Settlements
Agriculture
Farming
Agricultural hearth
Grab-bag terms
100

Typically, there are a number of separate farmsteads scattered throughout the area

What is a dispersed settlement?

100

agriculture conducted on commercial principles, especially using advanced technology.

What is agribusiness

100

grow grains such as corn, wheat, rye, and others, including grain sorghums

What is Grain farming?

100

tract of land that spans what is now Egypt, Lebanon, Palestine, Israel, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Jordan, Turkey, and Cypress in the Middle East

What is the Fertile Crescent

100

the process of adapting wild plants and animals for human use.

What is animal domestication?

200

a (normally small to medium-sized) settlement or group of buildings that is formed in a long line

What is a linear settlements?

200

the main objective is to generate profit by maximizing yields and efficiently utilizing resources.

What is commercial agriculture

200

is a class of agriculture for the long-term production of milk, which is processed for the eventual sale of a dairy product

What is dairy farming?

200

an early hearth of domestication of plants and animals found on the Indus River between India and Afghanistan

Indus River Valleyan

200

grown without the use of synthetic chemicals, such as human-made pesticides and fertilizers, and does not contain genetically modified organisms (GMOs)

What is organic food?

300

a rural settlement where a number of families live in close proximity to each other, with fields surrounding the collection of houses and farm buildings.

What is a clustered settlement?

300

a type of agriculture, both of crop plants and of animals, with higher levels of input and output per unit of agricultural land area.

intensive agriculture

300

the practice of raising animals for their products

WHat is livestock farming?

300

China, in the fertile valleys of the Yangtze River. From there it spread eastwards to Korea and Japan and southwards to Southeast Asia. The term "agricultural hearth" refers to early settled agricultural regions (usually along rivers).

What is East Asia

300

the condition of not having access to sufficient food, or food of an adequate quality, to meet one's basic needs.

What is a food insecurity?

400

Where are linear settlements usally found?

along a transport route, such as a road, river, or canal

400

what is extensive agriculture?

system of crop cultivation using small amounts of labour and capital in relation to area of land being farmed

400

An example is the Tibetan Plateau herd goats, sheep, and yaks, moving them from place to place with the changing of the seasons.

What is Pastoral nomadism

400

What are the 4 agricultural hearths

Fertile Crescent, Sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, and Mesoamerica.

400

a geographical economic theory that refers to how the price and demand for real estate change as the distance from the central business district increases

WHat is bid-rent theory?

500

Where are clustered settlements found?

around natural resources, such as water sources or fertile land, or around economic opportunities, such as transportation corridors or natural resource extraction

500

when farmers grow crops to meet the needs of themselves and their families on smallholdings

What is subsistence agriculture?

500

North America might involve one farmer working full-time on two acres (0.81 ha; 8,100 m2). Most work is done with hand and light power tools, and perhaps a small tractor. Some 20 different crops are planted throughout the season.

What is an example of market gardening?

500

Around 7,000 years ago, agriculture emerged in _____, including the domestication of maize, beans, and squash, causing major changes in the plants that people cultivated.

What is mesoamerica?

500

typically chosen based on their stability, distinctiveness, and repeatability, and are often used as a basis for tasks such as object detection, tracking, recognition, and matching

What are the key points of the blue revolution?

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