AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTIONS
FARMING TO SURVIVE
FARMING TO MAKE BREAD
CHALLENGES
ANYTHING IS POSSIBLE!
100

This agricultural revolution led to the domestication of plants and animals

What is the Neolithic Revolution (would also accept 1st Agricultural revolution)

100

The term for farming done to survive

What is subsistence agriculture?

100

This is the name for the kind of farming done to make money on a large scale

What is commercial agriculture?

100

This is an environmental reason why some people choose to be vegan?

What are cow farts? (methane emissions leading to global warming)

100

Cornucopians would point to the Green Revolution as helping to make progress around what major problem facing the world

What is overpopulation/world hunger?

200

The Industrial Revolution created innovations around this aspect of farming during the 2nd Agricultural Revolution

What is farming technology (mechanical reaper, plows, seed drills)?

200

The kind of subsistence farming that is done predominantly in East, Southeast, and South Asia

What is Wet Rice?

200

This is the main kind of agriculture happening in parts of California, Arizona, and Florida

What is fruit/vegetable farming?

200

The growth of soybean farming to provide feed for cattle is one of the major causes of this agricultural issue in Brazil

What is deforestation?

200

This change explains why Von Thunen’s model does not always apply to why farms locate where they do today

What are refrigeration and innovations in transportation?

300

In addition to improved farming technology, the Green Revolution created higher yields through these materials

What is: fertilizer, pesticides, hybrid seed varieties?

300

This kind of farming is the main form of commercial agriculture found in LDCs

What is plantation agriculture?

300

This term refers to the agricultural practice of fattening up animals at young ages so they can be turned into meat very quickly and efficiently

What are CAFOS? (concentrated animal feeding operations)

300

This is a potential danger of using irrigation systems to farm

What are water shortages?

300

People growing food in extremely hot places is an example of this term that refers to how humans are not constrained by their environments

What is possibilism?

400

An environmental effect that the Green Revolution led to

What is: water shortages, chemical pollution (air and water), deforestation, soil erosion?

400

The biggest factor that determines where plantation farming occurs

What is climate? - tropical/sub-tropical areas (where businesses can make the most money possible)

400

The term for government-provided financial incentives to grow certain crops

What are subsidies?

400

In countries with lots of women working in agriculture, their TFR will likely be described in this way

What is High TFR

400

The 2nd agricultural revolution led to many farmers being replaced by machines, which led to this major change

What is migration to cities and employment in industry?

500

This is a risk of reduced biodiversity because only one crop is grown

What is: greater risk of crop failure due to pests and diseases, potential extinction, lost cultural traditions, worse nutrition?

500

A major difference between commercial and subsistence agriculture, besides their purpose

What is manual labor/farming technology, LDCs vs. MDCs

500

In Von Thunen’s model, this is the reason that grain farming occurs further from the market

What is lower transportation, labor, land costs? (it’s not heavy, not perishable, doesn’t need to be harvested often)

500

This is a challenge for women in countries where most farmers are women

What is high labor burden, lack of access to education, low pay, lack of farm ownership?

500

In 2023, scientists made a breakthrough raising pigs whose DNA has been changed to develop organs for transplants, an example of this term

What are GMOs?