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population

Rocklin High School Notes

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19-2:??Ecology of Organsims I.???????????????????Biotic & Abiotic factors?=?Living & non-living factors in an environment that affect an organism. ??????????? *Name the important abiotic factors: temperature, humidity, pH, salinity, oxygen concentration, sunlight, availability of nitrogen, precipitation *How are?biotic?and?abiotic?factors not independent? ?organisms can change environments, and environments can change organisms A.? Name the three different ways that the environment has changes in temperature: it can vary with time, or by place, or by location within a habitat (shade or sun) B.? Draw the?tolerance curve?from page 369 (fig 19-8): ?

lolols Afsg

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John Overing Mr. Held 4 March 2013 Period 3 KBATS Age Distribution ? The proportion of individuals of different ages within a population. Agricultural Density ? The ratio of the number of farmers to the total amount of land suitable for agriculture. Arithmetic Density ? The total number of people divided by the total land area. Cairo Conference ?A UN conference held in Cairo in September 1994, recommending world population stabilization. Carrying Capacity ? The largest number of people that the environment of a particular area is able to support. Census ? A complete enumeration of a population. Child Mortality Rate ? The number of children that die between the first and fifth year of their lives. Contraception ? The use of devices or drugs to prevent conception.

APHG CH 2 VOCAB

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1. Agricultural Density The ratio of the number of farmers to the total amount of land suitable for agriculture. 2. Agricultural Revolution The time when human beings first domesticated plants and animals and no longer relied entirely on hunting and gathering. 3. Arithmetic Density The total number of people divided by the total land area. 4. Census A complete enumeration of a population. 5. Crude Birth Rate (CBR) The total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive in the society. 6. Crude Death Rate (CDR) The total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people alive in the society. 7. Demographic Transition The process of change in a society's population from a condition of high crude birth and death rates and low rate of natural

APHUMANGEOGRAPHYNOTES

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AP Human Geography Notes General Geography: US road map is not a thematic map Every meridian is the same length and has the same beginning and end According to environmental determinism, the physical environment causes social development Highest density: most in numbers Highest concentration: closest together Cloropleth map uses shading Five Themes of Geography: Location: Relative location Absolute location Place: Human Characteristics Physical Characteristics Human-Environmental Interaction: Humans adapt to the environment Humans modify the environment Humans depend on the environment Movement People Goods Ideas Regions Formal (uniform) Functional (nodal) Vernacular (perceptual) Culture:

APHUMANGEOGRAPHYNOTES

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AP Human Geography Notes General Geography: US road map is not a thematic map Every meridian is the same length and has the same beginning and end According to environmental determinism, the physical environment causes social development Highest density: most in numbers Highest concentration: closest together Cloropleth map uses shading Five Themes of Geography: Location: Relative location Absolute location Place: Human Characteristics Physical Characteristics Human-Environmental Interaction: Humans adapt to the environment Humans modify the environment Humans depend on the environment Movement People Goods Ideas Regions Formal (uniform) Functional (nodal) Vernacular (perceptual) Culture:

AP Hug Chapter Two Vocab

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Chapter Two Vocabulary Chapter 2: Population Arithmetic population Density- Population per area/ unit, found by dividing population by area of the region or country. Arithmetic Population Density can be very useful for some countries or regions but others not because it will not give an accurate presentation. Carrying capacity- Is the maximum population that that area biologically can hold, Giving water food shelter act. Many experts think that the world's Carrying capacity is going to reach its max within a few decades Chronic/degenerative Disease- A disease that affects the organs or many affects you for your whole life. Cancer is a chronic/degenerative disease. Crude birth rate (CBR)/

APHG Unit 1 Review List

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APHG UNIT 1 Review List 4 traditions of Geography Physical/Earth Science Geography tradition- physical geo, lithosphere, earth-sun interaction, the study of earth as a home to humans, geothermology, paleontology, glaciology Human-Environment/ Man-Land tradition- Human impact on nature, impact of nature of humans, natural hazards to humans, perception of environment, environmentalism, cultural, political and population geography Spatial tradition- mapping, special analysis, boundaries and density, movements and transportation, quantitive tools/techniques i.e.- computer maps Regional/Area Studies tradition- descriptions of regions or areas, world regional geography, international trends and relationships, how regions are different from each other 5 themes of Geography Location

How Population Evolve

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I. How population Evolve. The Physical feature of animals is examples of evolutionary adaptations inherited traits that enhance an organisms’ ability to survive and reproduce in particular environment. Evolution, inherited changed in organisms over the time. A. A sea voyage helped Darwin frame his theory of evolution. Darwin thought that organisms change over time as the earth changes. The natural resource has changed many things like mountain and as a result of earth quakes there are marine snails on top of the mountains. Also those organisms are related somehow from the past. He phrase for evolution, descent with modification. B. The study of fossil provides strong evidence for evolution.

Unit 2 AP Human Geography Vocab cards

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Age-sex distribution: A model used in population geography that describes the ages and # of males and females within a given population; also called a population pyramid. There are more women in every country than men. Arithmetic Density: The # of ppl living in a given unit area. Also called population. Baby boom: A cohort of individuals born in the US between 1946 and 1964 , which was just after WWII in a time of relative peace and prosperity. These conditions allowed for better education and job opportunities, encouraging high rates of both marriage and fertility. Ms Dish?s parents

HGAP De Blij Seventh edition Chapter 4

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Chapter 4: Fundamentals of Population, Location, Distribution & Density Demography ? Study of population. Key issues in population geography are population growth & migration. World population is growing in poorer countries by 80 million per year. Distribution of population describes location where people live, Population Density is the measure of number of people per unit area. Arithmetic population density is an average and is not a true measure. Physiological population density is the total population to area of cultivable land. There is strong correlation between high population density & areas with expanses of arable (farmable) land. Population data is unreliable!! Why ? because of high costs involved and disorganized information.

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