Migration is when animals move to diffrent places to lay eggs, in the winter birds fly south because it's warmer there than it is here,etc.
that came to american to wen the wor
They took some of the 'wild' out of the west and set up the first settlement in the west based around religion rather than mining, lumber, or fur trapping.
Depends on what you mean... but I'll try.There is migration, chain migration, forced migration, voluntary migration, net-in migration, net-out migration, immigration, emmigration, countermigration.These are Human Geographic terms by the way. That makes about 9 types of migration.
Within the United States, internal migration in the latter part of the 20th century involved movement to the western, southern, and southwestern parts of the United States. These areas offer milder climates, cheaper labor, less expensive land, and frequently little traffic congestion in the beginning of settlement. Many people and firms left the Northeast to move to these areas. Both legal and illegal migrations occur -- legal ones to Canada and illegal ones from Mexico. However, both are external migration, not internal migration. Internal migration occurs within a country, not from one country to another. Migration to Canada is not very large, although in the late 1960s and early 1970s it was significant for young men who did not want to fight in Vietnam. Illegal migration from Mexico is more significant.
Who you would call a migration expert would probably depend on which species migration you want information about. A person who specializes in, say, wolves and their migration might be totally different from aperson who specializes in the migration of, say, seagulls.
Tuscarora
that came to american to wen the wor
It is called immigration, emigration, settlement or colonisation.it is called immigrationthe answer is explorationImmigration.
immigration, settlement, expansion, migration, establishment
If the resource isn't where the person is or wants it to be, they will move to where it is.
Settlement growth refers to the increase in the physical size and population of a settlement over time. This can happen through natural population growth, migration, or urbanization. It can lead to changes in infrastructure, land use, and social dynamics within the settlement.
Mark Collinson has written: 'The dynamics of migration, health and livelihoods' -- subject(s): Emigration and immigration, Emigration and Immigration, Health Status, Socioeconomic Factors, Population, Mortality, Population Surveillance 'Migration and changing settlement patterns' -- subject(s): Internal Migration, Migration, Internal, Population geography
Kirk Haskin Stone has written: 'Norway's internal migration to new farms since 1920' -- subject(s): Internal Migration, Land settlement 'The South's nonmetropolitan counties' -- subject(s): Rural population 'Alaskan group settlement' -- subject(s): Agricultural colonies, Colonization
K. P. Kumaran has written: 'Migration settlement and ethnic associations' -- subject(s): Caste, Ethnic relations, Rural-urban migration, Social policy, Societies, Urbanization
Alice Bloch has written: 'The Migration and Settlement of Refugees in Britain' 'The Community Charge in England, Year 1'
Kamal Riad Morcos has written: 'The impact of migration on rural and urban settlement patterns in Egypt'
Ryszard Grabowiecki has written: 'Report on national settlement analysis and policies' -- subject(s): Internal Migration, Population