3.2.6
The Growth of Tourism
Growth of Tourism
Growth of Tourism
Tourism has grown since the 1500s. Innovations in transport has had huge impacts on tourism.


Beginnings of tourism
Beginnings of tourism
- Tourism started with public baths that people relaxed in. Middle and upper class people would travel to these baths from the 1700s.
- Very rich people travelled to Rome and Athens to see the culture there from the 1500s onwards.
- The Colosseum (Rome) and the Acropolis (Athens) were frequently visited, as well as the capital cities of Vienna and Paris (Austria and France), which were seen as the home of the arts and culture.
- These holidays would usually have to last months or years because of the limited means of transport.
- Journeys would be taken by horse and carriage along dirt tracks.


Package deals
Package deals
- Package deal holidays were created by Thomas Cook.
- The first one in the UK was for a religious seminar on avoiding alcohol in 1841, encouraging travel by train between Leicester and Loughborough.


Transport
Transport
- In the UK, tourism grew through railways.
- After WW2 more people began to own cars and the government invested more in roads.
- This opened up opportunities to go to holiday parks like Butlins and seaside resorts like Blackpool.


Transport 2
Transport 2
- Post-1945, the invention of the jet engine made air travel much more attractive for larger numbers of people.
- Many UK locations could not compete with the sunshine in Spain and France, especially because it had become so quick to go abroad.
- Budget airlines like Easyjet were created in the 1990s, which made going abroad cheaper by being more basic a service.
- This made travel more affordable so it became more normal to go abroad.


Television
Television
- TV and the internet make other parts of the world visible and encourages people to visit more isolated locations to do some exploring, e.g. Antarctica or St Helena island.


Which attractions are popular?
Which attractions are popular?
- Some attractions are popular because they are interesting physical landscapes, like the the Grand Canyon, Niagara Falls and Victoria Falls.
- Cities can also be attractions, even though they are man-made.
- e.g. cityscapes like Manhattan (Empire State building, Chrysler building, Grand Central station).
- London is also an example of a cityscape (Houses of Parliament, the Shard, the London Eye, the Tower of London).
- These attract millions of visitors a year.
1Physical Geography
1.1River Environments
1.1.1Weathering
1.1.2Mass Movement
1.1.3Erosion
1.1.4Transportation
1.1.5Deposition
1.1.6River Landforms: Waterfalls & Gorges
1.1.7River Landforms: Interlocking Spurs
1.1.8River Landforms: Flood Plains
1.1.9River Landforms: Point Bars
1.1.10River Landforms: Levees
1.1.11River Landforms: Meanders
1.1.12River Landforms: Oxbow Lakes
1.1.13River Landscape Changes: Long Profile
1.1.14River Landscape Changes: Cross Profile
1.1.15Vertical & Lateral Erosion
1.1.16Flood Risk Factors
1.1.17Human Activities on Rivers
1.1.18River Management: Hard Engineering
1.1.19River Management: Soft Engineering
1.1.20Case Study: The River Eden - Landforms
1.1.21Case Study: The River Eden - Climate
1.1.22Case Study: The River Eden - Geology
1.1.23Case Study: The River Eden - Management
1.1.24Case Study: The River Eden - Human Activity
1.1.25End of Topic Test - River Environments
1.2Coastal Environments
1.2.1Weathering
1.2.2Mass Movement
1.2.3Erosion
1.2.4Deposition
1.2.5Longshore Drift
1.2.6Sediment Transportation
1.2.7Wave Action on Coasts
1.2.8Other Factors Influencing Coasts
1.2.9Coastal Landforms: Wave-cut Platforms & Cliffs
1.2.10Coastal Landforms: Headlands & Bays
1.2.11Coastal Landforms: Caves, Arches & Stacks
1.2.12Coastal Deposition
1.2.13Spits, Bars & Sand Dunes
1.2.14Human Activity on Coasts
1.2.15Coastal Defences: Hard Engineering
1.2.16Coastal Defences: Soft Engineering
1.2.17Coastal Defences: Managed Retreat
1.2.18Case Study: Holderness Coast Overview
1.2.19Case Study: Holderness Coast Management
1.2.20Case Study: Holderness Coast Defences
1.2.21End of Topic Test - Coastal Environments
1.3Hazardous Environments - Tropical Cyclones
1.3.1Characteristics of a Tropical Cyclone
1.3.2Structure of a Tropical Cyclone
1.3.3Physical Hazards of Tropical Cyclones
1.3.4The Impacts of Tropical Cyclones
1.3.5Responses to Tropical Cyclones
1.3.6Vulnerability to Tropical Cyclones
1.3.7Preparing for Tropical Cyclones
1.3.8Case Study: Katrina
1.3.9Case Study: Nargis
2Human Geography
2.1Economic Activity & Energy
2.2Rural Environments
3Global Issues
3.1Fragile Environments & Climate Change
3.2Globalisation & Migration
3.2.1Globalisation - Transport
3.2.2Globalisation - Communication Networks & Banking
3.2.3Push & Pull Factors
3.2.4TNCs & Globalisation
3.2.5Tourism Landscapes
3.2.6The Growth of Tourism
3.2.7The Economic Benefits of Tourism
3.2.8The Social & Cultural Benefits of Tourism
3.2.9The Economic Costs of Tourism
3.2.10The Social & Cultural Costs of Tourism
3.2.11Managing Tourism - Sustainability
3.2.12Managing Tourism - Quotas & Tourism Hubs
3.3Development & Human Welfare
3.3.1Ways of Defining Development
3.3.2Different Ways of Measuring Development
3.3.3Environmental Factors Causing Uneven Development
3.3.4Historical Factors Causing Uneven Development
3.3.5Economic Factors Causing Uneven Development
3.3.6Patterns of Development
3.3.7How Can we Reduce the Global Development Gap?
3.3.8Top-Down & Bottom-Up Development
Jump to other topics
1Physical Geography
1.1River Environments
1.1.1Weathering
1.1.2Mass Movement
1.1.3Erosion
1.1.4Transportation
1.1.5Deposition
1.1.6River Landforms: Waterfalls & Gorges
1.1.7River Landforms: Interlocking Spurs
1.1.8River Landforms: Flood Plains
1.1.9River Landforms: Point Bars
1.1.10River Landforms: Levees
1.1.11River Landforms: Meanders
1.1.12River Landforms: Oxbow Lakes
1.1.13River Landscape Changes: Long Profile
1.1.14River Landscape Changes: Cross Profile
1.1.15Vertical & Lateral Erosion
1.1.16Flood Risk Factors
1.1.17Human Activities on Rivers
1.1.18River Management: Hard Engineering
1.1.19River Management: Soft Engineering
1.1.20Case Study: The River Eden - Landforms
1.1.21Case Study: The River Eden - Climate
1.1.22Case Study: The River Eden - Geology
1.1.23Case Study: The River Eden - Management
1.1.24Case Study: The River Eden - Human Activity
1.1.25End of Topic Test - River Environments
1.2Coastal Environments
1.2.1Weathering
1.2.2Mass Movement
1.2.3Erosion
1.2.4Deposition
1.2.5Longshore Drift
1.2.6Sediment Transportation
1.2.7Wave Action on Coasts
1.2.8Other Factors Influencing Coasts
1.2.9Coastal Landforms: Wave-cut Platforms & Cliffs
1.2.10Coastal Landforms: Headlands & Bays
1.2.11Coastal Landforms: Caves, Arches & Stacks
1.2.12Coastal Deposition
1.2.13Spits, Bars & Sand Dunes
1.2.14Human Activity on Coasts
1.2.15Coastal Defences: Hard Engineering
1.2.16Coastal Defences: Soft Engineering
1.2.17Coastal Defences: Managed Retreat
1.2.18Case Study: Holderness Coast Overview
1.2.19Case Study: Holderness Coast Management
1.2.20Case Study: Holderness Coast Defences
1.2.21End of Topic Test - Coastal Environments
1.3Hazardous Environments - Tropical Cyclones
1.3.1Characteristics of a Tropical Cyclone
1.3.2Structure of a Tropical Cyclone
1.3.3Physical Hazards of Tropical Cyclones
1.3.4The Impacts of Tropical Cyclones
1.3.5Responses to Tropical Cyclones
1.3.6Vulnerability to Tropical Cyclones
1.3.7Preparing for Tropical Cyclones
1.3.8Case Study: Katrina
1.3.9Case Study: Nargis
2Human Geography
2.1Economic Activity & Energy
2.2Rural Environments
3Global Issues
3.1Fragile Environments & Climate Change
3.2Globalisation & Migration
3.2.1Globalisation - Transport
3.2.2Globalisation - Communication Networks & Banking
3.2.3Push & Pull Factors
3.2.4TNCs & Globalisation
3.2.5Tourism Landscapes
3.2.6The Growth of Tourism
3.2.7The Economic Benefits of Tourism
3.2.8The Social & Cultural Benefits of Tourism
3.2.9The Economic Costs of Tourism
3.2.10The Social & Cultural Costs of Tourism
3.2.11Managing Tourism - Sustainability
3.2.12Managing Tourism - Quotas & Tourism Hubs
3.3Development & Human Welfare
3.3.1Ways of Defining Development
3.3.2Different Ways of Measuring Development
3.3.3Environmental Factors Causing Uneven Development
3.3.4Historical Factors Causing Uneven Development
3.3.5Economic Factors Causing Uneven Development
3.3.6Patterns of Development
3.3.7How Can we Reduce the Global Development Gap?
3.3.8Top-Down & Bottom-Up Development
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