The basics
Revolutions
Consequences
Methods
Misc.
100

agriculture that uses fewer inputs of capital and paid labor relative to the amount of space being used

Extensive farming

100

Origin of farming

First Agri. Revolution (Neolithic) 

100

The clearing and destruction of forests to harvest wood for consumption, clear land for agricultural uses, and make way for expanding settlement frontiers.

Deforestation

100

usually practiced in Mediterranean agriculture it is the seasonal herding of animals from higher elevations in the summer to lower elevations and valleys in the winter Usually goats and sheep

Transhumance

100

one of the earliest human alterations of the landscape, farmers would build a series of steps into the side of a hill

Terrace Farming

200

farming primarily for sale, not direct consumption

Commercial Agriculture 

200

Rapid diffusion of new agricultural technology, especially new high-yield seeds and fertilizers

Green Revolution 

200

transition of land from fertile to desert

Desertification

200

a process by which humans use engineering techniques to change the DNA of a seed. First used in the 1970s.

GMO

200

the geographic distance that milk is delivered.

Milkshed

300

agriculture that involves greater inputs of capital and paid labor relative to the space being used.

Intensive Farming

300

Used the Advances of the Industrial Revolution to increase food supply and support population growth

Second Agri. Revolution 
300

number of crops or people that an area can support

Carrying Capacity 

300

large commercial farm that specializes in one crop, usually found in the low latitudes (tropics) and in hot humid climates with substantial precipitation

Plantation 

300

 the integration of various steps of production in the food processing industry. Highly mechanized, large-scale farming, usually under corporate ownership

Agribusiness    

400

practice of raising and harvesting fish and other forms of food that live in water

Aquaculture    

400

the exchange of diseases, food, crops, and populations between the New World and the Old World

Columbian Exchange 

400

process of diverting water from its natural course or location to aid in the production of crops

Irrigation 

400

a process used by businesses to gather resources and change them into a product for consumers 

commodity chain

400

advances in refrigeration created these; transportation networks that keep food cool throughout a trip.

cool chains

500

when farmers consume the crops they grow and raise, usually with simple tools and manual labor

Subsistence agriculture

500

The increased the availability of fish protein for so many people - it is the fastest growing form of food production on the planet and responsible for 50% of the world's seafood.

Blue Revolution 

500

the diversity of plant and animal life in a particular habitat (or in the world as a whole)

Biodiversity   

500

used to indicate a starting position for each land use relative to the market

Bid rent curve

500

provided by govt in the developed world, this is public support, to farmers to ensure that consumers have dependable, low cost supply of good.

 subsidy