INTRODUCTION TO AGRICULTURE: What is it and where did it begin?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
 Sauer, a cultural geographer, believed that the earliest form of plant cultivation was vegetative planting, in which new plants were produced from existing.
Advertisements

Agricultural Origins & Regions OOrigins of agriculture Hunters and gatherers Invention of agriculture LLocation of agricultural hearths Carl O Sauer.
Unit Five Review: Agriculture
Agriculture and Rural Land Use. Agriculture Is the raising of animals or the growing of crops to obtain food for primary consumption by the farm family.
Where did agriculture originate?
With your host Mr. Brooks!! Choose a category. You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question. Click to begin.
AGRICULTURAL LAND USE Agriculture – the deliberate tending of crops and livestock in order to produce food and fiber Less than 2% of Americans are farmers.
Key Issue 1 Where did Agriculture Originate?
Where Did Agriculture Originate?
INTRODUCTION TO AGRICULTURE: What is it and where did it begin?
There are 4 sectors of the economy ppl might work in.
 The Primary Sector- (agriculture) is the part of the economy that draws raw materials from the natural environment. Ex. Agriculture, raising animals,
Agriculture Chapter 10. Primary, Secondary, Tertiary Sectors Half the professions in LDC are agriculture based,
Agriculture and other primary economic activities Agriculture: the deliberate tending of crops and livestock in order to produce food and fiber.
AGRICULTURE “Where did agriculture originate?”. AGRICULTURE: Case study Read case study on page 328. Compare and contrast the life of a farmer in Pakistan.
Agriculture Chapter 10 An Introduction to Human Geography
Agriculture AP Human Geography.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Bellringer: What do you like to eat most? Pick one item and try to think about where it came from, be very detailed.
AP Human Geography Origins and Diffusion of Agriculture Spring 2015 Origins and Diffusion of Agriculture Spring 2015.
+ © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. T3/20/12 The Origins of Agriculture (Ch. 10.1)
American Farms are vastly different from farms around the world. Farming practices are different around the world. Agriculture is deliberate modification.
In general, in LDCs, are crops consumed on or off the farm? –ON – subsistence agriculture.
The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography
AGRICULTURE Chapter 10 An Introduction to Human Geography The Cultural Landscape, 8e James M. Rubenstein.
Agricultural Geography
Unit 5 Agriculture.
Intensive subsistence
Agriculture Caty Brown. Agricultural Revolutions First Agricultural Revolution- Neolithic Revolution Saw the human development of seed agriculture and.
January 22, 2016S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 10 Key Issue 1 Where Did Agriculture Originate?
AGRICULTURE Chapter 11. What Is Agriculture, and Where Did Agriculture Begin? The purposeful tending of crops and raising of livestock in order to produce.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Agriculture  The deliberate modification of Earth’s surface through cultivation of plants and rearing of animals to obtain.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Agriculture Defined  The deliberate modification of Earth’s surface through cultivation of plants and rearing of animals.
Agriculture. Economic Activities 1. Primary  Extraction of products 2. Secondary  Taking a primary product & turning into something else 3. Tertiary.
APHuG Dec. 4 AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTIONS What is it? Where did it begin?
6 Key Items in Agriculture 1. Worlds crops based on Climate Regions 2. The 3 agricultural revolutions –First agricultural revolution –Second agricultural.
Small-Scale Economic Systems  All economic activity takes place within an economic system  Earliest economic systems were marked by: Reliance on subsistence.
Chapter 10 Agriculture. Agricultural Origins & Regions Origins of agriculture – Hunters and gatherers – Invention of agriculture Location of agricultural.
Unit V – Agriculture & Rural Land Use. 2 A. Before Agriculture Mostly nomadic Hunter-Gatherers Alternating periods of plenty & scarcity (due to Ice Age)
Key Issue 1: Where did Agriculture originate?. Invention of Agriculture Prior to the advent of agriculture, all humans probably obtained needed food through.
Unit 6: agriculture AP Human Geography.
Agricultural Revolutions
Where did Agriculture Originate?
Agricultural revolutions
Key Issue 1 Where did Agriculture Originate?
History of Agriculture
UNIT FIVE AGRICULTURE: PRIMARY ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES
Models & Theories Commercial Ag Subsistence Ag Vocab Potluck 10 pt
Agriculture Ap Human Geography.
Chapter 10 Agriculture By Eugene Stanton.
Second Agricultural Revolution
Agriculture Chapter 10 An Introduction to Human Geography
Agriculture, Food Production, and Rural Land Use Review
Chapter 11 Review.
Agriculture and Rural Land Use
Open your textbook and read the Agriculture intro from pg
MAJOR AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION REGIONS
Tim Scharks Green River College
Key Issues Where did agriculture originate? Why do people consume different foods? Where is agriculture distributed? Why do farmers face economic difficulties?
AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY Agriculture and Land Use Copeland
Agriculture Chapter 10 An Introduction to Human Geography
Chapter 9: Food and Agriculture
Agricultural Geography
AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY Agriculture and Land Use Copeland
UNIT FIVE AGRICULTURE: PRIMARY ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES
The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography
Agricultural Revolutions
Agriculture: Deliberate modification of Earth’s surface through cultivation of plants and rearing of animals to obtain sustenance or economic gain. Began.
AIM: How do farming practices vary around the world?
Agriculture Chapter 10 An Introduction to Human Geography
Presentation transcript:

INTRODUCTION TO AGRICULTURE: What is it and where did it begin? AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY Agriculture and Land Use Copeland 2010

ECONOMIC ACTIVITY LEVELS PRIMARY Involves products closest to the ground; farming, ranching, fishing, forestry, mining SECONDARY Manufacturing of a primary product; processed foods, cars, chemicals TERTIARY The service industry; bankers, lawyers, teachers QUATERNARY Services involved with the exchange of money or goods QUINARY Services involved with research and higher education Agriculture is classified as a primary activity

FOOD PRODUCTION Providing food in the United States and Canada is a vast industry. The mechanized, highly productive American or Canadian farm contrasts with the subsistence farm found in much of the world. This sharp contrast in agricultural practices constitutes one of the most fundamental differences between the more developed and less developed countries of the world.

The Economics of Farming The reason why farming varies around the world relates to distribution across space of cultural and environmental factors. Elements of the physical environment, such as climate, soil, and topography, set broad limits on agricultural practices, and farmers make choices to modify the environment in a variety of ways. Broad climate patterns influence the crops planted in a region, and local soil conditions influence the crops planted on an individual farm. Farmers choose from a variety of agricultural practices, based on their perception of the value of each alternative. These values are partly economic and partly cultural. How farmers deal with their physical environment varies according to dietary preferences, availability of technology, and other cultural traditions. At a global scale, farmers increasingly pursue the most profitable agriculture

AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE The overall appearance of an area impacted through a system of agriculture.

ORIGINS OF AGRICULTURE Hunters and Gatherers Invention of Agriculture

THE INVENTION OF AGRICULTURE Agriculture evolved into two types of cultivation. Vegetative Planting Seed Agriculture

TWO TYPES OF CULTIVATION Over thousands of years, plant cultivation apparently evolved from a combination of accidental and deliberate experiment. The earliest form of plant cultivation, according to Carl Sauer, was vegetative planting, direct cloning from existing plants, such as cutting stems and dividing roots. Coming later, according to Sauer, was seed agriculture. Seed agriculture is practiced by most farmers today.

VEGETATIVE PLANTING HEARTHS There were several main hearths, or centers of origin, for vegetative crops (roots and tubers, etc.), from which the crops diffused to other areas.

LOCATION OF FIRST VEGETATIVE PLANTING Dr. Sauer believes that vegetative planting probably originated in Southeast Asia. The region’s diversity of climate and topography encouraged plants suitable for dividing. The first plants domesticated in Southeast Asia.. . probably included roots such as the taro and yam, and tree crops such as the banana and palm. The dog, pig, and chicken probably were domesticated first in Southeast Asia. Other early hearths of vegetative planting also may have emerged independently in West Africa and northwestern South America.

SEED AGRICULTURAL HEARTHS Seed agriculture also originated in several hearths and diffused from those elsewhere.

DIFFUSION OF SEED AGRICULTURE Seed agriculture diffused from Southwest Asia across Europe and through North Africa. Seed agriculture also diffused eastward from Southwest Asia to northwestern India and the Indus River plain. Again, various domesticated plants and animals were brought from Southwest Asia, although other plants, such as cotton and rice, arrived in India from different hearths. Rice has an unknown hearth. Sauer identified a third independent hearth in Ethiopia, where millet and sorghum were domesticated early. However, he argued that agricultural advances in Ethiopia did not diffuse widely to other locations

DIFFUSION OF SEED AGRICULTURE IN THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE Two independent seed agriculture hearths originated in the Western Hemisphere: southern Mexico and northern Peru. Agricultural practices diffused to other parts of the Western Hemisphere. This diversity derives from a unique legacy of wild plants, climatic conditions, and cultural preferences in each region. Improved communications in recent centuries have encouraged the diffusion of some plants to varied locations around the world.

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN COMMERCIAL AND SUBSISTENCE AGRICULTURE The most fundamental differences in agricultural practices are between those in less developed countries and those in more developed countries. Subsistence agriculture is the production of food primarily for consumption by the farmer’s family. Commercial agriculture is the production of food primarily for sale off the farm. Five principal features distinguish commercial from subsistence agriculture: purpose of farming; percentage of farmers in the labor force; use of machinery; farm size; (and) relationship of farming to other businesses.

LABOR FORCE IN AGRICULTURE A large proportion of workers in most LDCs are in agriculture, while only a small percentage of workers in MDCs are engaged in agriculture.

FARM SIZE The average farm size is relatively large in commercial agriculture, especially in the United States and Canada. Commercial agriculture is increasingly dominated by a handful of large farms. In the United States the largest 4 percent of farms account for more than one half of the country’s total output. One half of U.S. farms generate less than $10,000 a year in sales. Large size is partly a consequence of mechanization. As a result of the large size and the high level of mechanization, commercial agriculture is an expensive business.

RELATIONSHIP OF FARMING TO OTHER BUSINESSES Commercial farming is closely tied to other businesses. Commercial farming has been called agribusiness, integrated into a large food production industry. Although farmers are less than 2 percent of the U.S. labor force, more than 20 percent of U.S. labor works in food production related to agribusiness: food processing, packaging, storing, distributing, and retailing.

AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTIONS First Agricultural Revolution Dating back 10,000 years, this achieved plant domestication and animal domestication. Second Agricultural Revolution Witnessed improved methods of cultivation, harvesting, and storage of farm produce. Third Agricultural Revolution Currently in progress, its principal orientation is the development of Genetically Modified Organisms

FIRST AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTION Studied by geographer, Dr. Carl Sauer Believed that agriculture would only flourish in a land of plenty Key area: Tigris and the Euphrates Rivers (Fertile Crescent)

SECOND AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTION Coincided with the Industrial Revolution Surpluses of food needed to feed those working in factories New technologies developed to improve crop yields Supported by governments of Europe Enclosure Act of Great Britain – enforced the increase in the size of farms; created large scale farms

THIRD AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTION Also known as the Green Revolution Dates back to the 1930s Manipulation of seed varieties to increase crop yields 1960s – focus of the Green Revolution turned to India Crops impacted: corn, wheat, rice Decreased famine in numerous areas “Hunger Areas” greatly impacted

AGRICULTURE TOMORROW… World population will grow from around 7 billion people today to 8.3 billion people in 2030. The world population will be increasingly well-fed by 2030. The number of hungry people in developing countries is expected to decline, but Sub-Saharan Africa is cause for serious concern. Much of future food production growth will come from higher productivity. The expansion of farmland for food production will be slower than in the past. Globally, deforestation will probably continue to slow down. At a global level there is enough water available, but some regions will face serious water shortages. Modern biotechnology offers promises as a means to improving food security.