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Where is the World’s Population Distributed? Key issue #1- Chapter 2 Introduction • Study of population Important: 1. Many people are alive at this time- 6 ¾ Billion 2. Worlds population increased at a faster rate during the second half of the twentieth century than ever before in history 3. Virtually all global population growth is concentrated in LDC’s • Demography: scientific study of population characteristics Introduction • 2 “Where” Questions: 1. Where people are found across Earth’s space 2. Where are the places population is growing • 2 “Why” Questions: 1. Why population is growing at different rates in different places 2. Why Local diversity in growth rates to be important Introduction • 2 things involved in the study of over population: 1. Relationship between the number of people 2. Availability of resources • Problems result: when an area’s population exceeds the capacity of the environment to support it at an acceptable standard of living Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • 4 most populated regions: 2/3 inhabitants are clustered 1. 2. 3. 4. East Asia South Asia Southeast Asia Western Europe Similarities: Live near an ocean or river with east access to a ocean Occupy low-lying areas, fertile soil and temperate climate Regions located in the Northern Hemisphere between 10 and 55 degrees north latitude, with exception of part of SE Asia concentration Countries with at least 50 Million inhabitants World Population Distribution & Climate Zones Fig. 2-2: World population is unevenly distributed across the earth’s surface. Climate is one factor that affects population density. World Population Climate Zones Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • East Asia – 1/5 of the worlds people live – Bordering the Pacific Ocean includes China, islands of Japan, Korean Peninsula and island of Taiwan – 5/6 of the people here live in China, most populated country; third largest land area, but much is mountains and deserts – Chinese population clustered near the Pacific Coast and several fertile river valleys, Huang and Yangtze – 26 urban areas with more than 2 million people – 52 with more than 1 million – 2/3 of the people live in rural areas as farmers Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? – Japan and South Korea population distributed unevenly – 1/3 of people live in three metropolitan areas, Tokyo and Osaka Japan and Seoul S. Korea • Less than 3% of land area for both countries • More than ¾ of all Japanese and Koreans live in urban areas and work industrial or service jobs Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • South Asia – 1/5 of the worlds population: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and island of Sri Lanka – India: worlds 2nd most populated country – Most important concentration of people live along a 900 mile corridor from Lahore, Pakistan through India and Bangladesh to the Bay of Bengal – Population is heavily concentrated along the Indus and Ganges rivers and India's two coastlines, Arabian Sea to the west and Bay of Bengal to the east – Most are farmers living rural areas – 21 urban areas more than 2 million; 55 with more than 1 million Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • Southeast Asia – World s fourth largest – ½ billion people – Series of islands lie between the Indian and the Pacific Oceans: Papa New Guinea, Philippines, Borneo, Java etc – Largest island of Java, 100 million – Indonesia, 13,677 islands is worlds fourth most populated country – High population concentration along river valleys and deltas at se tip of Asian mainland, Indochina – High % of people work as farmers Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • Europe – Western Europe, Eastern Europe and the European portion of Russia, worlds third largest population cluster, 1/9 of the people in the world – Four dozen countries – ¾ of the citizens live in cities, less than 20% are farmers – Dense network of rail and road link settlements – Highest population near coal fields of England, Germany and Belgium – Do not produce enough food for themselves – Import food and other resources (colonization!) Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • NE United States and SE Canada – Largest population concentration in western Hemisphere – Atlantic Coast from Boston to Newport News VA and westward along Great Lakes to Chicago – 2%of the worlds people – Urban dwellers, less 5% farmers Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • West Africa – 2% of the Worlds population is clustered • South facing Atlantic coast – ½ of population is concentrated in Nigeria – Most work in agriculture – 6 urban areas with more than 2 million people – 16 with more than 1 million Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • People do not live: – Too dry, too wet, too cold, too mountainous • Ecumene: portion of the Earth’s surface occupied by permanent human settlement • 75% of the Earths population live on 5% of the Earth surface • 71% of Earth is oceans Ecumene 5000 B.C. Ecumene, A.D.1900 Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • Dry lands – Cover 20% – Two largest desert areas are in Northern Hemisphere 15 and 50 degrees north latitude and Southern Hemisphere 20 and 50 degrees latitude – Lack sufficient water to grow crops, use irrigation systems and camels to survive – Contain natural resources, oil reserves Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • Wet Lands – Between the equator 20 degrees north and south latitudes in South America, Central Africa and SE Asia – Combination of rain and heat rapidly deplete the nutrients from the soil – Enough food can be grown during the wet seasons to support a large population Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • Cold Lands – Land near North and South Poles – Permanently frozen (permafrost) – Receive less rainfall then Central Asian deserts, small annual snowfall has accumulated into thick ice – Unsuitable for planting crops, few animals can survive the extreme cold Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • High Lands – Switzerland: 5% of its population live in the high lands and ½ of the country is 3,300 ft above sea level – Latin America and Africa are exception to the rule of nobody living in the high lands • Temperature and precipitation is uncomfortable in the lowlands Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • Arithmetic Density: total number of people divided by total land area 1. Compare conditions in different countries because the two pieces of information needed to calculate measure are easy to obtain 2. High- South Asia, Bangladesh 2700 per sq mile Low- Canada, 8 per sq mile 3. Answers the “where” question Arithmetic Population Density Fig. 2-4: Arithmetic population density is the number of people per total land area. The highest densities are found in parts of Asia and Europe. Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • Physiological Density: number of people supported by a unit of arable land 1. High- United States: 172 per sq mile Low- Egypt: 6,682 per sq mile 2. The higher the physiological density, the greater the pressure the people may place on the land to produce enough food 3. Provides insight into the relationship between the size of a population and the availability of resources in a region Physiological Density Key Issue #1 Where is the World’s Population Distributed? • Agricultural Density: ratio of the number of farmers to the amount of arable land 1. Helps account for economic differences 2. United States is low: 1 farmer per sq kilometer Egypt is high: 826 farmers per sq kilometer 3. MDC’s are lower because of technology and finance allow a few people to farm extensive land areas and feed many people Density per sq Kilometer