Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
and
landscapes
SA
PL
E
1.1
1.2
2 Think about the place in which you live. Can you identify
two different landforms and two types of landscapes
that you see every day?
40
chapter
PL
E
M
SA
Source 1.1 This satellite image of Las Vegas shows many different landscapes and landforms.
41
1.1
PL
E
1 Mountain
M
t i
7 Built
2 Coastal
C
t l
SA
5 Karst
Arctic Circle
Tropic of Cancer
Equator
Tropic of Capricorn
1500
3000 km
Antarctic Circle
Source 1.2
6 Tropical
rainforest
4 Desert
3 Riverine
1 Mountain landscapes
PL
E
SA
2 Coastal landscapes
Source 1.4 Peggys Cove in Nova Scotia, Canada, is an example of a coastal landscape.
chapter 1 landforms and landscapes
43
5 Karst landscapes
3 Riverine landscapes
PL
E
SA
4 Desert landscapes
Source 1.6 The Sahara desert in North Africa is an example of a desert landscape.
44
7 Built landscapes
PL
E
landscape.
SA
landscape.
chapter 1 landforms and landscapes
45
Landscape type
Mountain landscape
PL
E
An Australian example
Coastal landscape
SA
Riverine landscape
46
Landscape type
Desert landscape
An Australian example
Karst landscape
PL
E
Tropical rainforest
landscape
SA
47
Uluru: an iconic
Australian
landform
PL
E
SA
48
Northern Territory
Indigenous population %
Males
Females
04
6.2
5.9
59
6.1
5.7
1014
5.7
5.4
1519
5.3
5.0
2024
4.7
4.8
2529
4.0
4.3
3034
3.9
4.1
3539
3.5
3.7
4044
2.9
3.0
4549
2.3
2.5
5054
1.7
2.0
5559
1.1
1.4
6064
0.8
1.1
6569
0.5
0.7
7074
0.3
0.5
75+
0.3
0.6
Indigenous population
Age (years)
75+
7074
6569
6064
5559
5054
4549
4044
3539
3034
2529
2024
1519
1014
59
04
Female
Northern Territory
0 1 2 3 4 5
3 2 1 0
Percentage of the total population
Males
Females
04
3.5
3.3
59
3.4
3.1
1014
3.4
3.2
1519
3.2
2.9
2024
3.9
3.5
2529
4.3
4.2
3034
4.6
4.3
3539
4.6
4.2
4044
4.6
4.0
4549
4.4
3.9
5054
4.0
3.5
5559
3.7
2.8
6064
2.4
1.7
6569
1.5
1.0
7074
0.7
0.5
0.8
0.8
SA
Non-Indigenous population %
PL
E
Male
75+
49
1.2
aesthetic value
economic value.
Source 1.16 Karlu Karlu (also known as The Devil's Marbles) is sacred to Indigenous
Australians. This is an example of how landforms can have spiritual value.
Cultural value
cultural value
PL
E
SA
Spiritual value
50
Source 1.18 Landscapes with high mineral and metal deposits are
an example of economic value.
Aesthetic value
Competing values
PL
E
SA
Economic value
51
The Chinese
tourism boom in
Australia
skilldrill
Analysing statistics
SA
PL
E
52
2011
Country of
origin
Economic
value to
Australia
($ billions)
Number
of tourists
(000)
Change
in visitor
numbers from
2010 (%)
Name of
group
Description
Percentage
of Chinese
tourists
Selfchallengers
22
China
3.5
542
+19.5
2.6
608
-6.0
Family
connections
13
United
Kingdom
Sightseers
18
Ready to leave
25
Close to home
22
2.0
1173
+0.9
1.8
456
-3.4
Japan
1.1
333
-16.5
South Korea
1.1
198
-7.6
Singapore
1.0
318
+3.4
Malaysia
0.9
241
+1.7
India
0.9
148
+6.9
Germany
0.7
154
-4.0
PL
E
New Zealand
USA
SA
600 000
500 000
400 000
300 000
200 000
100 000
0
Jan. 92
Jan. 96
Jan. 00
Jan. 04
Jan. 08
Jan. 12
Year
53