HSC Geography · People, Patterns and Processes · 7.2

Patterns of Settlement

From scattered villages to a majority-urban planet of mega-cities — where people live, and why · NESA Syllabus 2022
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7.2.1

Urbanisation & its global rise

7.2.1 The global shift

The world went urban around 2007–2008

0%25%50%75%100% 19501990201020182050 ~68% urban (2050, UN)RuralUrban

~30% urban in 1950 → ~55% by 2018 → UN projects ~68% by 2050. Growth is concentrated in Asia & Africa.

7.2.2

The mega-city

7.2.2 Extreme concentration

Mega-city = an urban area of > 10 million

Tokyo ≈ 37 million

The world's largest urban agglomeration (UN) — dense, productive, superb transport, but huge servicing pressures.

30+ mega-cities

e.g. Delhi, Shanghai — and the number keeps rising, fastest in Asia & Africa.

Not the same as a primate city (dominant city) or a megalopolis (merged cities).

7.2.3

Urban distribution

7.2.3 Where cities are — & why

Uneven, and clustered on coasts & rivers

Mega-city (10 million +)

Physical (water, land, harbours) + economic (trade, jobs) + historical factors → strong clustering, especially in Asia.

7.2.4

Environmental footprint

7.2.4 Small in area, huge in impact

≈ 3% of land · ≈ 70% of carbon emissions

The pressure

Cities concentrate energy use, resource consumption, waste & pollution (UN estimates).

The response

Green infrastructure · public & active transport · renewables · denser, mixed-use design.

Density can make cities more sustainable per person than sprawl.

7.2.5

Evolution of settlements

7.2.5 From camps to cities

Nomadic → farming → village → city → mega-city

Early villagefarming surplus(Neolithic) Ancient cityUruk, Mesopotamia(~4th mill. BCE) Industrial cityfactories, migration(18th–19th C) Mega-city10 million+(today)

The agricultural revolution produced the food surplus that first made cities possible.

7.2.6

Trade & urban growth

7.2.6 The engine of growth

Where goods meet, cities grow

Trade = the concept of interconnection — name the flows that feed a city.

7.2.7

Ancient urban origins

7.2.7 The first cities

Born in fertile river valleys

Uruk — Mesopotamia (~4th millennium BCE)

One of the world's earliest & largest cities, in Sumer (modern Iraq). Irrigated farming on the Tigris–Euphrates plains fed a large population, monumental building & organised society — showing how surplus + trade + administration scale a settlement into a city.

Exact dates are debated — treat Uruk as an illustrative early example.

End of 7.2

Recap

Urbanisation → ~68% urban by 2050 (UN) · mega-city = > 10 million · uneven distribution clustered on coasts/rivers · big environmental footprint (~3% land, ~70% CO₂) · villages → Uruk → industrial city → mega-city · trade as the engine. Next: use the activity sheet & study guide.
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