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Unit 3: Human Population
35

Unit 3: Human Population

Jan 01, 2016

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Unit 3: Human Population. The Anthropocene Epoch. Is named for the alterations to the Earth’s crust as a result of human activity Industrial Revolution Atomic Age. World Population. Is 7.1 billion people Has increased exponentially over the past 10,000 years - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Unit 3:  Human Population

Unit 3: Human Population

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The Anthropocene Epoch

• Is named for the alterations to the Earth’s crust as a result of human activity– Industrial Revolution– Atomic Age

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World Population

• Is 7.1 billion people• Has increased exponentially

over the past 10,000 years• Has stopped growing as

quickly– May start decreasing by 2100

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Human Carrying Capacity of the Earth

• Is estimated between 4 and 16 billion

• Depends on how we use resources

• Depends on how quickly the population grows

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Age Structure

• Expresses how a population is divided among age groups

• Can show how a population is and will be affected by birth rates and life expectancy

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Demographic Transition

• Is a change in birth and death rates over time

• Occurs as nations industrialize

• Overall leads to a decline in population growth

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Demographic Transition

• Stage 1– Birth and death rates are

high– Population is stable

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Demographic Transition

• Stage 2– Death rates drop due to

improvements in medical care and sanitation

– Birth rates remain high– Population grows

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Demographic Transition

• Stage 3– Birth rates drop due to

increased education and better employment

– Population growth rate slows

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Demographic Transition

• Stage 4– Birth and death rates

remain low due to economic stability

– Population stays stable

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Demographic Transition

• Stage 5– Birth rates drop below

death rates– Population declines

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Life Expectancy Affects Population Growth

• Longer-lived individuals delay having children– Can result in fewer children per couple

• Increased numbers of older individuals can become a burden on younger members of a population

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Disease Affects Population Growth

• Epidemics like influenza can increase the death rate• Diseases like AIDS can decrease life expectancy

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Birth Rates Affect Population Growth

• Total Fertility Rate (TFR)– Estimated number of children each woman in a population

will have

• If this number drops below the number of children needed to replace their parents, the population will shrink

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Birth Rates Affect Population Growth

• Replacement-Level Fertility– # of births required to offset deaths– Must take into account pre-

reproductive mortality• Individuals who die before reproducing

– In developed nations, it is 2.1– In developing nations, it is higher

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Migration Affects Population Growth

• Only occurs between countries, not the planet

• A positive migration indicates a country’s population is growing– More people are entering

the country than leaving it

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Achieving Zero Population Growth

• Depends on controlling birth rates– Education (sex education

and general education)– Access to birth control– Delaying age of first

childbearing

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