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Over the past 25 years, employment growth has followed population growth in the Rocky Mountain West. The draw to potential migrants and employers, especially for counties rich in natural landscapes, has increased over time. As with other non-urban counties, the service and trade sectors now lead employment in the Rocky Mountains. According to the excerpt, why has employment grown in the Rocky Mountains? A. People are moving out, allowing more jobs for the people that stay in the area. B. Job growth has followed the decision of more people to settle in the area. C. Jobs needed to be filled, so people moved to the area. D. The city-like atmosphere is drawing big companies and many employees.
According to the graph, which of these statements is true about why people settle in Toronto? • A. Job prospects and lifestyle combined were the most important reasons. • B. Family or friends were more important than all other reasons combined. • C. Housing and lifestyle combined were more important than anything else. • D. Similar ethnic backgrounds was the most important reason to move to Toronto.
Essential Question • How do you examine reasons and patterns of human migration? (7.3 spi19)
Migration • Migration is the process of moving from one place to live in another.
Who migrates? • Immigrant: A person who moves into a new country. • Emigrant: A person who moves out of a country (exit)
Example • If Joe moves from Spain to France. He is an _______ to Spain and an _______ to France. • Emigrant to Spain • Immigrant to France
Push – Pull Theory • When one thing pushes you out of one location, another thing pulls you into a different location. • Explains the reasons why people migrate.
Reasons for Migration Family Climate Natural Resources Employment
Reasons for Migration • On each of the following slides make a list of things that pushed and pulled people to move.
Family • Many people migrate to be closer to their family and friends. It gives them a familiar feeling in a new place. When immigrants came to the United States, they often moved near family or friends. This eventually led to entire neighborhoods full of one specific culture.
Climate • People often migrate to live in a climate that lets them live how they want. The climate affects what crops can grow, what animals can be bred, and even what kind of house can be built. Some people even migrate with the seasons, living up north during the summer and in the south during the winter, to have more temperate climates year-round.
Natural Resources • People migrate to an area to live near natural resources they need or want. They can use these natural resources to help them survive and trade them for other things they do not have. Middle Eastern countries are near oil, and they can trade it with other countries for things they do not have, like timber and types of food.
Employment • People also migrate to an area because of job opportunities. As cities grow, more people are migrating into them from the country to have better and more jobs. People also migrate to different countries to get better jobs at higher wages.
The Irish Potato Famine • During the summer of 1845, a "blight of unusual character" devastated Ireland's potato crop, the basic staple in the Irish diet. A few days after potatoes were dug from the ground, they began to turn into a slimy, decaying, blackish "mass of rottenness." The cause was a fungus that had traveled from Mexico to Ireland.
"Famine fever – a variety of diseases-soon spread through the Irish countryside. Observers reported seeing children crying with pain and looking "like skeletons, their features sharpened with hunger and their limbs wasted, so that there was little left but bones." Masses of bodies were buried without coffins, a few inches below the soil.
Over the next ten years, more than 750,000 Irish died and another 2 million left their homeland for Great Britain, Canada, and the United States. Within five years, the Irish population was reduced by a quarter.
Irish peasants subsisted on a diet consisting largely of potatoes, since a farmer could grow triple the amount of potatoes as grain on the same plot of land. A single acre of potatoes could support a family for a year. About half of Ireland's population depended on potatoes for subsistence.
Tenant farmers held short-term leases that were payable each six months in some areas. If the tenants failed to pay their rent, they were jailed or evicted and their homes burned. During the time of the Great Hunger (1845-1847), approximately 500,000 people were evicted, many of whom died of starvation or disease or relocated to mismanaged and inadequate poor houses.
The alternative to eviction, poorhouses, or starvation was emigration, which rose to over two million people from 1845-1855. Emigrants tended to follow their families which were found mostly in Great Britain, United States, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia. There were two ways out of this Irish nightmare, death and emigration.
In a paragraph, describe the Irish Potato Famine. • Describe what it was • Describe its effects on the people
Homework • Look at the following pictures in your Geography textbook. Write a paragraph for each picture explaining WHY people would want to immigrate to or emigrate from each place. • Pages 79, 612, 628, 653, 657, 668, 679, 705