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Modern business geography

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fullscreen: Modern business geography

Monograph

Identifikator:
1830562916
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-217337
Document type:
Monograph
Author:
Huntington, Ellsworth http://d-nb.info/gnd/117070092
Cushing, Sumner W.
Title:
Modern business geography
Place of publication:
New York [usw.]
Publisher:
World Book Company
Year of publication:
1930
Scope:
VIII, 352 S.
Ill., graph. Darst.
Digitisation:
2022
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Chapter

Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
Part one. The field of primary production
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • Modern business geography
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • Introduction
  • Part one. The field of primary production
  • Part two. The field of transportation
  • Part three. The field of manufacture
  • Part four. The field of consumption
  • Index

Full text

116 
Modern Business Geography 
1. What influence do you think these conditions have upon the abundance 
and nature of the primary products, and thus upon the growth of sea- 
ports? Explain. 
2. What influence do they have upon trade with the interior? 
3. Table 7 (page 336) gives the chief exports of South America in the 
order of their value and shows what countries export them. Which of 
these come from hot, tropical lowlands? How important are they? 
Table 6 (page 335) gives the chief cities of South America. Arrange 
them in order of size. How many are found on the north and northeast 
coast? How do these stand as to size? How many and of what size 
are the cities south of latitude 20° S? 
Because of the scantiness and relative inefficiency of their inhabit- 
ants, the tropical forests furnish few primary products for com- 
merce, even though their possible resources are large. 
5. What fraction of the entire South American seacoast is therefore un- 
favorable to the growth of seaports? 
Returning to southern Ecuador, let us examine the coast from 
there to Valparaiso in Chile. This almost rainless coast is bordered 
by a desert, except where irrigation is carried on by means of streams 
from the Andes. 
6. What fraction of the total western coastline is bordered by desert? 
7. Explain why there is so little rain on the west coast. 
8. What influence does this desert have on primary production? upon 
the growth of seaports? 
9. How many of the products of Table 7 (page 336) come from deserts? 
10. How many of the cities of Table 6 (page 335) are found on this coast? 
Now examine the rest of the west coast of South America. 
11. How many of the cities of Table 6 are found south of latitude 45° 
12. What does this lead you to infer as to the importance of the primary 
products of this far southern part of South America? 
Turn next to the west coast between 30° and 45° south of the equa- 
tor, and to the east coast from the coffee plateaus of Brazil in latitude 
20° to latitude 45°. 
13. Which of the chief primary products come from this section ? 
14. How many of the chief cities are located here ? 
Certain other conditions also help to make the southern re- 
gion highly productive. One is the presence of Europeans; for this 
is the part of South America where people of European ancestry 
largely outnumber the colored races.
	        

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Modern Business Geography. World Book Company, 1930.
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