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  2. Fort William First Nation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_William_First_Nation

    Fort William First Nation (Ojibwe: Animkii Wajiw [2]) is an Ojibwa First Nation reserve in Ontario, Canada. The administrative headquarters for this band government is south of Thunder Bay . As of January 2008 [update] , the First Nation had a registered population of 1,798 people, of which their on-Reserve population was 832 people.

  3. Population history of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Population_history_of_the...

    [4] [132] [133] For example, according to Coquille scholar Dina Gilio-Whitaker, "In recent decades, however, researchers challenge the idea that disease is solely responsible for the rapid Indigenous population decline. The research identifies other aspects of European contact that had profoundly negative impacts on Native peoples' ability to ...

  4. List of countries by population growth rate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by...

    The number shown is the average annual growth rate for the period. Population is based on the de facto definition of population, which counts all residents regardless of legal status or citizenship—except for refugees not permanently settled in the country of asylum, who are generally considered part of the population of the country of origin ...

  5. Fort William, West Bengal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_William,_West_Bengal

    A view of Calcutta from Fort William (1807) Plan (top-view) of Fort William, c. 1844. There are two Fort Williams. The original fort was built in the year 1696 by the British East India Company under the orders of Sir John Goldsborough which took a decade to complete. The permission was granted by Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb.

  6. The Limits to Growth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Limits_to_Growth

    The Limits to Growth (LTG) is a 1972 report [2] that discussed the possibility of exponential economic and population growth with finite supply of resources, studied by computer simulation. [3] The study used the World3 computer model to simulate the consequence of interactions between the Earth and human systems.

  7. Epidemiological transition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epidemiological_transition

    In general human history, Omran's first phase occurs when human population sustains cyclic, low-growth, and mostly linear, up-and-down patterns associated with wars, famine, epidemic outbreaks, as well as small golden ages, and localized periods of "prosperity".

  8. 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1491:_New_Revelations_of...

    (a) Population levels of indigenous peoples in the Americas were probably higher than had been traditionally believed among scientists and closer to the numbers estimated by "high counters". (b) Humans probably arrived in the Americas earlier than traditionally thought, over the course of multiple waves of migration to the New World and not ...

  9. Malthusian growth model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malthusian_growth_model

    By now, it is a widely accepted view to analogize Malthusian growth in Ecology to Newton's First Law of uniform motion in physics. [8] Malthus wrote that all life forms, including humans, have a propensity to exponential population growth when resources are abundant but that actual growth is limited by available resources: