This is the full-content study version of "The Diversity and Extent of Human Activity on Earth" — the conceptual opener for the People, Patterns and Processes focus area. It sets up the ideas (human activity, the ecological footprint, sustainability) that the rest of the topic (7.2–7.7) explores in detail. Read it, then use the activity sheet and the topic study guide to revise. Watch the numbers: keep general framing general, and quote a figure only with its source.
Syllabus: overview of the diversity and extent of human activity on Earth's surface on a global scale.
The full range of ways people use, modify and depend on Earth's surface — from growing food, building settlements and moving goods, to mining, manufacturing, trade and recreation. Its diversity is the variety of these activities; its extent is how far across the planet they reach.
Humans have become the single most powerful force reshaping the planet's surface. We clear and cultivate land, dam and divert rivers, build cities, and draw on resources for energy and materials. The scale and speed of this change is so great that many scientists describe a proposed new interval of Earth history — the Anthropocene — in which human activity is the dominant influence on natural systems.
The diversity is enormous: from a subsistence farmer working a single plot by hand, to a global megacity of tens of millions, to an automated mine or container port. The extent is nearly total — very little of Earth's ice-free land is now untouched by human influence, whether through direct use or through indirect effects such as pollution and a changing climate.
This chapter is built around the seven key concepts: place, space, environment, interconnection, scale, sustainability and change. Human activity is diverse (varies from place to place), unevenly spread across space, felt at every scale, and is driving rapid change in the environment — which is why sustainability is the thread running through the whole topic.
What has expanded human activity — and at what cost.
The reach of human activity has grown because of remarkable achievements in technology. Each advance lifted living standards while also enlarging our demand on the environment:
The pattern is a trade-off: material gains for people, paid for with pressure on natural systems. Technology is double-edged — the same tools that enlarge our footprint can also shrink it (renewable energy, efficient design, recycling), which is why 7.1 sets sustainability up as the central question.
Why growth has not solved everything — inequality and environmental limits.
Despite rising average living standards, two stubborn problems remain — and they are geographic, because they are unevenly spread across space:
Economic gains have not been shared evenly. Many regions still face poverty, limited services and vulnerability to shocks, while a minority of the world consumes the majority of resources. This inequality is itself a spatial pattern — a core reason the topic studies where activity and wealth concentrate.
Human wellbeing has often been improved by drawing down natural capital — soils, forests, fisheries, freshwater, a stable climate — faster than it can regenerate. Ecosystem services (clean water, pollination, climate regulation) are being degraded. The current trajectory of human activity is therefore widely judged to be unsustainable.
Keep numbers general unless you can cite a source. It is safe to say inequality is wide and natural systems are being degraded; it is not safe to invent precise percentages. Where you want a figure, attribute it (e.g. "the IPBES 2019 assessment estimated around a million species are at risk of extinction").
A first overview — where people and economies cluster (developed in 7.2–7.5).
Human activity is not spread evenly — it forms distinct spatial patterns. People and economies concentrate where conditions favour them: fertile land, fresh water, coastlines, trade routes, mineral wealth and, increasingly, existing cities that attract still more people and investment.
These patterns each carry a different environmental footprint: dense cities concentrate consumption and waste in one place; extensive farming and mining transform large areas of land. Reading and describing these patterns is the analytical work of the whole focus area — this section is just the map-level overview.
The topic's headline measure of humanity's demand on the planet.
The area of biologically productive land and water needed to supply everything a population consumes and to absorb its waste (especially carbon dioxide). It is compared against biocapacity — how much productive area is actually available. Both are measured in "global hectares".
The footprint turns a broad idea — "our demand on nature" — into something you can compare and measure. When humanity's total footprint is larger than the planet's biocapacity, we are in ecological overshoot: consuming resources and producing waste faster than Earth can regenerate and absorb them. In effect we are running down the planet's natural savings, not living off the interest.
Earth Overshoot Day is a way to picture this: the Global Footprint Network marks the date each year by which humanity's demand is estimated to exceed what Earth can regenerate in that year. The earlier the date, the deeper the overshoot.
The footprint is deeply unequal. Rich, high-income countries have far larger per-capita footprints than low-income ones, because they consume more energy, goods, food and transport. A common way to dramatise this: the Global Footprint Network estimates that if everyone lived like an average resident of a high-consuming country, humanity would need several Earths — one planet cannot supply it. (Treat any single multiple as an estimate; the reliable point is that demand already exceeds one Earth's biocapacity.)
When you use "ecological footprint" in a response, define it precisely (biologically productive land & water to supply consumption and absorb waste), link it to overshoot and biocapacity, and use it to explain inequality — the concept is most powerful when it shows who is placing the demand.
What overshoot leads to — and why it sets up the rest of the topic.
When human demand runs ahead of what Earth can regenerate, the consequences show up across natural systems:
These are not separate problems — they are interconnected outcomes of the same overshoot, and they feed back on human wellbeing. This is exactly why the focus area is framed around sustainability: the goal is to meet human needs while keeping the demand on natural systems within what the planet can renew. Chapters 7.2–7.7 examine specific spatial patterns — settlement, economic activity and culture — through this lens.
Rather than a single place, this chapter's "case" is a global measure. The Global Footprint Network compares humanity's total footprint against Earth's biocapacity and finds demand exceeds supply — the world is in overshoot. Country footprints differ sharply, so the responsibility for overshoot is unevenly distributed.
You should be able to: define human activity and describe its diversity and extent; explain how technological achievements enlarged our reach and its costs; identify the persistent challenges of inequality and environmental depletion; give an overview of the spatial patterns of settlement and economic activity; define and use the ecological footprint, biocapacity and overshoot; and explain the consequences of unsustainable practice. Test yourself with the activity sheet and the topic study guide — then move on to 7.2.
Everything in this chapter traces to a source you can check. Watch the explainer, read the primary sources, follow the news, and practise the geographical skills this chapter uses.