Patterns of Settlement (Cambridge (CIE) O Level Geography)
Revision Note
Written by: Jacque Cartwright
Reviewed by: Bridgette Barrett
Patterns of Settlements
Categorising settlements
A settlement is a place where people live and carry out a range of activities - trade, manufacturing, agriculture etc.
They can be categorised through their pattern
However, there are other factors that influence settlements such as their:
Shape or form
Site and situation
Function and hierarchy
Change and growth - modern-day settlement patterns are changing due to population change, technological developments, changing lifestyles and expanding urban limits (rise of the megacities and urban sprawl)
Pattern
Settlements come in different shapes and sizes called patterns
These range from isolated buildings in rural regions to urban megacities of over 10 million people
Urban towns, cities, conurbations and megacities are usually densely populated over a smaller area
Rural towns and fringe areas are usually densely populated over a larger area
Villages and hamlets will usually have a lower population density and smaller settled areas
The physical geography of an area dictates these patterns
Settlement Patterns
Form or shape?
Both mean the same when it comes to describing the pattern
It is how the settlement is laid out
For instance, a river, railway or major road would encourage a linear development along this route to attract trade
However, linear settlements also arose due to physical limitations such as poor drainage or the position of a mountain
Circular shapes grow around a central feature like village greens or lake and are organised, so the middle remains accessible
A star form occurs when several roads meet, and houses are built along those roads
T-form settlements arise when one road meets another at a junction
Y-form settlements develop where two roads meet and houses are built along these routes
Cruciform shapes occur at cross-roads and houses cluster (nucleate) and spread in all four directions
Cross-shaped is similar to a cruciform, however, the houses will be linear around the crossroad rather than nucleate
Settlement Patterns
Dispersed
Where isolated houses or farms are set in fields or along roads rather than concentrated in one area
Found in sparsely populated rural areas such as Sahel region of Africa, Australian outback or the mountainous regions of Scotland and Wales
The break-up of large rural estates led to dispersed settlements in England during the 16th and 17th centuries
Dispersed settlements also occur where the physical geography is extreme - too hot, wet, cold or dry - which in turn discourages settlement and development
Linear
Where there is a physical feature such as a river or a trade and transport route, settlements group and form a line along its path
Nucleated
Form when settlements tightly cluster around a central feature such as a village green, a crossroad or a church etc.
Very few buildings are found further out, and these settlements are usually called hamlets or villages, depending on their size and function
There are a number of reasons for the development of nucleated settlements such as:
Defence
Trade
Co-operative community - agriculture, water, work
Floodplain - safer to group on a hilltop
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Make sure you can define the terms urban and rural. You might think it is easy, but as settlements change, so does their position in the hierarchy.
Rural - an area with less than 10,000 people living within its boundaries
Urban - an area with more than 10,000 people living within its boundaries
This use of a figure helps to keep the definition clearer and it is easier to discuss the types of settlements found within.
Rural - dispersed, hamlet, village and small market town
Urban - large towns, cities, conurbations and megacities
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