Chapter 9 Reading Guide

Global Geography 12

Page 208 – 216

  1. What is a resource?

In general terms, resources are anything that is useful.

  1. What is a natural resource?

Materials found in nature that can be used to make a profit.

  1. Name and describe the two categories of natural resources.

Renewable resources are materials that can be replaced by nature within a relatively short period of time (fifty years or so)

Non-renewable resources are materials that cannot be replaced by nature, or only replaced over a very long period (geologic time scale).

  1. Define human resources and give an example.

Human resources are the abilities of people to do useful work.

  1. What three characteristics demonstrate a high standard of living?

In order to create a high standard of living within a country, there must be:

  • Enough people to fill the labour needs and provide a domestic market to buy the goods and services
  • People whoare healthy and able to work and raise families
  • People who have access to education and training to do valuable work
  1. What is the main idea of the diagram in Figure 9.8?

The diagram illustrates how poverty is passed on from one generation to the next:

poor families cannot provide adequate nutrition, disease prevention and mental stimulation

children do not survive or cannot benefit from education

children cannot pursue higher paying jobs due to low education and focus on basic survival

  1. Describe two relationships that can be found between Figure 9.10(worldwide GNP per capita) and 9.11 (worldwide literacy rates)

The areas with lowest per capita GNP also have the lowest literacy rates.

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  1. What is meant by uneven distribution of resources?

The natural resources are not spread equally among all countries.

Land Resources

  1. What are some natural causes of uneven distribution of resources?

The reason natural resources are located in certain areas depends on physiography (landscape), climate and geologic history.

  1. What factors affect the distribution of agriculture? Explain each factor in a sentence.
  • Farming can only happen where the climate has the right conditions of temperature and rainfall to provide a good growing season.
  • Farming requires low relief (relatively flat land) because temperatures fall at higher elevations in mountainous or steep areas and soil erodes quickly (unless the land is terraced).
  • Farming can only occur where the geology provides deep soils that contain necessary mineral nutrients.
  • Human settlement tends to spread from cities and urban areas take over productive farmland.
  1. What is lapse rate and how does it affect agriculture?

Lapse rate is the rate that temperature drops as you go up an elevation such as a mountain.

  1. In at least a complete sentence for each, define commercial, small holding and subsistence farming.

Commercial farming is large-scale farming for profit, where most of the crop is sold for cash and advanced equipment is used.

Small holding is farming with a combination of machinery and livestock where part of the crop is used to feed a family and the rest is sold for cash.

Subsistence farming is small scale, on land with less suitability for growing, where most of the labour is provided by the family which depends on the crop for food.

  1. Explain several reasons why most of France has commercial farming, but Mauritania has subsistence farming.

Farmers in France have education and wealth, allowing them to borrow money to buy equipment to establish productive farms and make the most optimal use of the land. France has a good climate for farming and farmers can correct the soils with fertilizers and other additives, provide irrigation if there isn’t enough moisture , and buy the best seeds that will produce good crops.

In Mauritania, climate and soils are less suitable, farmers have no access to services (like education or training from a government department of agriculture) that might allow them to improve the land and no access to capital (money they could borrow).

  1. Compare Figure 9.15 and 9.17. What type of soil is found where most commercial farms are located?

Commercial farms are mainly found in areas with forest and grassland soils.

Water Resources

  1. Why is unsafe drinking water such a problem?

Around the world, unsafe drinking water causes diseases (3-5 million deaths each year, 80% of diseases in LDCs)

  1. Using the map in Figure 9.20 and the map in the front cover of your text, identify three countries that have a chronic water shortage, three that have water scarcity and three countries where 100% of the population has access to safe water.

Chronic water shortages occur in:

Algeria, Egypt, Libia, Tunisia, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Oman, United Arab Emirates, Lebanon, Jordan and Israel

These countries are probably using up water faster than nature returns it to lakes, rivers and aquifers

Water scarcity occurs in: Peru, Iran, Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rawanda South Africa, Zimbabwe, United Kingdom, Belgium, Iran, S. Korea

100% of the population can get clean water:

Canada, Iceland, Norway, France, Costa Rica, Finland Italy

Mineral Resources

  1. What three factors control whether to open a mine or not?

The creation of a new mine depends on

  • the extent (total amount) and concentration of the mineral;
  • the price the mineral will bring;
  • and the cost of extracting, processing and transporting the mineral.
  1. Describe several differences between open-pit and underground mines.

An open pit mine is basically a large hole in the ground. The rock is removed in layers from the surface. It affects a larger area of the surface, so it has more impact on the local environment.

An underground mine involves shafts (tunnels) underground and is much more dangerous and expensive.