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Page 1: Population

Population

Mitchell McGovernSarah MasonJessie Fedyke

Page 2: Population

Importance of Population

• Studying populations allows us to see where people are found across Earth’s surface.

• It also allows us to see the areas where population is growing too fast/ too slow.

• Demography: the study of the characteristics of human populations

• Population is measured by a Census, a count of the number of people in a given area, usually every ten years. Very important to determine government funding.

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Declining Rate of Natural Increase• NIR:

-% a population grows each year-CDR-CBR=NIR

• CDR: -Total # of deaths in a year for every 1,000 people

• CBR:-Total # of live births in a year for every 1,000 people

• Doubling Time-# of years needed to double a population

World NIR is decreasing (as of 1963)• Causes:

-Sterilization, especially in India-Increase in Education-Family Planning-Lower birth rates improve economic conditions-propaganda now encourages small families (china)

*Exception: LDC-Almost all the world population growth is from LDC’s (95% of World NIR)

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Measures of population• Total Fertility Rate:

-measures the # of births in society, average # of children a woman will have during childbearing years of 15-49.

• World TFR is 2.6 children per woman-LDC’s TFR is high-MDC’s TFR is low

• Infant Mortality Rate-# of deaths of infants under the age of 1, per year-LDC’s IMR is high-MDC’s IMR is low

• Life Expectancy-Average # of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels-High in MDC’s-Low in LDC’s

• Dependency ratio-# of people too old or young to work compared to the # of their working years-High levels of YOUNG dependent people in LDc’s -High levels of OLD dependent people in MDC’s

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World Population Distribution

• 7 billion• Factors of distribution:

-Climate and Weather, availability/quality of water, topography, arable land, along with political and economic factors

• Culture/ethnicity• Areas of high political instability are undergoing changes

in population • Population growth curves:

-S curve; historical growth-J curve; exponential growth

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Population distribution • Ecumene

-Portion of the earth’s surface occupied by permanent settlement-today 3/4ths of the world population lives on only 5% of earth’s surface

• 20% of earth’s surface is not arable due to dry lands and large deserts, low population in these areas

• In areas of high rainfall with more than 50 inches per year the soil is depleted of nutrients therefore the population is low

• Near the North and South poles with massive elevations and ice coverage very little humans or animals live.

Country: PopulationChina 1,354,040,000

India 1,210,193,422

United States 315,761,000

Indonesia 237,641,326

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Density• Population Density

-numerical measure of the relationship between the number of people and some other unit expressed as a ratio- helps geographers describe distribution of people in comparison to available resources.

• Arithmetic Density-Total # of objects in an area-To find it you take the total # of people divided by total land area-Does not always accurately portray population distribution because in some countries a large majority of the people live in a certain part, they are not spread out evenly.

• Physiological Density-# of people per area of arable land in a region

• Agricultural Density-ratio of farmers to the amount of arable land-measures economic differences

• Why? -Comparing agricultural and physiological densities allows you to see the relationship between population and resources

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World population threats

• Epidemiologic transition: -Focuses on distinctive causes of death in each stage of the demographic transition

• Epidemiology:-branch of medical science concerned with the incidence, distribution, and control of diseases that affect large numbers of people

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Epidemiologic transition • Stage 1, Pestilence and Famine ex. Black Plague

-spread from urban areas to rural areas wiping out entire villages, thought to originate from the Tatar army.

• Stage 2, Receding Pandemics occuring over a wide geographic area. ex. -Edwin Chadwick (1800-1890) said that residents in poorer neighborhoods had higher incidences of pandemic diseases -Dr. John Snow (1813-1858) said that the contaminated water was the cause of death, not sinful behavior.

• Stage 3, Degenerative and human-created diseases. Ex. Cancer -End of deaths from infectious illnesses due to vaccines

• Stage 4, delayed degenerative diseases ex. Stage 3 diseases still linger but there are new treatments to extend life expectancy. -Result of more research in medicine and reduced use of drugs.

• Stage 5, Stage of reemergence of infectious diseases and parasitic disease ex. Malaria-Stage is more of a theory, thought to might happen due to evolution with microbes evolving and changing vaccines may stop working, like building up immunity to certain medicine from so much use.

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Malthus Theory• Thomas Malthus predicted that population was growing too fast that

eventually we would run out of food.-With an increase in population resources would deplete and disease, famine, and war would ensue. -population grows geometrically while population growths arithmetically

Reasons he was wrong• Malthus failed to anticipate that poor countries would have rapid population

growth • Theory based on his idea that food and resources were at a fixed amount. • Malthus’s arithmetic theory didn’t take into account that too few people could

also slow the economy just as overpopulation might• Food production increased with green revolution

-fertilizer-Genetically enhanced food-technology

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Demorgaphic Transition Model• Stage 1: Low Growth, high birth AND death rates

-Hunting and Gathering, no modern medicine, no country is still in stage one today• Stage 2: Death rate drops, but birth rate stays high

-Occurred in MDC’s during the 18th with most LDC’s during mid 19th century due to the industrial revolution, improved sanitation/medicine/technology

• Stage 3:Birth rate drops, death rate low-CBR is still higher than CDR, most MDC’s went through stage 3 during the early 1900’s with a sudden drop of birth rates with rural families moving to cities no longer needing several kids to work farms

• Stage 4: Low growth overall-Countries enter stage 4 when there is zero population growth, or negative growth (communist rule)-BR = DR or zero population growth-most of Europe and the U.S. have zero NIR

• Stage 5: When the crude death rate is higher than the birth rate-no countries have undergone stage 5 yet

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Population Pyramids

• Population Pyramid: bar graph that displays age and gender of a population with males on the left and females on right, determined by CBR -broken down into 5 year age groups -Sex ratio: # of males per hundred females