Sir....It's greatfull to inform you that your videos very helpful for students who lives in various countries and your language is not difficult to understand....sir I have a question that....stable or stationary population is same or not?????
Thank you for your comment and question. Stable and stationary would be basically the same, however stable is a more appropriate term when referring to a population.
In relation to population pyramids and outbreak would be in relation to a dramatic change in a population as it would outbreak from what would be expected. This could be the result from a disease, famine, or mass immigration to an area. Clustering is more of a method of grouping. This can be the chosen population used for the creation of the population pyramid or the groping of population pyramids for comparison purposes. Hope this helps.
It would be good to show the number of people that used to be alive in each age group. With faded gray barns to go beyond the sides of the pyramid. Perhaps even animat it so it looks like a campfire. As the generations. And the dead people would be smoke.
@@DeBaccoUniversity what wold also be good is an animation of the population pyramid that shows how it changes over time. It would look like a bon fire. People being living people being the flames dead people being the smoke. It would also be interesting to use shading to show the percentage of people in the. Just some ideas.
thx bro, this video is sooooooo helpfull. I really appereciate your help. Im from Denmark, and i actually understand this, bc your language is so great. You speak clearly and i really love that❤❤❤❤❤ this was something we had to watch for class, and i thought it would be boring, but then it was you talking, and i was so intrigued that i watched your video 4 times, might watch it more tho (; I also thought it was really nice of you to include our little country. thanks for saying our population pyramid was good and stable🎡🎆🎈🎄 Anyway you explained it so well that i am now the best at population pyramids in my class, 🧶🦺🎭🕶 so thanks 🤩🤩😎😎😍😍🤣🤣😂😂
The detail and length of your comment is appreciated! Thanks for the shout out from Denmark and that your country was included as an example. In short... You Are Welcome!
Typically for a constricting population pyramid this (increased infant mortality) will not be the case, more often it is simply a reduce birth rate. If infant mortality was to increase there would be a noticeable reduction in a year class of individuals. Any other questions be sure to post them.
Thanks for this explanation. I found the pyramid for Christmas Island extremely curious, with that big bulge of male population in the ~20-35 range, so I poked around and found out Australia has an incarceration center there, which probably explains it.
@@DeBaccoUniversity Thank you for pointing out the fishing industry. That actually probably has even more of an influence on that population bulge than the incarceration center. I'll look more carefully into local economic concerns in the future when looking at populations like this.
Constrictive population pyramids are used to describe populations that are elderly and shrinking. Constrictive pyramids can often look like beehives and typically have an inverted shape with the graph tapering in at the bottom. Constrictive pyramids have smaller percentages of people in the younger age cohorts and are typically characteristic of countries with higher levels of social and economic development, where access to quality education and health care is available to a large portion of the population. (Source: populationeducation.org/what-are-different-types-population-pyramids/)
Constrictive population pyramids are used to describe populations that are elderly and shrinking. Constrictive pyramids can often look like beehives and typically have an inverted shape with the graph tapering in at the bottom. Constrictive pyramids have smaller percentages of people in the younger age cohorts and are typically characteristic of countries with higher levels of social and economic development, where access to quality education and health care is available to a large portion of the population. (Source: populationeducation.org/what-are-different-types-population-pyramids/)