This focus area studies the diversity and extent of human activity on Earth — the spatial patterns of settlement, infrastructure, agriculture and industry, and patterns related to culture (Indigenous peoples and languages). Use this guide with the seven chapter study pages.
Place · Space · Environment · Interconnection · Scale · Sustainability · Change. For every pattern, ask: where is it (space), why there (process), at what scale, and how is it changing?
| # | Chapter | Content strand |
|---|---|---|
| 7.1 | Diversity & extent of human activity | Overview |
| 7.2 | Patterns of settlement | Settlement |
| 7.3 | Patterns of infrastructure | Infrastructure |
| 7.4 | Economic activity — agriculture | Agricultural production |
| 7.5 | Economic activity — industrial production | Industrial production |
| 7.6 | Indigenous peoples | Spatial patterns related to culture |
| 7.7 | Languages | Spatial patterns related to culture |
China's Belt and Road InitiativeBelt and Road Initiative — a global infrastructure & investment program (since 2013) building ports, rail and roads across Asia, Africa and Europe. Learn more → is reshaping global trade; rapid urbanisationurbanisation — the rising share of people living in towns and cities rather than rural areas. Learn more → is growing vast mega-citiesmega-cities — an urban area with a population of more than 10 million people (e.g. Tokyo, Delhi). Learn more →; and the ecological footprintecological footprint — the biologically productive land and water needed to supply what a population consumes and absorb its waste. Learn more → measures humanity's demand on the planet.
This topic uses several geographical tools — revise them in the Skills suite:
Real, verified examples that anchor each pattern. Learn one or two per chapter well.
A mega-city is an urban area of over 10 million people (Tokyo ≈37m, plus Delhi, Shanghai…). Uruk (ancient Mesopotamia) is an early example of urban origins.
Contrast ageing infrastructure (parts of the USA) with rapid expansion (China's Belt and Road Initiative & high-speed rail; Shanghai Metro; Sydney Metro).
Agriculture ranges from subsistence to commercial; the Fertile Crescent is a domestication origin; the Green Revolution transformed yields.
Economic restructuring & the new international division of labour have shifted manufacturing from traditional Western belts to emerging economies. Manufacturing is ≈16% of global GDP (World Bank); China is the largest manufacturer by output.
≈476 million Indigenous people worldwide (UN). The Whanganui River gained legal personhood (Te Awa Tupua Act 2017).
About 7,000 languages exist; ~40% are endangered. PNG is the most linguistically diverse country; Australia had ~250 Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander languages, ~120 still spoken (AIATSIS).
| Study | Place | Interconnection | Change | Sustainability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mega-cities | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Belt & Road / Shanghai | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Rust Belt → Zhengzhou | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Indigenous peoples | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Languages | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Question: Explain how the spatial patterns of ONE type of human activity (settlement, economic activity or culture) are produced, and how they are changing.
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| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Urbanisation | The growing share of a population living in urban areas. |
| Mega-city | An urban area with over 10 million people. |
| Settlement | A place where people live, from a remote community to a mega-region. |
| Infrastructure | The basic physical systems & services (transport, water, power, communications) that support activity. |
| Economic activity | The production, distribution & consumption of goods & services (primary/secondary/tertiary/quaternary). |
| Green Revolution | Mid-20th-C rise in yields via high-yield varieties, irrigation & synthetic inputs. |
| Economic restructuring | A shift in the balance of an economy's activities (e.g. from manufacturing to services). |
| International division of labour | The global spread of production stages across countries by cost & advantage. |
| Deindustrialisation | Decline of manufacturing in a region (e.g. the US Rust Belt). |
| Ecological footprint | The biologically productive land & water needed to supply what a population consumes and absorb its waste. |
| Country (Indigenous concept) | An interconnected living whole — land, water, sky, people, law, story — to which people belong. |
| Traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) | Indigenous understanding of land, water & species used in sustainable management. |