Total Visitors
- 5,456,857
Search Inside
My You Tube Channel
Visitors on The Site
-
Join 783 other subscribers
Fill This Form to Contact Me
Top Posts & Pages
- Waste to Energy in India
- About Me and This Site
- Migration Theories : Lee’s Push Pull Theory
- Gond Tribe of India
- Levant: The Term, The Region and Cities
- Discontinuities Inside the Earth
- Geography Notes
- The Structure of the Ocean Floor(Ocean Topography)
- Physical Divisions of North America: An Overview
- Geography Study Material for NTA-NET & IAS Exams
Being Social
Pages
- Article Submission
- Basics of Geography
- Book Reviews
- Disaster Management
- Field Training and Tour
- Geography Notes
- Geography of Tourism
- Geography Study Material for NTA-NET & IAS Exams
- Geomorphology
- Geomorphology Class Black Board
- Hindi Posts
- Human Geography
- My Projects
- New UGC NET Syllabus-Geography
- Online Class
- Posts on Geography Practicals and Statistical Techniques
- Regional Studies
- Settlement Geography
- Social Geography
- Urban Agro Systems
- Urban Systems
- Useful Links
- Water Resources
- About Me and This Site
Blogroll
Digital Blackboards
My Pages
Other Sites I Am Involved With
Recommended Links
Useful Links
Primacy Index
The primacy index (or index of primacy) is a measure of how much the largest city in a country or region dominates the urban system in terms of population size.
Basic idea
The index shows whether the urban system is “primate” (one city overwhelmingly larger than others) or more balanced (several large cities of similar size). A higher primacy index implies greater concentration of population and resources in the first‑rank city, which often reflects strong centralization in politics, economy, and services.
Common formulas
- Two‑city primacy indext
PI ={P_1}{P_2}whereP_1is the population of the largest city andP_2is the population of the second largest.- If
PI is greater than 2, the city is often considered “primate” (Mark Jefferson’s rule).
- If
- Three‑city primacy index
PI = C_1 + C_2 + C_3* 100whereC_1,C_2,C_3are the populations of the first, second, and third largest cities.
Interpretation in planning
- High primacy index: indicates strong centripetal forces, agglomeration bias, and often regional imbalance.
- Low or declining index: suggests a more polycentric or balanced urban system, which many planners view as more sustainable.
Posted in earth
Leave a comment
Are The Strongest Nor’easters Getting Stronger? What The Data Actually Shows

‘How scientific uncertainty morphed into media certainty’ – some climate industry propaganda tactics exposed, featuring the well-known US Nor’easters…
Are The Strongest Nor’easters Getting Stronger? What The Data Actually Shows
Posted in earth
Leave a comment