1 / 27

Chapter 11: Industry

Chapter 11: Industry. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. Where is Industry Distributed?. Origin of industry From cottage industries to the Industrial Revolution

viveka
Download Presentation

Chapter 11: Industry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 11: Industry The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography

  2. Where is Industry Distributed? • Origin of industry • From cottage industries to the Industrial Revolution • Impact of the Industrial Revolution especially great on iron, coal, transportation, textiles, chemicals, and food processing

  3. Diffusion of the Industrial Revolution Figure 11-2

  4. Where is Industry Distributed? • Industrial regions • Europe • Emerged in late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries • North America • Industry arrived later but spread faster than in Europe • East Asia

  5. Industrial Regions Figure 11-3

  6. Industrial Areas in Europe Figure 11-4

  7. Industrial Areas in North America Figure 11-5

  8. Why Are Situation Factors Important? Figure 11-8 • Proximity to inputs • Bulk-reducing industries • Examples: • Copper • Steel

  9. Why Are Situation Factors Important? Figure 11-10 • Proximity to markets • Bulk-gaining industries • Examples: • Fabricated metals • Beverage production • Single-market manufacturers • Perishable products

  10. Why Are Situation Factors Important? • Ship, rail, truck, or air? • The farther something is transported, the lower the cost per km/mile • Cost decreases at different rates for each of the four modes • Truck = most often for short-distance travel • Train = used to ship longer distances (1 day +) • Ship = slow, but very low cost per km/mile • Air = most expensive, but very fast

  11. Why Are Site Factors Important? • Labor • The most important site factor • Labor-intensive industries • Examples: textiles • Textile and apparel spinning • Textile and apparel weaving • Textile and apparel assembly

  12. Cotton Yarn Production Figure 11-16

  13. Woven Cotton Fabric Production Figure 11-17

  14. Production of Women’s Blouses Figure 11-18

  15. Why Are Site Factors Important? Figure 11-20 • Land • Rural sites • Environmental factors • Capital

  16. Why Are Location Factors Changing? • Attraction of new industrial regions • Changing industrial distribution within MDCs • Interregional shift within the United States • Right-to-work laws • Textile production • Interregional shifts in Europe • Convergence shifts • Competitive and employment regions

  17. Changing U.S. Manufacturing Figure 11-21

  18. Manufacturers of Men’s and Women’s Socks and Hosiery Figure 11-22

  19. European Union Structural Funds Figure 11-23

  20. Why Are Location Factors Changing? • Attraction of new industrial regions • International shifts in industry • East Asia • South Asia • Latin America • Changing distributions • Outsourcing

  21. World Steel Production Figure 11-24

  22. Global Production Figure 11-25

  23. Apparel Production and Jobs in the United States Figure 11-26

  24. Why Are Location Factors Changing? • Renewed attraction of traditional industrial regions • Proximity to skilled labor • Fordist, or mass production • Post-Fordist, or lean production • Just-in-time delivery

  25. Electronic Computing Manufacturing Figure 11-28

  26. Women’s and Girls’ Cut and Sew Apparel Manufacturing Figure 11-29

  27. The End. Up next: Services

More Related