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Demography

AP Human geoCh 2 Vocab

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Vocabulary Agricultural Density - The ratio of the number of farmers to the total amount of land suitable for agriculture. Agricultural Revolution - The time when human beings first domesticated plants and animals and no longer relied entirely on hunting and gathering. Arithmetic Density - The total number of people divided by the total land area. Census - A complete enumeration of a population. Crude Birth Rate (CBR) - The total number of live births in a year for every 1,000 people alive in the society. Crude Death Rate (CDR) - The total number of deaths in a year for every 1,000 people alive in a society.

Pearson Biology Guided Reading Answers Chapter 36

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Chapter 36: Population Ecology 208 Copyright ? 2015 Pearson Education, Inc. Name ________________________ Period _________ # 152826 Cust: Pearson Au: Reece Pg. No. 208 Title: Active Reading Guide for Campbell Biology: Concepts & Connections, 8e C / M / Y / K Short / Normal DESIGN SERVICES OF S4-CARLISLE Publishing Services Chapter 36: Population Ecology Guided Reading Activities Big idea: Population structure and dynamics Answer the following questions as you read modules 36.1?36.8: 1. Yellowstone National Park is home to many animals. For example, elk and gray wolves are found there. Would the elk and wolves be considered a population? Briefly explain your answer. 2. Which of the following is a population? a. Lake Michigan b. A human jogging in the street

Pearson Biology Guided Reading Activities

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Chapter 36: Population Ecology 208 Copyright ? 2015 Pearson Education, Inc. Name ________________________ Period _________ # 152826 Cust: Pearson Au: Reece Pg. No. 208 Title: Active Reading Guide for Campbell Biology: Concepts & Connections, 8e C / M / Y / K Short / Normal DESIGN SERVICES OF S4-CARLISLE Publishing Services Chapter 36: Population Ecology Guided Reading Activities Big idea: Population structure and dynamics Answer the following questions as you read modules 36.1?36.8: 1. Yellowstone National Park is home to many animals. For example, elk and gray wolves are found there. Would the elk and wolves be considered a population? Briefly explain your answer. 2. Which of the following is a population? a. Lake Michigan b. A human jogging in the street

AP Human Geography Study Guide

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About 3,000 immigrants or refugees and 1,000 unauthorized foreigners arrive in the United States per day. During the 1990?s, 51% of immigrants were from Latin America, 30% from Asia, 13% from Europe, and 6% from Canada and other places. Spouses, children, and parents or other relatives of U.S. citizens may enter as family-sponsored immigrants. Foreigners with special positions or skill may enter as employment-based immigrants. Foreigners with a well-rounded fear of persecution in their home countries are allowed in as refugees. Most immigrants are family-sponsored, employment-based, refugees, or diversity-based. U.S. immigration policies were shifted in favor of those closely related to U.S. citizens.

Human Population Outline

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Human population Out line .4.1 How population change over time A. B. C. D. II. Age structure A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. 4.2 Kinds of population Growth III Exponential growth A B C IV A brief history of human population Growth 1. 2. 3. 4. 4.3 Present Human Population Rates of Growth A. B. C. D. E. F. 4.4 Project Future Population Growth A. V. Exponential Growth and daubing Time A. B. C. D. E. The logistic Growth Curve A. B C D E. F. G. VII. Forecasting Human Population Growth Using the logistic Curve A. B. C. D. E.

Human Geo 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

Chapter 2 KI 2

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AP Human Geo Chapter 2 Key Issue 2 I. Where Has the World?s Population Increased? Population increases rapidly in places where many more people are born than die Increases slowly in places where the number of births exceeds the number of deaths by only a small margin Declines in places were deaths outnumber births a. Natural Increase Crude birth rate is the total number of live births in a year for every 1,000 people alive in society Crude death rate is the total number of deaths in a year for every 1,000 people alive in society Natural increase rate is the percentage by which population grows in a year. World population increased from 3 to 4 billion in 14 years

Islamic Middle East (world history)

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Islamic Middle East Cosmopolitan: Including many countries and cultures. Accurately describes the middle east. Economy: The area was not a completely integrated market. Each region produced most of its own food and cloth. Regional economies were centered on major towns and cities in the area. Pastoral nomads: traded wool and dairy produce for tools and other goods. Traveled between towns and cities. Merchants: Go betweens in many transactions, dealt in luxury items, made profits by transporting and selling goods that producers could not sell directly.

AP Human Geography: People, Place, And Culture Unit 2 & Population Notes

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Unit 2 Vocabulary - Population 1. Arithmetic density: The total number of people divided by the total land area. Finding population density through the number of people and total land area. 2. Carrying capacity : This is the population level that can be supported, given the quantity of food, habitat, water and other life infrastructure present. How many people an area can support. 3. Demographic momentum: this is the tendency for growing population to continue growing after a fertility decline because of their young age distribution. When a population continues growing even after a fertility decline - allows population to move to next stage of transition.

APUSH CH 14 STUDY GUIDE

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Chapter 14: Forging the National Economy; 1790-1860 People/Terms: 1. Industrialization- Industrialization began in the 1750?s in Britain with the textile machines and eventually found its way into the American Industries. This increased the movement of people into cities because machines took the place of people in agriculture and people were needed in cities to man the machines. Many moved to cities. This increased production and efficiency throughout the United States of America. 2. Know- Nothing Party-

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