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The History of The History of Population Population

The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

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Page 1: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

The History of The History of PopulationPopulation

Page 2: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

1. First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

Page 3: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

A. Ceased being nomadic and become sedentary

B. Domesticated food provided a surplus of food.

C. New source of protein (wheat and milk products)

D. People lived longer.

Page 4: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

E. More PossessionsF. More time to develop

religions, art, communications, literature, trade, money, division of labor, governments, music, etc.

Page 5: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

2. Second Increase: During the Industrial Revolution (1750s) and the use of machines.

Page 6: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

A.D.2000

A.D.1000

A.D.1

1000B.C.

2000B.C.

3000B.C.

4000B.C.

5000B.C.

6000B.C.

7000B.C.

1+ million years

8

7

6

5

2

1

4

3

OldStoneAge New Stone Age

BronzeAge

IronAge

MiddleAges

ModernAge

Black Death —The Plague

9

10

11

12

A.D.3000

A.D.4000

A.D.5000

18001900

1950

1975

2000

2100

Future

Billions

Source: Population Reference Bureau; and United Nations, World Population Projections to 2100 (1998).

World Population Growth Through History

Page 7: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

The Classic Stages of Demographic Transition

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Note: Natural increase is produced from the excess of births over deaths.

Lesson Plan: The Demographic Transition, Activity One

Page 8: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

3. People are NOT evenly distributed over the surface of the earth.

• Why do people live in certain areas?

waterjobstransportationclimatesoil

vegetationresourcesphysical featuresWealthwar

Page 9: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

4. Most people live:• on plains in the middle

latitudes• by rivers.

Page 10: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

4. Four areas which are mostly uninhabited:

A. Polar and Tundra areas—Too cold.

B. Tropics (near the equator). Too hot and wet.

C. Deserts-1/4 of the earth’s surface. Too dry

D. Mountains-too steep, rocky, cold, and soil is too thin

Page 11: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

Did you know… • Approximately 240,000 people

are added to the daily? • Approximately 167 people are

added to world population every minute?

Page 12: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

6. Why populations increase or decrease:

A. Improved medical careB. Changes in technology

—ex: improved water treatment and waste removal; increased food production; food processing and refrigeration; improved nutrition

Page 13: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

C. Migration-people moving A. Emigration—

exiting/moving OUT of a country

B. Immigration—moving INTO a country

D. WarsE. Plagues-diseases

that kill a lot of people.

Page 14: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

7. Overpopulation: more people in an area than the resources can support.

• Is an area over populated? Geographers/Experts look at: a. birth rates b. death rates

Page 15: The History of Population. 1.First Increase - shift from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural society

What does the History of Population look like?

• Population density over time