REVIEW. Location of cities? Physical Factors: –Landforms –Climates –Nearness to bodies of...

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REVIEW

Transcript of REVIEW. Location of cities? Physical Factors: –Landforms –Climates –Nearness to bodies of...

Page 1: REVIEW. Location of cities? Physical Factors: –Landforms –Climates –Nearness to bodies of water.

REVIEW

Page 2: REVIEW. Location of cities? Physical Factors: –Landforms –Climates –Nearness to bodies of water.

Location of cities?

Physical Factors:

–Landforms

–Climates

–Nearness to bodies of water

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Landforms

•People tend to settle in fertile, Non-mountainous areas, such as

valleys and plains.

Did you know? 8 of the 10 most populous cities in the world are on

earthquake faults.

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Climates

•People tend to settle in temperate or mild climate.

•Population is typically sparse in extremely dry, wet or cold

areas.

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Nearness to Bodies of Water

•People tend to settle near sources of fresh water and not

too far from oceans.

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Location of cities?

Human Factors:

–Economic Activities (Access to Natural Resources)

–Level of Technology

–Transportation Routes

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Economics

• Economic activity could change with the discovery of new natural resources

• When an area becomes more or less wealthy it is considered an Economic Change

• What are some factors that could cause a change in economics?

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Access to Natural Resources

The discovery of valuable resources like gold, diamonds or oil, may attract settlers to an otherwise unfavorable area.

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Improving Technology

•As technology improves, people are able to explore and settle new areas.

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Transportation Routes

•Establishing a new transportation route to exchange goods.

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Access to Natural Resources

The discovery of valuable resources like gold, diamonds or oil, may attract settlers to an otherwise unfavorable area.

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Improving Technology

•As technology improves, people are able to explore and settle new areas. –Examples:

• Air Conditioning in Houston

• Improved oil drilling technology in Siberia

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River Valley Civilizations

• People needed more land to farm

• Good farmland in river valleys– Access to water for irrigation– People moved to river valleys

• Pull Factor – Grow more food in river valleys

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• Food grows easily in river valleys

– Not everybody needs to be a farmer anymore

Indus River Valley

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Major Cities of Latin America

• Mexico City

• Rio de Janiero

• São Paulo

• Buenos Aires

• Montevideo

• Caracas

•Most cities are on the East Coast

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Know the countries of Latin America

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URBANIZATION• People were

flocking to work in the factories which were all in the cities or urban areas

• From the farms to the cities

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Pollution• Massive amounts of pollution filled the air

and soot covered the trees and stained the brick buildings

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Increasing pollution today

• With China’s substantial industrialized growth, it is likely that we will see more cars on the road, creating more emissions.

• As more countries begin to develop, there will be more pollution.

• As the economies improve, so does the amount of fossil fuels being burned.

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Industry’s affect on the environment

• Hydro-electric dams

• Pollution

• Deforestation

• What other ways have industry affected the environment?

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Rural Areas

• Typically have more agricultural based economies

• Can have poorer public services, hospitals and less doctors

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Sustainable Development

• Development that meets the needs of today without risking the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.

Results of unsustainable development

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Sustainable Development

• To stop desertification in Patagonia, the government of Argentina began a sustainable cattle raising program

• In an effort to reduce emissions (air pollution) Mexico has began to use wind power

Overgrazing in Patagonia

Mexico’s Wind Power

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World cities

• Based on services, not goods

• Face-to-face contact, communications

• Global orientation

• NYC, London, Tokyo

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Suburbanization and Technology

• Suburbanization happens because of transportation technology– Cars and Freeways– Mass Transit

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Suburbs and inner cities

• (younger) people still want to live in or near the city

• immigrants arrive in cities and lead to increasing redevelopment of downtowns and historical districts

–LoDo –Lower Downtown Denver

–Battery Park in NYC

–Jack London Square in Oakland

–The Heights in Houston

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Ancient Cities Layouts

Religious and Government

Center

High Status Business

Secular Business

Food and Low Status Business

The further away from the middle – the less power or status you had

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Modern Urban Structure

• Where do people live and work?

• Different cities a built on different models– Concentric Zone Model– Sector Model– Multiple Nuclei Model

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Concentric Zone Model

• Theory – cities grow outward in rings– Zone of transition is industrial and poor quality housing

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Dallas as a Concentric Zone Model• More home ownership away from city center

% of households that own their own home

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Sector Model

• Theory – cities grow in a series of wedges or corridors which extend from the CBD

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Dallas as a Sector Model• High income housing in northern sector

House values

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Multiple Nuclei Model• Theory –

city is a collection of individual centers around where people cluster

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MEGALOPOLIS

• A chain of metropolitan areas

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Megalopolis

• Sometimes called Bos-Wash– From Boston,

MA to Washington DC

– Population of over 52 million people

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MegalopolisPopulation Density Map

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Largest Cities in the WorldIncluding neighboring metro areas

1. Tokyo, Japan – 34.4 million**2. Guangzhou, China – 25.4 million**3. Seoul, South Korea – 25.2 million**4. Shanghai, China – 24.9 million**5. New Delhi, India – 23.5 million**6. Mumbai, India – 23.2 million**7. Mexico City, Mexico – 23 million**8. New York City, USA – 22 million**9. Sao Paulo, Brazil – 21 million**10. Manila, Philippines – 20.6 million**27. Chicago, USA – 9.5 million48. Dallas/Ft Worth, USA – 6.7 million57. Houston, USA – 6.1 million

** Need to know