Vocab
Agricultural Revolutions
Von Thunen
Types of Agriculture
Random
100

Raising crops or animals primarily for direct consumption.

Subsistence agriculture

100

This significant advancement started the First Agricultural Revolution

The invention of agriculture

100

Livestock pastures or ranching is most likely to be found in this area according to von Thunen

The outermost ring, furthest from the city

100

Feedlots and dairying both present a significant risk to this particular local resource.

Water

100

This crop is likely to come from a tropical plantation

cocoa, coffee, mangos, pineapples, sugar, rubber, palm oil

200

Overwatering, over-fertilizing, and in general overuse of arable land can result in this degradation of the land.

Desertification

200

Due to the larger amounts of food produced during the Second Agricultural Revolutions, this stage of the DTM started

2

200

Although relatively extensive, timber should be located closer to the market due to this expense.

transportation costs

200

This type of agriculture common in LDCs practices mono-cropping for commercial purposes.

Plantation

200

The Columbian Exchange refers to the diffusion of agricultural products like corn and tomatoes from this hearth

Meso-America, Andean Highlands

300

Moving herds between pastures seasonally

Transhumance

300

Food preservation and the mechanization of agriculture started this agricultural revolution

Second

300

Due to its use as transportation, the introduction of a river to the von Thunen model changes the arrangement from rings to this shape.

Stripes

300

Shifting cultivation is most likely to use multi-cropping methods because this is the primary purpose of shifting cultivation

Subsistence agriculture

300

This term refers to when a farmer makes preserves out of their extra fruit or cheese out of their extra milk, and can be a handy source of extra income

Value-added

400

The practice of consolidating smaller farms into larger farms, this change in land ownership helped to start the Industrial Revolution and Second Agricultural Revolution

The Enclosure Movement

400

This significant advancement of the Third Agricultural Revolution allows for longer shelf life, larger crops, and natural resistances to pests and disease

Genetically modified organisms

400

Along with dairying, this type of agriculture is likely to be found closely clustered around large urban areas, a practice that shows von Thunen on a larger scale.

Market gardening / horticulture

400

This type of agriculture is most likely to practice transhumance.

Nomadic pastorlism / pastoral nomadism

400

Increasing global demand for palm oil from tropical palm trees will most likely lead to this negative environmental outcome

Deforestation

500

A form of market gardening or horticulture, this type of agriculture grows olives, nuts, and grapes in its specific climate.

Mediterranean agriculture

500

The Green Revolution was largely about synthetic fertilizers and pesticides as well as this method of creating desirable traits in crops and animals.

Hybridization

500

The idea that land is more valuable nearer to the city, raising the cost of living there, this idea was central to the development of von Thunen's model

Bid-rent theory

500

Due to vast global demand and the climate it tends to be practiced in, this is the significant environmental risk of grain farming.

Desertification

500

In many of the least developed countries today the demand for better paying urban jobs is growing. This means that this demographic is now doing much of the subsistence farming at home.

Women

M
e
n
u