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Social Studies 4: Population and Location 19 Views
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Description:
Today we're learning about the study of populations by location. Apparently Washington D.C. is almost 10,000 times as densely populated as Alaska. They're like sardines over there.
Transcript
- 00:04
[Dino and Coop singing]
- 00:13
What would the world look like without humans? [A busy street]
- 00:16
Well there would definitely be some upsides,
- 00:19
There would literally be more more fish in the sea. [Lots of fish]
- 00:21
Bigger rainforests.
Full Transcript
- 00:23
More thriving wildlife. [Elephants]
- 00:25
No pollution.
- 00:26
No global warming.
- 00:27
No Kardashians. [Stop sign appears over a picture of the Kardashians]
- 00:29
But on the downside, the Earth wouldn't have...
- 00:31
Mount Rushmore!
- 00:32
So that's a fair trade off, right? [Picture of Mount Rushmore]
- 00:38
Well whether or not planet Earth would have been better off without us, we're here to
- 00:42
stay. For a while at least.
- 00:44
And that means we're here to be studied – by sociologists, psychologists, and even geographers. [Scientists watching people in cells]
- 00:50
That's right, because geography includes the study of the population that [Coop pointing at a blackboard]
- 00:53
lives in a particular location.
- 00:56
Population studies include the number of people in a location, majors towns and [Dino pointing at a blackboard]
- 01:00
cities, and specific data about the people that live there, like their age, gender and
- 01:05
type of home they have.
- 01:06
This information is collected by the U.S. Census Bureau through phone calls, surveys
- 01:10
and door-to-door visits,
- 01:11
if one of them approaches you with a questionnaire while you're having lunch at subway,
- 01:15
You should report them, they're not supposed to do that [Man about to eat his sandwich looks angry]
- 01:19
If a geographer were to look at population data about Alaska, they might find that as of 2012
- 01:24
the population was 731,449.
- 01:27
Alaska is the largest state in the U.S by land area, and only 1.2 people live in each [Man appears with a woolly hat]
- 01:33
square mile. Which means people can really blast their music without worrying about complaints [Guy in winter dress with his thumbs up next to a speaker wall]
- 01:38
Anyway a geographer could then compare Alaska to Hawaii, which had a population of 1,392,313
- 01:46
in 2012.
- 01:47
With a much smaller area composed of small islands, Hawaii has a wopping 211.8 people
- 01:55
per square mile. [Lots of people crowded together on a tiny island]
- 01:58
Still not downtown Manhattan but still more crowded than Alaska.
- 02:00
Washington, DC is the smallest of the three by size at only 68 square miles, but had a
- 02:06
2012 population of 632,323, which means that 9299 people live in each square mile of DC. [A huge crowd with people packed together]
- 02:17
And roughly 8000 of those are lobbyists." [Lobbyist holding sweets]
- 02:21
By analyzing population data, geographers can gain insight into how the physical geography,
- 02:26
climate and economy might impact changes in population.
- 02:30
For example, if the change in climate began to cause a particular area to have more
- 02:34
hurricanes than before, you could understand why the population might shrink as people [Guy with a briefcase is blown away]
- 02:39
to more comfortable safer and less blustery locations. [Guy sits down on the couch with his hair messy because of the wind]
- 02:43
Or the opening up a brand new gigantic factory which might encourage people to move nearby in order [Factory workers]
- 02:48
to get a job there.
- 02:49
There are plenty of other reasons related to climate, geography or economy – that
- 02:53
might cause individuals to move to or from a particular area. [Guy freezing in the snow wants to move to Florida]
- 02:56
Usually though it's not because thousands of people are trying to move closer to the Cold Stone creamery. [Big crowd appears outside the Cold Stone]
- 03:01
Although it's almost worth it. [Guy says he was he here first]
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