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Demography

Chapter 3 Key issue 2

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Chapter 3 - Key Issue 2: Where do people migrate within a country? Two main types of internal migrations are: interregional (between regions of a country) and intraregional (within a region) In past ? search for farmland; today ? interregional migration is from rural areas to urban areas for jobs Recent immigrants - more than ? immigrate to California, Florida, New York, or Texas Interregional Migration in the United States Population Center ? the average location of everyone in the country, the ?center of population gravity? The changing location of the population center graphically demonstrated the march of American people across the North American continent over the past 200 years; the center consistently shifted westward

Chapter 3 Key issue 1

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Chapter 3 - Key Issue 1: Where are the World?s Migrants Distributed? Introducing Migration Migration ? a permanent move to a new location; specific type of relocation diffusion Geographers document the migration of people across Earth and reasons for the migration Relocation diffusion ? the spread of a characteristic through the bodily movement of people from one place to another Residence ? where they sleep, store their possessions, and receive legal documents Mobility ? a more general term covering all types of movement from one place to another Examples: journeying every weekday from their homes to places of work or education and once a week to shops, places of worship, or recreation areas Circulation ? short-term, repetitive, or cyclical movements that recur on a regular basis

AP Human Geo CH 3 Bank

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1 Copyright ? 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. The Cultural Landscape, 11e (Rubenstein) Chapter 3 Migration 1) The ability to move from one location to another, either temporarily or permanently, is A) migration. B) mobility. C) net migration. D) voluntary migration. E) forced migration. Answer: B Diff: 1 Bloom's Taxonomy: Knowledge Geog. Standard: 9 Section: 3 Migration Learning Outcome: 3. 2: Describe internal migration Global Sci L.O.: 1. Demonstrate an understanding of the principles of scientific inquiry 2) A permanent move to a new location is A) migration. B) mobility. C) net migration. D) net in-migration. E) net out-migration. Answer: A Diff: 1 Bloom's Taxonomy: Knowledge Geog. Standard: 9 Section: 3 Migration

key issue packet AP HUMAN

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The Cultural Landscape by Rubenstein Chapter 3: Migration Key Issue 3: Why Do People Migrate? Pages 92-95 What are push factors and pull factors? Complete the chart below with specific examples of push and pull factors and where people are being pushed from and pulled to. Push Factors Pull Factors Political Environmental Economic Define guest worker: Explain why China and Southwest Asia are major destinations for migrants. Key Issue 4: Why Do Migrants Face Obstacles? Pages 96-103 Define intervening obstacle: Briefly describe the role of physical geography in examining intervening obstacles and migration. Briefly describe the role of transportation in examining intervening obstacles and migration.

chapter 3 vocabulary biology

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Ch 3 Migration Due: __October 10th_________ ? Standard of Living Sustainability Chain Migration Cyclic Movement Forced Migration Voluntary Migration Gravity Model Intervening Opportunity Periodic Movement Place Utility Push Factor Pull Factor Refugee Chinese Exclusion Act Step Migration Transhumance Remittances Forward Capital Migration International migration Interregional migration Intraregional migration Guest Worker Migration Transition Indigenous Genocide ?
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chapter 2 vocab biology

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Chapter 2 Population Due on Chapter 2 Test day: ___________ ? ? Population Pyramid Age Distribution Cohort Carrying Capacity Demographic Equation Demographic Momentum Demographic Transition Model Dependency Ratio Fertility Control Doubling Time Ecumene Epidemiological Transition Model Infant Mortality Rate J-Curve Census Thomas Malthus Crude Death Rate/Mortality Crude Birth Rate/Natality Neo-Malthusianism Overpopulation Population Density Arithmetic Density Physiological Density Population Distribution Density Concentration Pattern Population Explosions Population Projection Rate of Natural Increase S-Curve Sex Ratio Underpopulation Zero Population Growth Agricultural Density Pro- Natalism Anti-Natalism ?

Japan data

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Japan Data Sheet Capital city: Tokyo Population of capital city: 13.62 million Area: 145,924 sq mi Physical features: mountain chains, volcanoes and heavy forests. Population in country: 126.96 million Population density: 348.25 Japan: constitutional monarchy Head of government and state: prime minister Neighboring countries: None, it?s made up of islands Crude birth rate: 8.07/1000 Growth rate: 7.3% Infant mortality rate: 2/1000 Life expectancy: 85 years Main imports, main exports: oil, foodstuffs, wood, cars, electronic devices, computers Gdp per capita: 34,523.70 Currency: japanese yen Unemployment: 2.8% Natural resources: fish, coal, liquefied natural gas Trade partners: United States, China, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Thailand, Singapore

Campbell Biology 9th Edition - Ch. 53 Population Ecology

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POPULATION ECOLOGY Chapter 53 Population = group of individuals of a single species living in same general area Density: # individuals / area Dispersion: pattern of spacing between individuals Introduction Determining population size and density: Count every individual Random sampling Mark-recapture method Patterns of Dispersal: Clumped ? most common; near required resource Uniform ? usually antagonistic interactions Random ? unpredictable spacing, not common in nature Additions occur through birth, and subtractions occur through death. Life table : age-specific summary of the survival pattern of a population Demography: the study of vital statistics that affect population size Survivorship Curve: represent # individuals alive at each age

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