AP Human Geography Vocab Unit 5

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76 Terms

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agriculture

the deliberate effort to modify a portion of Earth's surface through the cultivation of crops and the raising of livestock for subsistence or economic grain

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agrarian

the land and its ownership and cultivation

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aquaculture

the farming of aquatic organisms such as fish, crustaceans, mollusks, and aquatic plants

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sustainability

a method of harvesting or using a resource so that the resource is not depleted or permanently damaged

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crop

a plant cultivated by people

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primogeniture

where all land owned by the father is passed to the eldest son

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animal domestication

altering the behaviors, size and genetics of animals to benefit humans

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nomadic herding

the wandering, but controlled movement of livestock, solely dependent on natural forage- is the most extensive type of land use system

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second agricultural revolution

Began in W. Europe in 1600s; intensified agriculture by promoting higher yields per acre/ perfarmer

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crop rotation

the practice of rotating use of different fields from crop to crop each year to avoid exhausting the soil

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truck farm

farms that produce high consumer demand products and either trucks them to market or to processing plants

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feedlot

a plot of land on which livestock are fattened for market

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Third Agricultural Revolution

began in mid 1950'2; modern farming that refers to the industrialized production of livestock and crops

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biotechnology

the use of genetically altered crops and DNA manipulation in order to increase production

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agribusiness

the system of agriculture found in developed countries

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organic agriculture

crops that are grown without fertilizers and pesticides

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debt-for-nature swap

developing countries have some of their foreign in exchange for enacting conservation measures

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vegetative planting

the reproduction of plants by direct cloning from existing plants, such as cutting stems and dividing roots

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seed agriculture

the reproduction of plants through annual planting of seeds ; practiced by most farmers

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subsistence agriculture

the production of food primarily for consumption by the farmer's family; found in LDC's

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commercial agriculture

farmers and ranchers sell all of their output for money and buy their families' food at stores

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intensive agriculture

yields a large amount of output per acre through concentrated farming (uses a small amount of land)

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extensive agriculture

yields a large amount of output per acre through less intensive farming (uses a large amount of land)

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intensive subsistence agriculture

a form of subsistence agriculture where farmers expend a relatively large amount of effort to produce the maximum crop yield

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extensive subsistence agriculture

a form of subsistnece agriculture that involves large areas of land with minimal labor

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plant domestication

altering the behaviors, size and genetics of plants to benefit humans

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slash-and- burn

farmers clear land for planting by slashing vegetation and burning the debris

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swidden

an area cleared for farming using the slash and burn technique

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shifting cultivation

a form of subsistence agriculture in which people shift crop activity from one field to another

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Neolithic Revolution/First agricultural revolution

time period when society went from hunters and gathers to farming and domestication of animals, 10,000 BCE

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pastoral nomadism

a form of subsistence agriculture based on the herding of domesticated animals (sheep, goats, cows, etc)

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transhumance

seasonal migration of livestock between mountains and lowland pastures

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pasture

grass or other plants grown for feeding grazing animals, as well as land used for grazing

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paddy

a Malay (from Malaysia) word used to describe flooded fields where rice grows

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sawah

an Austronesian word used to describe flooded fields where rice grows

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wet rice

the practice pf planting rice on dry land in a nursery and then moving it to a flooded field to promote growth

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double cropping

a type of intensive agriculture where two crops are harvested in the same field a year

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hunting and gathering

the capturing and killing of animals and the knowledge and collection of edible plants and food of early humans

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Sauer

Carl O. (the geographer), believed that the hearth of vegetative planting was Southeast Asia, believed vegetative planting came before seed agriculture

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plantation

a form of commercial agriculture, it is a large farm that specializes in one or two crops

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cereal grains

a grass such a oats, wheat, rye or barkey used as food

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milkshed

the ring around a city from which fresh milk can be supplied without spoiling

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chaff

the husk of the seed

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winnow

chaff that is allowed to be blown away by the wind

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thresh

a process of beating the rice heads on the ground to separate the chaff form the seeds

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Columbian Exchange

where products were carried both ways across the Atlantic and Pacific oceans during colonization

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dispersed rural settlement pattern

areas of extensive agriculture practice whose individual farmhouses lay far apart

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nucleated rural settlement pattern

areas of intensive agriculture whose villages are located close together with small surrounding fields

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The Enclosure Movement

England 1700s; the fencing or hedging of large blocks of land for farming

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erosion

the natural process by which material is worn away from the earth's surface; usually by wind, water, or ice

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mixed crop and livestock farming

farmers grow crops and raise livestock on the same land with most of the crops fed to the animals rather than people

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patriarchal system

a society in which men controlled the holding power in the family, the economy, and the government

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combine

a machine that performs reaping, threshing, and cleaning

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horticulture

the growing of fruits, vegetables, and flowers for human consumption

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Johann von Thunen

a german farmer who created a model for rural land use

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ridge tillage (intertillage)

a system of planting crops on ridge tops in order to reduce farm production costs and promote soil conservation

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desertification

degradation of land because of human actions like excessive crop planting, animal grazing, and tree cutting

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seed drill

a machine that more effectively planed seeds

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Green Revolution

began in 1970's; the use of higher yield seeds and expanded use of fertilizers

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market gardening

a farm where people grow products that will be sold in a market

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adaptive strategies

the idea that humans can adapt their agricultural practices to the needs of the society or the environment

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collective farm

farm or group of farms organized as a unit and managed and worker by a group of laborers under state supervision; communist countries

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dairying

branch of agriculture that deals with the breeding, raising, and utilization of dairy animals and the selling of their products

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pesticides

a chemical used to kill pests, especially insects

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wattle

poles and sticks woven tightly together and then covered with mud; used in Africa for housing

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hull

the outer covering of the seed

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winter wheat

a wheat crop that is planted in the autumn and develops a strong root system before growth stops for the winter

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spring wheat

a wheat crop that is planted in the spring and harvested in late summer

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staple grains

a principal raw material or commodity grown or produced in a region

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reaper

a machine that cuts grain standing in a field

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forestry

the art and science of cultivating, maintaining, and developing forest

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location theory

a theory that explains the pattern of agricultural land use in terms of accessibility, costs, distance, and prices

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planned economy

an economic system in which the central government controls and makes decisions regarding the production and distribution of goods and services

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ranching

the commercial grazing of livestock over an extensive area

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specialization

the growth of specialized crops

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suitcase farm

when someone owns and operates a farm, but lives somewhere else; usually a crops only farm