Geo chapter 9 section 3
How might the cities of Latin America deal with the increasing demands placed on them by their expanding populations?
Add more jobs to help support the need to bolster the infrastructure to supply fresh water, power and road systems. Create a zone around the city to stop the expansion.
Terraced farming
An ancient technique for growing crops on hillsides or mountain slopes, using step-like horizontal fields cut into the slopes
What factors have drawn people from the countryside into the cities of the region?
Better jobs, school, and Medicare
What are the steps in slash-and-burn farming?
Clear field, burn the debris and then plant crops
Pull factors
Factors that "pull" people toward cities
Push factors
Factors that "push" people to leave rural areas
What are some of the advantages of tourism to the Caribbean?
More businesses, regional ports, reduce income gap, tourists spending money
What are some of the problems of cities in the region?
Pollution from cars and factories. Unemployment and crime increase. Slums spread over larger and larger urban areas. Shortages of drinkable water.
How have humans changed the environment in Latin America to make it more suitable for agriculture?
Slash and burn, irrigate, and terracing
Infrastructure
The basic support systems needed to keep an economy going, including power, communications, transportation, water, sanitation, and education systems
Slash-and-burn
A way of clearing fields for planting by cutting trees, brush, and grasses and burning them