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Bell Ringer

Bell Ringer. Miniature Earth – If the population of the Earth were shrunk to just 100 people, but the proportions were kept the same, what would it look like? This video will show us. http://www.schooltube.com/video/a6df161afdd345dab931/Miniature-Earth. POPULATION. What is Demography ?.

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Bell Ringer

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  1. Bell Ringer Miniature Earth– If the population of the Earth were shrunk to just 100 people, but the proportions were kept the same, what would it look like? This video will show us. http://www.schooltube.com/video/a6df161afdd345dab931/Miniature-Earth

  2. POPULATION

  3. What is Demography? • study of population What is a primary tool of demographers? • Census- survey of population, done every 10 years by the federal government

  4. What is Population Density? • The number of people in a unit of space. • Example: “8,500 people per square mile”

  5. What is Population Distribution? • Habitable Lands - 2/3 of population between 20*N and 60*N • Urban-Rural Mix – ½ of population lives in cities, more each year • Migration – people moving, causes change in population • Push Factors – reasons people leave home • Pull Factors – reasons people come to new home

  6. What is over population? number of people exceeds available resources

  7. Eastern Asia has the greatest concentration of people on Earth – it is centered in China and has 21% of Earth’s population. • 2) Southern Asia is the second largest concentration of • people – it is centered in India and has 16% of the Earth’s pop.

  8. 3) Western Europe is the third largest concentration. In Western Europe people are concentrated near natural resources needed for industry.

  9. East Central North America is the fourth largest center concentrated in the NE US and SE Canada. • In the US, the chain of cities start from the city of Boston to south of Washington DC. • - This is called a megalopolis.

  10. Africa has 12% of the Earth’s population. Largest cluster of people found in the Nile River Valley. Cairo is the largest city in Africa.

  11. South America is lightly populated compared with other continents. Patterns of people live along the edges of the continent – SE Buenos Aires in Argentina, Montevideo in Uruguay, and Rio de Janeiro and Recife in Brazil.

  12. Australia has the fewest number of people. They are concentrated along the eastern and southern coasts. (17.5 million people total on the entire continent. – as much as the NYC metro area)

  13. North Pole

  14. Population Growth Over Time “The J Curve” During the Industrial Revolution Late 1700’s to 1900’s New technologies improved medicine, sanitation, and food production.

  15. How do demographers determine who is growing? • Birth rates and Death rates

  16. What are Birth Rates? • Birth Rate – number of live births per 1000 people • Fertility Rate – average number of children a woman will have in her lifetime

  17. What are Death Rates? • Death (Mortality) Rate – number of deaths per 1000 people • Infant Mortality Rate – number of deaths among infants under 1 year old, per 1000 live births

  18. What is Rate of Natural Increase? Rate of Natural Increase- % a population grows in one year Birth RateminusDeath Rate = Rate of Natural Increase

  19. What is Doubling Rate? • Doubling rate- number of years it takes for a population to double.To figure the growth rate: 70 / Rate of Natural Increase (RNI) = Number of years to double population • Example: Mexico has an RNI of 1.7, so 70/1.7 = 41.17… so Mexico will double in population in about 41 years!

  20. Gapminder • Use your laptop or iPad to go out to http://gapminder.org. Feel free to poke around and orient yourself before you start the Gapminder worksheet.

  21. DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION

  22. What is the Demographic Transition Model? • Researchers identify either four or five stages of development. • Complex line graph • Categorizes a country based on birth & death rate Determines: • Growth • Standard of Living • Level of industrialization

  23. Stages of the Demographic Transition Model • Stage 1 – pre-industrial, slow growth rates • Stage 2 – poor countries, high birth and death rates • Stage 3 – developing countries, rapid growth • Stage 4 – developed countries, stable population • Stage 5 – rich and aging countries, shrinking population

  24. What is a Population Pyramid? • Complex Bar Graph What is shown? • Males and Females by age Why? • Demographers use age and sex to help predict info. about a country How do population pyramids work? • Wide base = high % of children • Narrow base = low % of children

  25. Making Predictions Look at the shape of these charts, and think about them. Then try to answer these questions on a separate paper. • Which has a higher % of children? • Which is most wealthy, most poor? • Which has the most unemployed? • Which probably has best health care? • Which has most not going to school?

  26. Projected U.S. Population Growth 1950-2050

  27. Mexico Population Pyramid 1980- 2005

  28. France Population Pyramid1990-2015

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