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Geography · Population & settlement

Population density & distribution

CIE 04601 min read

Population density

Population density — the number of people living in a given area per km². It is calculated as total population ÷ area.

  • Higher density — more crowded
  • Lower density — less crowded

Factors affecting population density

The main factors affecting population densities are:

  1. Relief — the shape and steepness of the land (flat land supports higher densities than steep slopes)
  2. Communications — transport links and infrastructure
  3. Economy — jobs and resources

Case studies

High population density — Japan

Causes of high density:

  1. Employment
  2. Flat land
  3. Transportation
  4. Natural resources
  5. Fertile soil

Facts:

  • Climate — 21–31 °C in summer
  • ⅔ of central Japan is rocky
  • Population density — 340/km²

Low population density — Namibia

Causes of low density:

  1. Hot and arid climate
  2. Bad communication/transportation
  3. Steep relief
  4. Infertile soil

Facts:

  • Population density — 3/km²
  • Poor transportation
  • Low GDP per person — $7,600 (lack of job opportunities, correlated to few jobs outside primary sectors)
  • Karas — the least densely populated region in Namibia, with a population density of 0.4/km²
  • Climate — the Namib desert experiences <80 mm of annual precipitation (40% of Namibia is desert)

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