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Demographic transition

Chapter 2 APHMG fill in blank test

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Geographers define overpopulation as too many people compared to resources ? Two-thirds of the world's population is clustered in four regions. Which of the following is not one of these four regions? Sub-Saharan Africa ? Most people live in cities in which of these regions? Western Europe ? The most populous country in the Southeast Asia region is Indonesia ? Physiological density is the number of people per area suitable for agriculture ? A country with a large amount of arable land and a small number of farmers will have a low agricultural density ? If the physiological density is much larger than the arithmetic density, then a country has a small percentage of land suitable for agriculture ?

Chapter 1 test

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1.? A state that is completely surrounded by the land of other states, which gives it a disadvantage?in terms of accessibility to and from international trade routes. A. Landlocked State B. Compact State C. Elongated State D. Preforated State E. Enclave 2.? Geographers define overpopulation as A. too many people in a region B. too many people compared to resources C. too many people in the world D. all of the above E. a and c 3.? Most people live in cities in which of these regions? A. East Asia B. Europe C. Southeast Asia D. South Asia E. Sub-Saharan Africa 4.? Human beings avoid all but which of these regions? A. cold lands B. warm lands C. dry lands

AP Hug chapter 2 test review

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The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography, 10e (Rubenstein) Chapter 2 Population 1) One important feature of the world's population with the most significant future implications is that A) the natural increase rate is larger every year. B) there are fewer people in the world now than at the peak in the middle of the twentieth century. C) the most rapid growth is occurring in the less developed countries. D) people are uniformly distributed across Earth. E) the less developed countries have the highest combined crude death rate. 2) Geographers define overpopulation as A) too many people in the world. B) too many people compared to resources. C) too many people in a region. D) all of the above E) A and C

Population Ecology PPT

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Population ecology is the study of populations in relation to environment, including environmental influences on density and distribution, age structure, and population size Concept: Dynamic biological processes influence population density, dispersion, and demographics A population is a group of individuals of a single species living in the same general area Density and Dispersion Density is the number of individuals per unit area or volume Dispersion is the pattern of spacing among individuals within the boundaries of the population Environmental and social factors influence spacing of individuals in a population Density: A Dynamic Perspective In most cases, it is impractical or impossible to count all individuals in a population

AP Human Geography Chapter 2 Test Questions

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1) The Indus and Ganges river plains hold a major part of what world population cluster? South Asia 2) One important feature of the world's population with the most significant future implications is that the most rapid growth is occurring in the less developed countries. 3) Geographers define overpopulation as too many people compared to environmental capacity. 4) Human beings avoid all but which of these regions? warm lands 5) The world's most populous country is China. 6) Which of the following is not one of the world's largest population concentrations? North America 7) The most populous country in the Southeast Asia region is Indonesia. 8) A country with a high physiological density has a lot of people for every unit of farmland.

Chapter 2

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Jonathan Jacobs AP Hug Chapter 2 KBAT Know Population density- Measure of total population relative to land size Arithmetic population density- Measure of total population relative to all land Physiological population density- Measure of total population relative to arable land Population distribution- Descriptions of locations on the earth?s surface where individuals or groups live Dot map- A map in which one dot represents a certain number of population Megalopolis- Several large cities and their surrounding areas close enough to be considered a single urban complex Census- An official count or survey of a population recording several details of individuals Doubling time- Amount of time a population takes to double (not in size but in people)

APHG Unit 2 Review

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AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY UNIT 2: POPULATION & MIGRATION TEST REVIEW TOPICS Know the following topics for the test! Make sure you also study your chapter reading guide and all of the notes in class! Overpopulation Population regions in the world Physiological density Arithmetic density Timeline of Population Growth Crude Birth Rate Crude Death Rate Doubling Time Life Expectancy Human Development Index (how to they rank countries?) Demographic Transition Model (know the stages!) Thomas Malthus? Theory Population Pyramids Ethnicity vs. Race Cultural differences in Quebec Gravity Model Net Migration Equation Types of Migration Intervening Opportunity Push vs. Pull Factors US Immigration Waves Refugees Migration Selectivity Barriers to Migration

Unit II: Population Study Questions

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Unit II: Population Study Questions ? Population 1. Explain the difference between arithmetic and exponential growth. 2. What have been some of the trends in population growth and distribution since the First Agricultural Revolution? 3. What impact has the Industrial Revolution had on human populations? How have populations that have had such revolutions typically responded? 4. What is the relationship between population growth and distribution to natural hazards? 5. How does ?distance decay? and ?intervening opportunity? affect migration patterns? 6. What is the relationship between improvements in global health and the appearance of age-sex pyramids over the last century

Demographic Transition

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Demographic Transition About.com: Geography The demographic transition model seeks to explain the transformation of countries from having high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates. In developed countries this transition began in the eighteenth century and continues today. Less developed countries began the transition later and are still in the midst of earlier stages of the model. CBR & CDR

AP Human Geo Chapter 7 outline

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Where has the world?s population increased? Make sure you highlight natural increase, fertility & mortality in your outline.? Go into DEPTH/DETAIL for each of these & GIVE EXAMPLES! Natural Increase Rate: the percentage by which a population grows in a year. It is computed by subtracting CDR from CBR. Fertility Rate: measure of the number of births in a society. Mortality: measured by infant mortality rate and life expectancy. The world?s population growth has increased the most during the past decade in Asia, with the remaining 1/3 in divided equally among Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, and The Middle East. These are the top 3 fastest growing countries: South Sudan Total fertility rate: 5.66

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