Based on a 6-7 billion world population about 1 percent of the world's population has a PS3
During World War II (1939-1945) approximately 41.15 percent of the entire Canadian population was enrolled in the Armed Forces. All of these men and women were volunteers that served during World War II.
.Catholic AnswerAccording to the CIA factbook, and the Pontifical Yearbook put out by the Vatican, quoted in Wikpedia, the statistics for Africa at the end of 2009 put the total number of Catholics in Africa at 135,212, 325 or 15.27% of the total population. Africa has the fastest growing Catholic population in the world.
That he was the first englishman to travel around the world.
If you are asking about numbers alone then Nigeria, which is a fairly populous nation had a Christian population of nearly 59 Million in 2001, with a projected growth of 3.5%, which is 53% of the population. If you are looking at it as a percentage alone Angola had a Christian population of 12 million which represented 94% of the population in 2001. Source: Operation World, 2001 edition.
Approximately 31.2% of the world's population identifies as Christian.
Approximately 33% of the world's population are Christian.
50%
About 20.12 percent of the earths population is Muslim compared to 33 percent Christian, and 13.3 percent Hindu.
Of the world, About 33%
80 percent of the world's population lives in Asia.
Around 31% of the global population identifies as Christian, making Christianity the largest religious group worldwide.
33%
About 33 percent.
One hundred percent of the human population covers the world.
20 percent of the world's population consumes approximately 80 percent of the world's goods, indicating a high level of consumption inequality.
Population: Werewolves: 15 percent of earths population Vampires: 45.2 percent of the earths population Humans: 2 percent of the earths population wookies: 1 percent of the earths population witches and warlocks: 5.8 percent of earths population Actual real animals (you know normal stuff): 31 percent of the earths population