Western Europe is very densely populated; belgium, Netherlands, parts of cicily, parts of Switzerland and Italy...
The least dense European country is not Russia (8.3 per/km2), but is in fact Iceland (3.1 per/km2). The answer is Iceland
Answer: Scandanavia (Sweden, Norway, Iceland, Denmark, and Finland).
The economic activity in the most densely populated parts of North America is in the medical field. There are cosmetic as well as necessary medical procedures performed in great numbers anywhere where there are a lot of people.
which parts of eastern europe are sparsely or less populated
Most of the high-density areas are coterminous with the alluvial plains on which intensive agriculture is centred.
That depends on what is meant by "Tons of people". Ireland is not a densely populated country. There are over 4.5 million people in Ireland. Parts of Ireland are not highly populated, particularly the rural areas of the west of Ireland.
Most likely in parts of India, especially around the Ganges River, another location would be in most parts of Japan. China, Vietnam and the Sudan, Nigeria and Ethiopia
Greece
Fiordland would be one of the least populous parts of New Zealand.
According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics - www.abs.gov.au - 64% of the Australian population is located in capital cities. The most populous capital city is Sydney (capital of New South Wales) followed by Melbourne (capital of Victoria). The major of people in Australia live on the coast. The population density drops quite significantly when moving inland.
The most densely populated parts are all located within about 150km. of the US/Canada border. However, most of the country could be populated. The climate becomes inhospitable in the far north but native people live there on the ice and catch seals and fish for food.
Wedge shaped sales territory is a form of territory which focus on not only in urban area but also the the rural parts. It is applicable for FMCG. The design indicates serving to a densely populated urban area to small rural area.