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Contemporary Human Geography Population.docx

Uploaded: 6 years ago
Contributor: pd_master
Category: Geography
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Filename:   Contemporary Human Geography Population.docx (31.37 kB)
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Contemporary Human Geography Population 1) The Indus and Ganges river plains hold a major part of what world population cluster? A) South Asia B) East Asia C) Europe D) Southeast Asia Answer: A 2) One important feature of the world's population with the most significant future implications is that A) the natural increase rate is larger every year. B) there are fewer people in the world now than at the peak in the middle of the twentieth century. C) the most rapid growth is occurring in the less developed countries. D) people are uniformly distributed across Earth. E) the less developed countries have the highest combined crude death rate. Answer: C 3) Geographers define overpopulation as A) too many people in the world. B) too many people compared to environmental capacity. C) too many people in a region. D) All of these answers are correct. Answer: B 4) Human beings avoid all but which of these regions? A) cold lands B) dry lands C) warm lands D) wet lands E) high lands Answer: C 5) The world's most populous country is A) China. B) India. C) the United States. D) Russia. E) Europe. Answer: A 6) Which of the following is not one of the world's largest population concentrations? A) East Asia B) South Asia C) Southeast Asia D) Western Europe E) North America Answer: E 7) The most populous country in the Southeast Asia region is A) Bangladesh. B) China. C) India. D) Indonesia. E) Thailand. Answer: D 8) A country with a high physiological density has A) a lot of people. B) a lot of people for every unit of farmland. C) a lot of farmers for every unit of farmland. D) a lot of farmland. E) a lot of farmland for every farmer. Answer: B 9) Physiological density is the number of A) acres of farmland. B) farmers per area of farmland. C) people per area of land. D) people per area suitable for agriculture. E) farm animals per area suitable for agriculture. Answer: D 10) The most common measure of density, the number of people per area of land, is known as ________ density. A) arithmetic B) physiological C) mathematic D) geometric E) agricultural Answer: A 11) Land suited for agriculture is called A) population density. B) agricultural density. C) physiological density. D) arid land. E) arable land. Answer: E Geo Standard: 8. The characteristics and spatial distribution of ecosystems and biomes of Earth's surface. 12) A country with a large amount of arable land and a small number of farmers will have a A) high physiological density. B) low physiological density. C) high agricultural density. D) low agricultural density. E) low arithmetic density. Answer: D 13) If the physiological density is much larger than the arithmetic density, then a country has A) inefficient farmers. B) a large number of farmers. C) a small percentage of land suitable for agriculture. D) too many people for the available resources. E) too few farmers for the large area of land suitable for agriculture. Answer: C Bloom's Taxonomy: 3-Application 14) Wealthier countries have lower values than poorer countries for all but which demographic measure? A) life expectancy B) natural increase rate C) total fertility rate D) crude birth rate E) infant mortality rate Answer: A Section: 2.3 Learning Outcome: 2.3.1: Explain the three types of indicators used by geographers to measure population change. 15) The ________ rate in more developed countries is higher on average than in less developed countries. A) birth B) natural increase C) infant mortality D) total fertility E) death Answer: E Section: 2.3 Learning Outcome: 2.3.1: Explain the three types of indicators used by geographers to measure population change. 16) Country X has a crude birth rate of 40 and a crude death rate of 15, while Country Y has a crude birth rate of 20 and a crude death rate of 9. Which country has a higher natural increase rate? A) Country X B) Country Y C) The rate is the same in both countries. D) The rate depends on total population, so it can't be computed from this information. E) The rate depends on immigration, so it can't be computed from this information. Answer: A Section: 2.3 Bloom's Taxonomy: 3-Application Learning Outcome: 2.4.2: Define dependency ration and describe how a population pyramid can be used to study population structure. 17) To calculate a country's dependency ratio, one needs to know the country's population and A) the number of children still receiving financial support from their parents. B) the number of people who are actively looking for work but are unable to find it. C) all of a country's population younger than age 15 or older than age 64. D) the number younger than age 15. E) the number older than age 64. Answer: C Section: 2.4 Bloom's Taxonomy: 3-Application Learning Outcome: 2.4.2: Define dependency ration and describe how a population pyramid can be used to study population structure. 18) The number of people who are too young or too old to work in a society compared to the number of working age people is the A) dependency ratio. B) life expectancy. C) population pyramid. D) sex ratio. E) demographic ratio. Answer: A Section: 2.4 Learning Outcome: 2.4.2: Define dependency ration and describe how a population pyramid can be used to study population structure. 19) Arranging a country's population along a bar graph representing ages and genders creates a population A) pyramid. B) graph. C) demograph. D) map. E) line. Answer: A Section: 2.4 Learning Outcome: 2.4.1: Explain how changes in total fertility rates, infant mortality rates, and life expectancy affect population structure. 20) For every 1,000 babies born in India in 2011, an estimated 50 of them will have died before reaching their first birthday. The rate of 50 deaths per 1,000 births is known as the A) crude death rate. B) infant mortality rate. C) life expectancy. D) total fertility rate. E) terminal population rate. Answer: B Section: 2.4 Learning Outcome: 2.4.1: Explain how changes in total fertility rates, infant mortality rates, and life expectancy affect population structure. 21) The average number of births women bear in their lifetimes is A) crude birth rate. B) crude death rate. C) total fertility rate. D) natural increase rate. E) increasing in more developed countries. Answer: C Section: 2.4 22) The highest natural increase rates are found in countries in which stage of the demographic transition? A) Stage 1 B) Stage 2 C) Stage 3 D) Stage 4 E) Stage 5 Answer: B 23) Stage 2 of the Demographic Transition is characterized by a high ________ rate. A) natural increase B) death C) life D) natural decrease E) longevity Answer: A 24) The lowest crude birth rates are found in countries in which stage of the demographic transition? A) Stage 1 B) Stage 2 C) Stage 3 D) Stage 4 E) Stage 5 Answer: D 25) The highest crude death rates are found in countries in which stage of the demographic transition? A) Stage 1 B) Stage 2 C) Stage 3 D) Stage 4 E) Stage 5 Answer: A 26) Which stage of the demographic transition cannot be found anywhere in the world today? A) Stage 1 B) Stage 2 C) Stage 3 D) Stage 4 Answer: A 27) Which stage of the demographic transition are the world's richest countries in? A) Stage 1 B) Stage 2 C) Stage 3 D) Stage 4 Answer: D 28) Rapidly declining crude death rates are found in which stage of the demographic transition? A) Stage 1 B) Stage 2 C) Stage 3 D) Stage 4 E) Stage 5 Answer: B 29) Country X has a crude birth rate of 40 and a crude death rate of 15. In what stage of the demographic transition is this country? A) Stage 1 B) Stage 2 C) Stage 3 D) Stage 4 E) Stage 5 Answer: B Bloom's Taxonomy: 3-Application 30) Stages 1 and 4 of the Demographic Transition are similar in that A) both have low growth rates. B) both have high dependency ratios. C) both have low life expectancies. D) neither is presently observed. Answer: A 31) A key obstacle to declining birth rates is A) religious opposition to some birth control methods. B) economic incentives in favor of smaller families. C) women attending school in greater numbers. D) increased health care leading to decreased infant mortality. E) increased distribution of contraceptives. Answer: A Section: 2.6 Learning Outcome: 2.6.1: Give examples of how some developing countries have lowered birth rates. 32) One approach to decreasing birth rates is to increase the education of A) children. B) contraceptives. C) women. D) men. E) college graduates. Answer: C Section: 2.6 Learning Outcome: 2.6.1: Give examples of how some developing countries have lowered birth rates. 33) The principal reason for declining natural increase rates in less developed countries today is A) increasing crude birth rates. B) declining crude birth rates. C) increasing crude death rates. D) declining crude death rates. E) balanced natural increase rates. Answer: B Section: 2.6 Learning Outcome: 2.6.1: Give examples of how some developing countries have lowered birth rates. 34) The future may hold a new stage of the demographic transition marked by A) a return to stage 1 conditions. B) a negative natural increase rate. C) increasing family size. D) a reversal of the stages. E) population stability at Stage 4. Answer: B Section: 2.7 Learning Outcome: 2.7.2: Describe the possible Stage 5 of demographic transition. 35) As a country moves through the demographic transition, we can expect its elderly support ratio to A) increase. B) decrease. C) stay the same. D) None of these: the elderly support ratio isn't affected by the demographic transition. Answer: A Section: 2.7 Learning Outcome: 2.7.1: Explain the components of future population growth and the elderly support ratio. 36) Japan is dealing with economic concerns about an aging population by A) increasing the birth rate. B) encouraging older people and women to work. C) shifting jobs overseas. D) encouraging immigration. Answer: B Section: 2.7 Learning Outcome: 2.7.1: Explain the components of future population growth and the elderly support ratio. 37) The One Child Policy was effective at reducing the natural increase rate in A) India. B) Nigeria. C) Sierra Leone. D) China. E) Cape Verde. Answer: D Section: 2.7 Learning Outcome: 2.6.1: Give examples of how some developing countries have lowered birth rates. 38) Thomas Malthus concluded that A) population increased arithmetically while food production increased geometrically. B) the world's rate of population increase was higher than the development of food supplies. C) moral restraint was producing lower crude birth rates. D) population growth was outpacing available resources in every country. E) crude birth rates must balance crude death rates. Answer: B Section: 2.8 39) In comparing Malthus's theory to actual world food production and population growth during the past half-century, the principal difference is that A) actual food production has been much higher than Malthus predicted. B) Malthus's theory predicted much higher food production than has actually occurred. C) actual population growth has been much higher than Malthus predicted. D) Malthus's theory predicted much higher population growth than has actually occurred. E) population increased geometrically while food production increased arithmetically. Answer: A Section: 2.8 Learning Outcome: 2.8.2: Evaluate Malthus's population theory, and lists its main criticisms. 40) A country goes through A) the epidemiological transition and the demographic transition simultaneously. B) first the demographic transition, then the epidemiological transition. C) first the epidemiological transition, then the demographic transition. D) the demographic transition first if it's a more developed country. E) the epidemiological transition first if it's a more developed country. Answer: A Section: 2.9 Learning Outcome: 2.9.1: List the stages of the demographic transition. 41) Which stage of the epidemiological transition is known as the stage of "pestilence and famine"? A) Stage 1 B) Stage 2 C) Stage 3 D) Stage 4 E) Stage 5 Answer: A Section: 2.9 Learning Outcome: 2.9.1: List the stages of the demographic transition. 42) Which stage of the epidemiological transition is known as the stage of "receding pandemics"? A) Stage 1 B) Stage 2 C) Stage 3 D) Stage 4 E) Stage 5 Answer: B Section: 2.9 Learning Outcome: 2.9.1: List the stages of the demographic transition. 43) Which stage of the epidemiological transition is known as the stage of "degenerative diseases"? A) Stage 1 B) Stage 2 C) Stage 3 D) Stage 4 E) Stage 5 Answer: C Section: 2.9 Learning Outcome: 2.9.1: List the stages of the demographic transition. 44) Which stage of the epidemiological transition is known as the stage of "delayed degenerative diseases"? A) Stage 1 B) Stage 2 C) Stage 3 D) Stage 4 E) Stage 5 Answer: D Section: 2.9 Learning Outcome: 2.9.1: List the stages of the demographic transition. 45) Dr. John Snow found that cholera cases in London were A) spatially associated with a certain public wells. B) being punished for their sins. C) transmitted through the air in contagious diffusion. D) spread through trade routes by infected rats. Answer: A Section: 2.9 Learning Outcome: 2.9.1: List the stages of the demographic transition. 46) The epidemiological transition focuses on distinctive ________ at different stages of the demographic transition. A) patterns of growth B) causes of death C) rates of growth D) life expectancies E) fertility rates Answer: B Section: 2.9 Learning Outcome: 2.9.1: List the stages of the demographic transition. 47) Which stage of the epidemiological transition is known as the stage of "reemergent infectious diseases"? A) Stage 1 B) Stage 2 C) Stage 3 D) Stage 4 E) Stage 5 Answer: E 0 Learning Outcome: 2.9.1: List the stages of the demographic transition. 48) The most lethal epidemic in recent years has been A) avian flu. B) AIDS. C) malaria. D) cholera. E) SARS. Answer: B 0 Learning Outcome: 2.10.1: Hypothesize what there may be an emergence of Stage 5 of the epidemiologic transition. 49) Infectious diseases develop resistance to ________ when used improperly. A) antibiotics B) people C) infants D) degeneration E) DDT Answer: A 0 Learning Outcome: 2.10.1: Hypothesize what there may be an emergence of Stage 5 of the epidemiologic transition. 50) Which of the following is not a reason for the reemergence of infectious diseases? A) poverty B) evolution C) improved travel D) improved medicine Answer: D 0 Learning Outcome: 2.10.1: Hypothesize what there may be an emergence of Stage 5 of the epidemiologic transition. 51) More people are alive now than at any time in the past. Answer: TRUE 52) Most population growth is presently concentrated in more developed countries. Answer: FALSE 53) Population concentrations are generally in low-lying areas with fertile soil. Answer: TRUE Learning Outcome: 2.1.2: List the main reasons for the uneven population distribution in our planet. 54) The physiological density of Egypt is 2,580 persons per square kilometer, while the arithmetic density is 75. This means that most of the country's land is unsuitable for intensive agriculture. Answer: TRUE 55) A country of 30,000,000 people has a crude birth rate of 10. This means that in one year 3,000,000 babies were born. Answer: FALSE Section: 2.3 Learning Outcome: 2.3.1: Explain the three types of indicators used by geographers to measure population change. 56) The highest crude birth rates are found in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Answer: TRUE Section: 2.3 Learning Outcome: 2.3.1: Explain the three types of indicators used by geographers to measure population change. 57) Developing countries must face increasing proportions of older people in their populations. Answer: TRUE Section: 2.4 Learning Outcome: 2.4.2: Define dependency ration and describe how a population pyramid can be used to study population structure. 58) The demographic transition is a process that can move forward or backward. Answer: FALSE 59) Increasing the education of women is generally associated with declining birth rates. Answer: TRUE Section: 2.6 Learning Outcome: 2.6.1: Give examples of how some developing countries have lowered birth rates. 60) If there were a fifth stage of the demographic transition, Japan would qualify for it. Answer: TRUE Section: 2.7 Learning Outcome: 2.7.2: Describe the possible Stage 5 of demographic transition. 61) According to Malthus, population increases geometrically, while food supply increases arithmetically. Answer: TRUE Section: 2.8 62) The epidemiological transition occurs independently of the demographic transition. Answer: FALSE Section: 2.9 Learning Outcome: 2.9.1: List the stages of the demographic transition. 63) The AIDS epidemic has been the most lethal of recent epidemics. Answer: TRUE 0 Learning Outcome: 2.10.1: Hypothesize what there may be an emergence of Stage 5 of the epidemiologic transition. 64) Why does Mexico have a lower crude death rate than the United States and why does Vietnam have a lower crude death rate than Sweden? Answer: Varies 65) Explain why or why not it is possible for a country's IMR to be higher than its CBR. Answer: Varies Section: 2.4 Learning Outcome: 2.4.1: Explain how changes in total fertility rates, infant mortality rates, and life expectancy affect population structure. 66) Summarize the main stages of the demographic transition. Answer: Varies 67) Compare the birth control policies of India and China. Answer: Varies Section: 2.7 Learning Outcome: 2.6.1: Give examples of how some developing countries have lowered birth rates. 68) Identify and compare two different methods to decrease the birth rate in less developed countries. Answer: Varies Section: 2.6 Learning Outcome: 2.6.1: Give examples of how some developing countries have lowered birth rates.

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