Distribution of world population
People have inhabited the earth for several
thousands of years, but for a long period of time, their numbers remained limited.
It is only during last few hundred years that human population has increased at
an alarming rate.
Population is spread unevenly across
the continents. Only a few areas support large concentration of people while vast
areas support few people. A large number of factors influence the distribution and
growth of population over the earth’s surface.
Rugged mountains pose various obstacles
such as unsuitable conditions for the construction of rail-roads and highways, unfavourable
conditions for agricultural crops because of short growing season, lack of cultivable
land and snowy winters do not encourage large settlement areas. Hence, the mountainous
areas support a few people. On the other hand, a large concentration of population
is found in the fertile lowlands such as the Ganges and Brahmaputra in India, Hwang-Ho
in China and plains of North-Western Europe and the USA. This is mainly due to flat
level land which is fertile, favourable conditions for agriculture, long growing
seasons and suitable condition for the settlement
Areas with well developed transport infrastructure
and links through road, rail, shipping, canals and air are likely to be more densely
populated than areas which are poorly connected with transport network.
In earlier times, in the absence of water
transport, all islands remained virtually uninhabited. One of the reasons why mountains
are not inhabited by people is lack of accessibility.
Population distribution is affected very
much by the presence or absence of water in any region. Water supply is essential
for human survival and development. Areas which have sufficient water tend to have
denser population. than areas which are dry or suffer from regular drought. Well
watered regions of the Great Northern plains of India are densely populated whereas
drought prone areas of Sahara are sparsely populated.
Fertile alluvial soils of river valleys
throughout the world have encouraged dense settlement of population because they
support agricultural activities. The high density of population in parts of East
and South- East Asia is dependent mainly on fertile soil. For example, dense population
is found in the Ganges valley of India, in Indus valley of Pakistan and Hwang-Ho
valley of China. On the other hand, desert soil of Sahara region is sparsely populated.
Unfavourable economic condition, unemployment,
religious intolerance, conflicts and wars do not favour more population
The analysis of the pattern of population
distribution and density is fundamental to the study of demographic characteristics
of any area. The population distribution refers to the way the people are spread
over the earth’s surface. The population distribution is uneven worldwide. Ten most populous countries of the world
together make up nearly 60% of the world’s
population.
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