Analyze how population pressures had an impact on disease, mortality rates, migration and living standards.- Alex vuchkov
The population of European and euro Americans people rose sharply during eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Demographic growth in the Western Hemisphere was fouled by migration from Europe
The more people the more disease, babies who die, higher living standards, and greater migration because of families continuing to bring members. Migration and disease are related because the more migration the more introduction to new diseases.
- As industrial revolution grew the population skyrocketed it led to urbanization. By 1900 it gained at least 50% of the population land.
-Coal burning fires and industrial pollution so fouled the air that people fled to parks and public gardens on the weekends
-Inadequate water supplies and unsanitary living conditions led to periodic epidemics of Typhus and Cholera.
European and euro American population increase was due to changing patterns of birth and death rates as well as to growing supplies of food.
- In most societies fertility was high but famines and epidemics resulted in high mortality, especially child mortality which prevented explosive population growth.
Demographic growth in the Western Hemisphere was fouled by migration from Europe
The more people the more disease, babies who die, higher living standards, and greater migration because of families continuing to bring members. Migration and disease are related because the more migration the more introduction to new diseases.
- As industrial revolution grew the population skyrocketed it led to urbanization. By 1900 it gained at least 50% of the population land.
-Coal burning fires and industrial pollution so fouled the air that people fled to parks and public gardens on the weekends
-Inadequate water supplies and unsanitary living conditions led to periodic epidemics of Typhus and Cholera.
European and euro American population increase was due to changing patterns of birth and death rates as well as to growing supplies of food.
- In most societies fertility was high but famines and epidemics resulted in high mortality, especially child mortality which prevented explosive population growth.