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Review. Age Specific Fertility Rate. Age Specific Fertility Rate (ASFR) = (Number of births to women in age group i / Number of women in age group i ) x 1000 Total Fertility Rate (TFR) = (The sum of the Age Specific Fertility Rates x The number of years in each age group) / 1000 .
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Age Specific Fertility Rate • Age Specific Fertility Rate (ASFR) = (Number of births to women in age group i / Number of women in age group i) x 1000 • Total Fertility Rate (TFR) = (The sum of the Age Specific Fertility Rates x The number of years in each age group) / 1000
Death rate Growth rate Emigration rate Birth rate Immigration rate Calculating Population Change Birth (b), Death (d), Immigration (i) and Emigration (e) are calculated per 1000 people r = (b – d) + (i – e)
Rule of 70 • The rule of 70 states that in order to estimate the number of years for a variable to double, take the number 70 and divide it by the growth rate of the variable. • if the growth rate of the China is 10%, the rule of 70 predicts it would take 7 years (70/10) for China's real GDP to double.
Population Growth Rate vs. Change • Take the difference of population in year two and the population in year one and divide by the population in year two. Then multiply is number by 100%. • (new-old)/new • Percent change • (New-old)/old
Three differences between Population Growth and Population Change: • (a) Population growth is the difference between birth rate and death rate plus migration per year. • (b) It is expressed in percentage. • (c) Growth rate was 2.14% per year as per census 1991. It has declined to 1.93% per year in 2001. • Population Change • (a) Population change is the number of people added to the total population in a year. • (.b) It is expressed in the addition of number of people. • (c) Population was 84.64 crore in 1991. It increased to 102.87 crore in 2001, an addition of 18.2 crore in a decade.
Leaching vs. Percilation • In general, leaching is the extraction of certain materials from a carrier into a liquid (usually, but not always a solvent). • Percolation (from Lat. percōlāre, to filter or trickle through) refers to the movement and filtering of fluids through porous materials.
Eminent Domain • Regulatory Taking • Government regulation of property so extensive that government is deemed to have taken the property by the power of eminent domain, for which it must compensate the property owners. • NEPA
Urban Sprawl • Urban sprawl or suburban sprawl describes the expansion of human populations away from central urban areas into previously remote and rural areas, particularly resulting in low-density communities reliant upon heavy automobile usage. Urban sprawl is a multifaceted concept of community planning especially relevant todevelopednations, involving topics that range from the outward spreading of a city and itssuburbs, to low-density and auto-dependent development on rural, examination of impact of high segregation between residential and commercial uses, and analysis of various design features to determine which may encourage car dependency.
Suburban Sprawl • Suburban Sprawl • Patchwork of vacant and developed tracts around the edges of cities • Problems • Loss of wetlands • Air pollution • Water pollution • Loss of biological habitat • 11 states now have new growth management laws (Smart Growth)
Long Division/ Decimals • Lets try again!