Download Units 1 & 2 Review

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Demographic transition wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Spring 2015
5-10% of exam
Areas to Know:
•Latin America
:
everywhere from Mexico
south…but NOT USA
•Middle East: can include
Egypt
•East Asia: China
•South Asia: India
•Southeast Asia: primarily
areas like Vietnam,
Cambodia, Thailand,
Philippines, Indonesia
•Oceania: Australia, New
Zealand, nearby islands
•Remember that the divide
btwn Euro & Asia is in
Russia

Location




Place
H-E Interaction




Absolute
Relative—relate to “situation”
Environmental Determinism: envir dictates what choices we
have (no snow skiing resorts in FL)
Possibilism: envir affects us but we can adjust and essentially
overcome envir (snow skiing in NC—we use the mtns and
some snow, then create our own snow)
Movement: see diffusion slide
Regions: see regions slide

Projections: problem of distortion in all


Robinson most common
Two common types
Reference: shows cities, boundaries, mtns, roads
 Thematic: shows a particular feature such as average
snowfall, language, voting patterns


Small scale=more land shown, less detail


World map
Large scale=less land shown, more detail

Map of Wake Forest

Formal (uniform)



Functional (Nodal)




Distinct characteristics recognized by all
EX: North Carolina (lines are drawn, recognized)
Organized around a focal point
Often ties to transportation, communication, or trade—
focuses on interactions
EX: The I-85 corridor or Atlanta Metro
Vernacular (perceptual)


Based on personal beliefs and cultural identity
EX: The South: how to we define? (dialect, climate?)


Relocation: spread through physical movement of
people
Expansion: snowball process
Hierarchical: starts with one key person, moves to others
who have direct access (does not affect the majority of
population)
 Contagious: rapid and widespread throughout a
population (like an illness)
 Stimulus: spread of an underlying idea, but not the entire
thing perhaps b/c of cultural barrier (McDonald’s sells
veggie burgers)


GPS: use of satellites to determine absolute
location


Google Maps
GIS: collection of spatial data that can be
manipulated into “layers” of information

Google Earth
13-17% of exam

Most populated:
 East Asia
 South Asia
 Western Europe
 North America



CBR: # of live births each yr per 1000
CDR: # of deaths each yr per 1000
Doubling time: time for pop to double in size


Total Fertility Rate: avg # of children born to a
woman in a lifetime


2.1 required for pop to maintain
Infant Mortality Rate: # of babies who die w/in 1st
year


Shorter time in many LDCs
Higher in LDCs
Life expectancy: avg length of life

Higher in MDCs


Arithmetic Density
 Avg population per unit of land
 Japan has higher density than USA (approx
880 vs 80 ppl per sq mile)
Physiological Density
 # of people per unit of ARABLE land


Changes in population of countries experiencing
industrialization
Stage 1: high birth, high death=low pop growth


Stage 2: high birth, low death=high pop growth


Improvements in medicine and living conditions
Stage 3: moderate birth, low death=moderate
growth


Many die from disease, famine
Lower birth rate b/c of delayed marriage/fewer kids
Stage 4/5: low birth, low death=low/zero growth

Women are highly educated, working

Represent population composition




Age
Sex
Stage 1 or 2--looks like a pine tree
Stage 4 or 5: bulge in middle


Expansive: countries who need to increase pop
(often Stage 4)
Restrictive: countries seeking to decrease pop
(often Stage 2)



China=One child
India=sterilization
Eugenic: countries seeking to decrease pop by
killing off a segment

Nazi Germany

Cyclic: set pattern completed annually


Periodic: temporary repeated relocation, return
to origin





Transhumance: seasonal movement following
livestock
EX= college
Forced
Voluntary
Step: move occurs in stages to final destination
Chain: following kinship links





1. every migration has a counter
migration
2. majority move a short distance
3. most choose big-city destinations
4. urban residents migrate less often
than rural
5. Young single adults most likely to
migrate


1700s: Atlantic Slave Trade
1700s- 1800s: British movement to North
America, Australia, South Africa




Movement to colonies in Asia/Africa, job
opportunities in America
WWII (asylum)
Post-CW and WWI: African American
migrations to American NE and Midwest
Most US migrants from Latin America today



Push: what factors make life difficult in your
point of origin?
 EX: War, political policies, famine
Pull: What factors make it appealing to move?
 EX: Job opportunities, religious freedom,
quality of life
Consequences:
 POL=gov’t restrictions, immigration policies
 SOC/CUL=diffusion of culture, adaptation
to new area

Many seek asylum in new areas
 Jews in WWII fled to Middle East
 Many areas of Africa today