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Lack of Water

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North America is dominated by metropolitan clusters most of which east of the 100th meridian ... French settlers in the St. Lawrence River valley were the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lack of Water


1
Lack of Water
  • What water there is in the western United States
    is quickly being used for both agricultural,
    industrial, residential uses

Colorado River
2
Air Quality Issues
  • Increased population specifically urban
    populations has led to an increase in pollution

3
Increasing Threat of Natural Hazards
  • In addition to warmer climates, Americans have
    also become attracted to Scenic areas, which have
    led to two different types of problems
  • Densely settled coastlines that are threatened by
    tropical storms, coastal mudslides, and beach
    erosion
  • Because these areas are much more densely settled
    than in the past, the amount of monetary damage
    incurred by each natural disaster is tremendous
  • Wildfires - Fire has always been a part of the
    natural process but with an increase in
    population, there is more pressure to control
    fires rather than letting them burn (a natural
    process that is beneficial to the environment)

4
Modern Demographic Patterns
  • North America is dominated by metropolitan
    clusters most of which east of the 100th
    meridian
  • There are a number of well-known clusters
  • Canadas Main street consisting of Toronto (4.2
    million), Montreal (3.3 million), Ottawa (1
    Million), Hamilton (620,000)
  • Megalopolis the largest agglomeration in the
    US, it includes Washington DC ( 4.7 million),
    Baltimore (2.5 million), Philadelphia (6
    million), New York (20.2 million), and Boston
    (3.3 million)
  • There are additional agglomerations found south
    of the great lakes (the Rust Belt), Greensboro to
    Atlanta (along I-85), DFW to San Antonio (I-35),
    Los Angeles-San Diego (I-5).

5
Historical settlement and Migration Patterns
6
3 Phases of Settlement
  • Prior to 1750
  • Consisted of a number of European coastal
    settlement footholds that developed independently
  • 1750-1850
  • Dramatic increase in westward movement after the
    American Revolution
  • Importance of cash crops (cotton) in attracting
    migrants to the western lands
  • 1850-1910
  • Post Civil War migration aided by the completion
    of transcontinental railroad in 1869
  • Railroads allowed crops to be easily transported
    to market and they aided new migrants

7
Populating North America
  • Throughout the history of the US there have been
    five distinctive phases of immigration
  • Prior to 1820 English African influences
    dominated (Dutch, French Germans were also
    important)
  • African slaves played an important role in the
    culture of the south
  • Despite their small numbers overall, early
    British settlers had a huge impact upon the
    culture of America
  • 1820-1870 Northwestern European migrants
    dominated (especially Irish Germans)
  • The pace of immigration also increased during
    this time period.
  • 1870-1920 The source area for migrant shifted
    from northwest Europe to southern and eastern
    Europe. Scandinavians accounted for a
    significant portion of those migrants who were
    still coming from northwestern Europe.
  • Migration reached its highest point during this
    time period.
  • 1920-1970 There was also an increase in the
    number of immigrants who originated from Latin
    America Canada.
  • Overall totals plunged during this time period as
    a result of more restrictive Federal immigration
    policies.
  • 1970-present Most immigrants in the current wave
    originate from wither Asia or Latin America.
  • The number of immigrants increased dramatically
    (largely as a result of international political
    economic instability, the booming American
    economy and loosening of immigration laws).

8
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9
Populating North America
  • Today almost ¼ of all US immigrants arrive from
    Mexico
  • Historically, the majority of Latin American
    immigrants settled in Texas or California. In
    recent years there has been a shift towards a
    more disperse population.
  • Asians are the fasted growing immigrant group in
    the country.
  • Asian immigrants tent to cluster in large cities,
    many of which are on the west coast.

10
Populating North America
  • Canadian Immigration Patterns
  • Immigration patterns in Canada tend to parallel
    those of the United States with a few exceptions
  • French settlers in the St. Lawrence River valley
    were the first to establish a population nucleus.
    They were followed by British and Irish settlers
    after 1765.
  • In the latter half of the 19th century, Canada
    was also the destination for a large number of
    eastern Europeans who settled in large eastern
    cities as well as the Prairie Provinces.
  • Today Asians represent the largest immigrant
    group in the country many of whom left Hong
    Kong when it reverted back to Chinese control

11
Migratory Trends in North America
  • Westward Migration
  • Until recently, westward migration patterns
    tended to skip over the intermontane region
  • In the 2000 census, Arizona Nevada were the two
    fastest growing states
  • The movement of people into arid regions has
    further complicated environmental problems

12
Migratory Trends in North America
  • Westward Migration

13
Migratory Trends in North America
  • Black Exodus from the US south
  • In the early 20th century there was a mass
    migration of blacks from the rural American South
  • Two migratory waves
  • 1910-1920
  • 1940-1960
  • Many people migrated to northern industrial
    cities such as Chicago, Detroit, New York,
    Philadelphia, Boston
  • In addition to northward migration, there, a
    significant proportion of people migrated to west
    coast cities (Los Angeles and Oakland) in the
    second migration.

14
Migratory Trends in North America
  • Rural to Urban Migration
  • 200 years ago only 5 of the North American
    population lived in urban areas (population
    exceeding 2,500 people)
  • Today more than 75 of the population lives in
    urban areas
  • Much of this migration was precipitated by a
    shift from primary activities (farming and
    extractive industries) to secondary
    (manufacturing), tertiary (service) and
    quaternary (information processing) activities.

15
Migratory Trends in North America
  • Growth of the Sun Belt South
  • After 1970, southern states grew more rapidly
    than the northeast and Midwest
  • The change can be attributed to a shift in
    manufacturing, better climate in the south,
    retirees, cheaper standard of living,
    recreational activities, and large-scale adoption
    of air conditioning
  • There has been dramatic growth in urban areas of
    the South Atlanta, Research Triangle (Durham,
    Chapel Hill Raleigh) Charlotte, Nashville,
    Jacksonville, and Tampa
  • These new urban areas developed around new
    industries that moved south (light manufacturing,
    banking)

16
Historical Evolution of the City
  • Changes in transportation have influenced the
    development of American Cities
  • Stages of growth
  • The original city center
  • Compact city that serviced a pedestrian
    population
  • Usually not more than 3-4 miles in diameter
  • Streetcar Suburbs
  • Developed after the 1888 development of electric
    streetcars
  • Cities extended out streetcar lines to form a
    spider web pattern

17
Historical Evolution of the City
  • Stages of Growth
  • The Automobile City
  • Developed in the 1920s with the widespread
    adoption of automobiles
  • Expansion was no longer limited to streetcar
    lines
  • Development of suburbs led to white flight
  • Edge Cities
  • Decentralized urban centers have developed in the
    past 30 years
  • An edge city fulfills many of the services of a
    downtown area with the hassle of traveling long
    distances
  • They are centers of business, shopping, and
    entertainment.

18
Historical Evolution of the City
19
Natural Resources
  • North America contains an abundance of natural
    resources
  • There is a large climatic and biotic variety that
    allows for the production of a variety of
    agricultural products
  • The region is also home to a wide variety of raw
    materials that aided industrial development.

20
Agriculture
  • North America is home to one of the most
    productive food-producing systems in the world
  • Farmers practice highly commercialized,
    mechanized, specialized agriculture that
    utilizes an efficient transportation system,
    global markets large capital investments in
    farm machinery
  • During the 20th century, crop yields steadily
    rose as the demands for labor steadily declined
  • Because of this shift, only a very small
    percentage of the US Canadian workforce is
    still engaged in agriculture
  • During the same time, there has been a steady
    rise in the average size of farms
  • The consolidation of farms has had a negative
    impact on small farming communities throughout
    the region.

21
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22
Regional Economic Patterns
  • Within North America, there are regional patterns
    in the concentration of industries
  • Location factors explain why certain industries
    are located where they are
  • Historically the manufacturing core was located
    in the Megalopolis region (Boston to Baltimore),
    southern Ontario (Toronto to Hamilton), and the
    industrial Midwest (Pittsburg to Chicago)
  • These manufacturing regions located in these
    places largely because of a number of factors
  • Their proximity to natural resources (farmland
    (production of food to feed workers, coal, iron
    ore)
  • Increasing connectivity (canals, railroad
    networks, highways, air traffic hubs,
    telecommunication centers)
  • A ready supply of productive labor, and a growing
    national then international market demand
  • The region traditionally dominated the production
    of steel, automobiles, machine tools,
    agricultural equipment

23
Regional Economic Patterns
  • In the last fifty years, there has been a shift
    in the center of the US economy to the west and
    the south
  • Many older industrial cities experienced a
    drastic loss in jobs in manufacturing and
    therefore lost their dominance over the economy.
  • The shift of industries to the Gulf Coast was
    precipitated by a number of factors
  • cheaper labor costs
  • Environment
  • a ready source of energy (fossil fuel).
  • The shift of industries to the West Coast ranges
    from Vancouver south into southern California
  • These industries are closely tied to the Pacific
    Rim market.
  • A number of different industries predominate
  • Aerospace other governmental spending
    industries
  • computers (Silicon Valley is close to Stanford
    Cal and allowed for easy access to innovation
    research).
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