life expectancy is what age you can expect to live. In developing countries CDR has gone down while life expectancy has gone up. D. Countries with high AIDS rates are the exception.
  • 16.  
  • 17. IV Natural Increase A. Rate of Natural Increase shows rate of population growth without factoring in migration B. Figured by starting with birth rate and subtracting death rate. It is usually shown as a percentage. Example. CB is 22 and CD is 12, 22-12=10 Natural increase would be 1% (of 1000)
  • 18.  
  • 19. V Doubling Times A. Doubling time is the time it would take for a population to double at the current natural increase rate. B. Populations grow exponentially rather than arithmetically. This is sometimes called a J-curve. C. Doubling time predictions are almost never accurate because so much can change in a population over time. Immigration and emigration rates change as does life expectancy and social policies or practices.
  • 20.