Population, Disasters, Asia, and India's Physical Geography
POPULATION TERMS: BIRTH RATE = live births per 1,000 people per year. DEATH RATE = deaths per 1,000 people per year. NATURAL GROWTH RATE = Birth Rate − Death Rate. LIFE EXPECTANCY = average years a newborn is expected to live. POPULATION DENSITY = Population ÷ Area (persons per km²). DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION MODEL (DTM): Stage 1 (Pre-industrial): High birth rate, high death rate, slow growth. Subsistence farming, no healthcare. Stage 2 (Early Developing): High birth rate, FALLING death rate, RAPID growth. Better food/medicine, but habits unchanged. Stage 3 (Late Developing): FALLING birth rate, low death rate, growth slowing. Urbanisation, education, women's empowerment. Stage 4 (Developed): Low birth rate, low death rate, STABLE (or declining) population. High income, education, healthcare. MIGRATION: INTERNAL (within country): rural→urban dominant trend (people move to cities for jobs). INTERNATIONAL (across countries). PUSH FACTORS: poverty, lack of jobs, natural disasters, war. PULL FACTORS: better jobs, education, facilities, higher standard of living. URBANISATION: % of population in cities. INDIA: ~35% in cities (growing rapidly). PROBLEMS: slums (~35% of urban India in slums), overcrowding, traffic congestion, pollution, strain on water/sanitation/transport. SATELLITE CITIES: planned cities near mega-cities to reduce pressure. Examples: Navi Mumbai (near Mumbai), Gurugram/Faridabad (near Delhi). SMART CITIES MISSION (2015): 100 cities selected for technology-based urban development. DISASTERS: NATURAL DISASTERS: Geological: earthquakes, volcanoes, tsunamis, landslides. Climatic: floods, droughts, cyclones, blizzards. MAN-MADE DISASTERS: Bhopal Gas Tragedy 1984 (MIC gas leak, thousands died). Chernobyl 1986 (nuclear reactor accident, Ukraine). Industrial accidents, oil spills, nuclear leaks. DISASTER MANAGEMENT — 4 STAGES: (1) MITIGATION: actions to REDUCE RISK BEFORE disaster. Building earthquake-proof structures, flood levees, mangrove preservation. (2) PREPAREDNESS: planning and training BEFORE a disaster. Early warning systems, evacuation drills, emergency stockpiles. (3) RESPONSE: actions DURING and immediately AFTER disaster. Search and rescue, medical aid, emergency shelter, food distribution. (4) RECOVERY: rebuilding AFTER the disaster. Rebuilding infrastructure, psychological support, livelihood restoration. ASIA — KEY FACTS: LARGEST + MOST POPULOUS continent. URAL MOUNTAINS + CAUCASUS MOUNTAINS separate Asia from Europe. HIMALAYAS ('ROOF OF THE WORLD'): world's highest mountain range. Mount Everest (8,849 m) = world's highest peak. Tibetan Plateau = 'Roof of the World' (highest plateau, avg 4,500 m). YANGTZE RIVER = longest river in Asia (~6,300 km). GOBI DESERT (China/Mongolia) and THAR DESERT (India/Pakistan). INDIA'S 6 PHYSIOGRAPHIC DIVISIONS: (1) HIMALAYAS (N): Young fold mountains. Great, Lesser, Outer Himalayas. Source of rivers (Ganga, Indus, Brahmaputra). (2) NORTHERN PLAINS: Formed by alluvial deposits of 3 great rivers. Most densely populated. Most fertile agricultural land (wheat, rice). (3) PENINSULAR PLATEAU (Deccan): Old, hard rock. Black soil (Regur) = ideal for cotton. Average elevation 600-900 m. Western Ghats + Eastern Ghats. (4) INDIAN DESERT (Thar): NW India (Rajasthan). Hot, arid. Sparse population. (5) COASTAL PLAINS: W coastal plain = NARROW (Konkan, Malabar). E coastal plain = WIDER, deltas of Mahanadi/Godavari/Krishna/Kaveri. (6) ISLANDS: Andaman and Nicobar Islands (BAY OF BENGAL). Lakshadweep (ARABIAN SEA). INDIA'S CLIMATE: Tropical MONSOON climate. SW MONSOON: June–September (~75% of annual rainfall). TWO BRANCHES: Arabian Sea branch (hits W Ghats first, Maharashtra/Kerala). Bay of Bengal branch (hits NE India, Bengal). INDIA'S NATURAL VEGETATION — 5 TYPES: (1) Tropical Evergreen (W Ghats, NE India, Andaman Islands): dense, evergreen, hardwood. (2) Tropical Deciduous (most widespread): shed leaves in dry season. Sal, Teak, Sandalwood. (3) Thorn and Scrub (Rajasthan, Gujarat): dry, thorny shrubs. (4) Mangroves (Sundarbans, coastal deltas): salt-tolerant, roots above water, habitat for Bengal Tiger. (5) Montane Forests (Himalayas): altitude zones: broadleaf → coniferous → alpine meadow.
ICSE CLASS 8 GEOGRAPHY KEY FACTS: (1) DTM STAGE 2 = fastest population growth (birth rate still high, death rate falling). Most developing countries are in Stage 2 or 3. (2) BHOPAL 1984 = man-made disaster (MIC gas leak from Union Carbide plant); CHERNOBYL 1986 = nuclear disaster (Ukraine, then USSR). Both are classic examples of man-made disasters. (3) India's COASTAL PLAINS: WEST = narrow (Konkan in Maharashtra, Malabar in Kerala). EAST = wider with major river DELTAS (Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri). (4) Lakshadweep = ARABIAN SEA. Andaman and Nicobar = BAY OF BENGAL. Students often confuse these. (5) SUNDARBANS MANGROVES (Bengal): UNESCO World Heritage Site, home to the Royal Bengal Tiger, largest mangrove forest in the world. (6) MITIGATION ≠ PREPAREDNESS: Mitigation = changing the physical environment (building codes, levees) to PREVENT damage. Preparedness = getting people READY (drills, plans, stockpiles) to RESPOND effectively.