Population Patterns: What factors determine the location and growth of human settlements?

From the Series Investigating Human Migration and Settlement
  • Interest Level: Grade 5 - Grade 9
  • Reading Level: Grade 6

Why do people migrate to and settle in the places they do? Fascinating examples in history help explain how the earliest human settlements were situated close to fertile ground and rivers for farming and raising livestock. Other determining factors have included areas that offered defensive advantages, resources such as metals, salt, and fossil fuels, and locations on trading routes. In modern times proximity to commercial centers and transportion links, such as railways, canals, and airports, have become more important. Examples featured include settling the Nile in ancient Egypt; the shaping of Central America by trade and colonization; the Industrial Revolution in Britain; the opening up of the American West; the Gold Rush; and the colonization of Australia. The concepts of urbanization - the settlement and growth of cities - and suburbanization, the return to the countryside and the growth of commuter towns, are both examined.

Format Your Price Add
978-0-7787-5182-3
$24.95
978-0-7787-5197-7
$10.95
978-0-7787-9134-8
$31.00
Interest Level Grade 5 - Grade 9
Reading Level Grade 6
Age Range 10 - 14
Dewey 307
Lexile 1150L
ATOS Reading Level 7.9
Guided Reading Level W
Subjects Geography
Genres Nonfiction
Publisher Crabtree Publishing
Imprint Crabtree Classics
Copyright 2010
Number of Pages 48
Dimensions 8 x 10
Graphics
BISACS JNF053240, JNF052040, JNF010000
Rights Included WORLD
Language English

Author: Natalie Hyde