why was there an increase in population growth after the industrial revolution? Give at least 3 reasons
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Answer:
Population change
There have been two major population explosions in the course of human social evolution. By the end of the Paleolithic Period the world’s human population is estimated to have been between five and six million (an average of 0.1 person per square mile [0.04 person per square kilometre] of Earth’s land area). Following the Neolithic or agricultural revolution, the population made its first major leap, reaching over the short span of 8,000 years around 150 million by the year 1000 BCE (2.6 persons per square mile). For the next two and a half thousand years there was relatively little change. World population had reached about 500 million by the middle of the 17th century. During this time any tendency for population to grow was punished by the checks of starvation and pestilence. Only with the Industrial Revolution of the 18th century did population growth break out again from its Malthusian fetters.