Human overpopulation (Simple English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Human overpopulation" in Simple English language version.

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1degree.com.au (Global: low place; Simple English: low place)

  • Grant, Cameron (August 2007). "Damaged Dirt" (PDF). The Advertiser. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 23 April 2010. Australia has the oldest, most highly weathered soils on the planet.

abc.net.au (Global: 139th place; Simple English: 98th place)

census.gov (Global: 45th place; Simple English: 10th place)

doi.org (Global: 2nd place; Simple English: 3rd place)

  • Ian J. Drake, What the Gorilla Saw: Environmental Studies and the Novel Ishmael, ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment, Volume 22, Issue 3, Summer 2015, Pages 568–581, https://doi.org/10.1093/isle/isu141

google.com (Global: 163rd place; Simple English: 123rd place)

guardian.co.uk (Global: 197th place; Simple English: 52nd place)

huffingtonpost.co.uk (Global: 1,146th place; Simple English: 1,151st place)

  • Vidal, John (March 15, 2019). The rapid decline of the natural world is a crisis even bigger than climate change. The Huffington Post. Retrieved March 16, 2019. [1]

kent.edu (Global: 9,450th place; Simple English: low place)

dks.library.kent.edu

sciencemag.org (Global: 857th place; Simple English: 242nd place)

  • Stokstad, Erik 2019. Landmark analysis documents the alarming global decline of nature. Science. AAAS. Retrieved 8 February 2021. For the first time at a global scale, the report has ranked the causes of damage. Topping the list, changes in land use—principally agriculture—that have destroyed habitat. Second, hunting and other kinds of exploitation. These are followed by climate change, pollution, and invasive species, which are being spread by trade and other activities. Climate change will likely overtake the other threats in the next decades, the authors note. Driving these threats are the growing human population, which has doubled since 1970 to 7.6 billion, and consumption. Per capita of use of materials is up 15% over the past 5 decades. [2]

tititudorancea.org (Global: low place; Simple English: low place)

un.org (Global: 97th place; Simple English: 34th place)

web.archive.org (Global: 1st place; Simple English: 1st place)

worldometers.info (Global: 2,099th place; Simple English: 1,864th place)