AP Human Geography Chapter 10/11
Hotelling model
(Dealt with locational interdependence) The location of industries can't be understood w/o reference to the location of other industries of like kind; two similar vendors would locate next to each other in the middle of a market area to maximize profit (or beach/street as his model suggests).
metes and bounds
-makes use of natural features -more irregular -visible where 2 survey systems meet
core & periphery
A model that describes how economic, political, and/or cultural power is spatially distributed between dominant core regions, and more marginal or dependent semi-peripheral and peripheral regions.
Brownfield
A property which has the presence or potential to be a hazardous waste, pollutant or contaminant.
manufacturing region
A region in which manufacturing activities have clustered together. The major U.S. industrial region has historically been in the Great Lakes, which includes the states of Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, New York, and Pennsylvania. Industrial regions also exist in southeastern Brazil, central England, around Tokyo, Japan, and elsewhere.
Industrial Revolution
A series of improvements in industrial technology that transformed the process of manufacturing goods.
post-Fordism/ Post Fordist production
Adoption by companies of flexible work rules, such as the allocation of workers to teams that perform a variety of tasks.
Agribusiness
Commercial agriculture characterized by the integration of different steps in the food-processing industry, usually through ownership by large corporations.
truck farming
Commercial gardening and fruit farming, so named because "truck" was a Middle English word meaning "bartering" or "exchange of commodities."
2 field crop rotation with cereal grains
Started in Northern Europe in the 5th century. only used one grain
milk shed
The area surrounding a city from which milk is supplied.
Forestry
The art, science, and practice of studing and managing forests and plantations and related natural resources
Carl Sauer
Defined cultural landscape as an area fashioned from nature by a cultural group.
Desertification
Degradation of land, especially in semiarid areas, primarily because of human actions such as excessive crop planting, animal grazing, and tree cutting. Also known as semiarid land degradation.
Monculture
Dependence on a single agricultural commodity.
mass production
The production or manufacturing of goods in large quantities.
Domestication
Genetic modification of plants and/or animals for human benefit.
bid rent
Geographical economic theory that refers to how the price and demand on real estate changes as the distance towards the Central Business District (CBD) increases.
cottage industry
Manufacturing based in homes rather than in factories, commonly found prior to the Industrial Revolution.
raw materials
Materials acquired from the earth to help industries manufacture a product.
Green Revolution
Rapid diffusion of new agricultural technology, especially new high-yield seeds and fertilizers.
Palouse region of Washington state
important source of legumes
effect of population growth on subsistence farming
influences distribution of types of subsistence farming. new farming methods are adopted to produce more of everything. shorter fallow, forest fallow, bush fallow, annual cropping, multi-cropping
site factor that has changed in the 21st century
labor
problems that dairy farmers currently face
labor intensive - require attention winter feed - feeding cows in winter (can't graze)
difference between labor intensive and high wage
labor intensive is measured as a percentage. high wage is measured in currency
why factories locate in suburban areas
land is cheaper in suburban and rural locations than near cities
percentage of workforce that are farmers in the US
less than 2%
percentage of people work at shifting cultivation
less than 5%
consumption of food varies around the world based on...
level of development - developed countries consume more food from different sources than in developing countries physical conditions - climate cultural preferences - food taboos
limited use of chemicals
limited if any herbicides to control weeds. manually get rid of weeds
survey pattern
lines laid out by surveyors prior to the settlement of an area -regular, geometric survey vs. irregular or unsurveyed property lines -unit block vs. fragmented landholding
characteristics of hunter gatherer society
live in small groups - less than 50 people which is good for lots of travel. men hunt and women gather
hedges
living fences -common in France, Great Britain, and Ireland
conditions of southeastern US that make it an ideal location for commercial gardening and fruit farming
long growing season, humid climate, accessible to large markets in the eastern US
long-lot farms
long narrow strips of land that are common in central and western europe (france), parts of brazil, argentina, quebec, southern louisiana, texas, and northern new mexico. good for water transportation
why forestry is placed where it is on the von thunen model
lumber. heavy and expensive to transport
Single-market manufacturers
make products that are specialized for only one or two customers.
crop hearths of southeast asia
mango, taro, coconut, pigeon pea, slender millet
regional-scale air pollution
may damage a region's vegetation and water supply through acid deposition (acid rain)
Cadastral pattern
method of land survey through which land ownership and property lines are defined -rectangular, township and range, metes and bounds, long-lot
copper production
mining - mining copper ore concentration - crush and grind ore, mix with water and chemicals, dry them smelting - remove impurities refining - treated to produce copper cathodes
agricultural density
The ratio of the number of farmers to the total amount of land suitable for agriculture.
Biotechnology
The use of genetically engineered crops in agriculture & DNA manipulation in livestock in order to increase production.
gross domestic product (GDP)
The value of the output of goods and services produced in a country in a given time period (normally one year).
potash
fertilizer from burning debris
number of undernourished people in the world
about 870 million people. decreased in east asia. increased in south asia and sub-saharan africa.
why the gulf coast is an important industrial area
access to oil and natural gas
how pastoral nomadism animals are chosen
according to cultural and physical characteristics -prestige -adaptation to weather and terrain
Unit-block farms
all the farmers property is contained in a single contiguous piece. occur mainly in the Americas, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa
Dietary energy consumption
amount of food that an individual consumes
Crop
any plant cultivated by people
ranching in south america
argentina, southern brazil, uruguay - sheep and cattle. can travel overseas easily
climate for livestock ranching
arid land, no vegetation, poor soil
crop hearths in the middle east
barley, einkorn wheat, emmer wheat, lentil, oats, rye, bread wheat, broad bean, olive
6 crops that were domesticated more than 8000 years ago
barley, lentil, rice, wheat, olive, millet
rectangular survey system
base lines-latitude meridian-longitude land is split up into square patterns.
benefits and challenges of increasing productivity
benefits - agricultural productivity has increased faster than population growth - green revolution challenges - expensive fossil fuels , cost
benefits and challenges of increasing exports from countries with surpluses
benefits - cushion of protection thanks to fellow countries challenges - can't keep up with population growth
benefits and challenges of expanding agricultural land
benefits - feed world population challenges - damage to land, Urbanization
benefits and challenges of expanding fishing
benefits - lots of fish challenges - used mainly for animal food. fish species have declined because of overfishing
importance of food processing
essential to feed the factory workers who didn't live on farms
Von thunen
estate owner in northern Germany who proposed a model for agriculture in 1826
climatic conditions of mediterranean climate and agriculture
borders at sea, wind provides moisture and moderate winter temps, hot and dry summers, hilly land, mountains
how factories get necessary space in cities
build multi-story buildings. raw materials are hoisted to the upper floors to make smaller parts, which were sent downstairs on chutes and pulleys for final assembly and shipment
california and mediterranean agriculture
california is devoted to fruit and vegetable horticulture. urbanization is causing them to spread to arid land but those areas need massive irrigation systems
common pastoral nomadism animals
camels, goats, sheep
importance of transportation
canals and railroads. enabled factories to have many employees, bring in bulky raw materials, and ship finished goods
earliest domesticated animals
cattle, goats, pigs, sheep, dogs
regions that pastoral nomadism are practiced
central and southwest asia and north africa
main source of calories for most humans
cereal grain
benefits of ships
cheap and can cross oceans
intensive subsistence farming in communist China - post-communes
communes are still intact but each villager has its own area. villagers can sell area to others. reorganization has been hard with irrigation systems, equipment, and infrastructure because they were originally made to serve communes. production has increased
air pollution
concentration of trace substances at a greater level than occurs in average air
according to von thunen model, 2 factors that a farmer considers before planting
cost of land cost of transporting products
market price
cost of production - related to value added
rent
cost of usage of land
crops that are common on plantations
cotton, sugarcane, coffee, rubber, tobacco, cocoa, jute, bananas, tea, coconut, palm oil
why grazing is placed where it is on the von thunen model
cows/livestock. don't require much work
Rest crop
crop that helps restore a field
farmers can distribute their workload because
crops are seasonal whereas livestock are full year
irony of amount of land devoted to crops vs. animals and the income generated by both
crops need all of the land but most income comes from animals
difference between grains grown in commercial grain farming regions and grains grown in mixed crop and livestock regions
crops on grain farm are primarily for consumption by humans rather than livestock
examples of perishable products
daily newspaper-current info has to be delivered at the correct time
just-in-time delivery
delivery right before a industry needs it
regions that intensive subsistence agriculture are practiced
densely populated areas China, India, East Asia, South Asia, and Southeast Asia
green revolution
development and adoption of high yielding cereal grains in the less developed world during the 60's, 70's, and 80's. Very large short term gains in grain output have allowed food supplies to grow faster than population
Undernourishment
dietary energy consumption that is continuously below the minimum requirement for maintaining a healthy, physical life
introduction and establishment of ranching
expanded during the 1860's because of demand for beef
examples of bulk gaining industry
fabricated metals beverage production
why commercial farmers suffer from low incomes
farmers are capable of producing much more food than demanded by consumers
fragmented farm
farmers live in farm villages. field are situated at varying distances from settlement. rectangular plots are common in Asia and southern Europe. narrow strips are common in Western and Central Europe
Intensive
farmers work intensively to subsist on land
4 steps in growing rice
field preparation flooding transplanting harvesting
harvesting of wet rice
harvested by hand, separate the husks, the heads are threshed by beating them on the ground or stepping on them
green revolution - 1970's
head of mexican corn program, won nobel peace prize
hazardous waste
heavy metals, PCB oils, cyanides, solvents, acids, caustics. hard to get rid of. can contaminate water and air
ways that truck farmers keep labor costs low
hiring migrant farm workers machines experimenting use only a few crops
economic rent
how much profit you can make off of a resource
location rent
how much profit you can make off of your location
most crops in mediterranean lands are grown for
human consumption rather than animal feed
green revolution - 1960's
hybrid strains of rice, wheat, and corn show great success in southeast asia, and latin america
impact of water pollution on aquatic life
if there is too much waste in the water than there won't be any oxygen in the water for the aquatic life. also temperature of the water matters.
territoriality among pastoral nomads
each group controls a piece and will invade somewhere else in an emergency or war. The goal for each group is to get as much land as possible but it all depends on wealth and power
how outsourcing has had an effect on distribuion of manufacturing
each step in the production process is now scrutinized closely in order to determine the optimal location
why enclosed field is placed where it is on the von thunen model
enclosing an animal in a field. doesn't require that much supervision. cost of shipping to city.
territoriality among village of shifting cultivation
normally owned by village - the chief gives a portion to each family
NAFTA
north american free trade agreement. eliminated most barriers to moving goods among Mexico, the US, and Canada
integration of crop and livestock
number of livestock. animal confinement-free range. management of extreme weather. flexible feeding and marketing
ways that corn is used
oil, margarine, fed to pigs and cattle, etc.
most important cash crops of mediterranean regions
olives and grapes
why do some regions specialize in milk products rather than fluid milk
other milk products can keep longer than milk
fixed location ranching
people were getting mad because cattle were walking/grazing on their property. created barbed wire to keep people and animals out
differences of subsistence agriculture and commercial agriculture
percent of farmers in labor force, use of machinery, farm size
Food security
physical, social, and economic access at all times to safe and nutritious food sufficient to meet dietary needs and food preferences
climate for double cropping
places that have warm winters - southern China and Taiwan dry winters - India
flooding of wet rice
plowed land is flooded with exact amount of water needed by rain, riverover flow, or irrigation
nonpoint sources
pollution from a large body of water -Agriculture-run off carrying fertilizers and pesticides
point sources
pollution that enters water from a specific source -water using manufacturers-steel, chemicals, paper products, food processing -municipal sewage-sinks, bathtubs, toilets
hunter-gatherers in the world today
quarter of million people. spinifex (Pila Ngur) people, Australia's Great Victorian Desert, Setinelese people, India's Andaman Islands, Bushmen-Botswana and Namibia
ways pastoral nomads obtain grain
raise crops, trade with sedentary subsistence farmers in exchange for animal products, hire people to grow grain, sow grain
field pattern
reflects the way a farmer subdivides land for agricultural use
Right-to-work laws
requires a factory to maintain an open shop and prohibits a closed shop. makes it difficult for union to organize factory workers, collect dues, and bargain with employers from a position of strength
Wet rice
rice planted on dry land in a nursery and then moved as seedlings to a flooded field to promote growth
crop hearths of east asia
rice, soybean, chinese chestnut, walnut
late ninteenth century: lake erie
rich iron ore - mesabi region
Industrial revolution
series of improvements in industrial technology that transformed the process of manufacturing goods. started in the UK in the late 1700's and 1800's
why wheat is the most important grain crop that is grown
sold for higher price used to make bread flower stored easily transportation is easy
2 groups that truck farmers sell their crops to
sold fresh or for canning/freezing
cultural factors for why agriculture developed
some humans preferred living in a fixed place and slowly learned how to grow things
where manufacturing jobs are moving to in the US
south and west because those areas aren't as developed as the northeast. wage rates are lower and the workers don't have as much interest in joining a union for higher wages and safer working conditions
where manufacturing jobs are moving to in Europe
southern and eastern europe because it offers labor and market proximity
second most popular in the US corn belt
soybeans
benefits of air travel
speedy delivery of small, high value items
crop hearths in the Americas
squash, beans, cotton, potato, corn, pepper, sweet potato, cassava
4 field crop rotation with cereal grains
started in europe in the 18th century. used 2 grains and 1 root
3 field crop rotation with cereal grains
started in europe in the 8th century. used 2 grains
invention that was the most important development to factories
steam engine. invented in 1769 by James Watt
Agricultural Revolution
the time when humans first domesticated plants and animal and no longer relied on hunting and gathering. it happened about 8000 BC. The world's population grew rapidly. By growing plants and raising animals, humans created larger, more stable sources of food
field preparation of wet rice
use a plow drawn by water buffalo or oxen
fencing and hedging
ways to enclose land
regions that mixed crop and livestock are common
west of the Appalachians (US)
3 leading cereal grains
wheat - europe, north america, southwest and central asia rice - east, south, southeast asia maize - some of sub-saharan africa
major crops of intensive subsistence without wet rice
wheat, barley, millet, oats, corn, sorghum, soybeans, cotton, flax, hemp, tobacco
crop hearths in africa
yam, sorghum, cowpea, african rice, coffee, finger millet
township
6 square mile parcel of land that serves as the political administrative sub-district within counties. Roads follow section and township lines
Gini coefficient
A measure of inequality by means of a ratio analysis, rather than a variable unrepresentative of most of the population, such as per capita income or gross domestic product.
sustainable agriculture
Farming methods that preserve long-term productivity of land and minimize pollution, typically by rotating soil-restoring crops with cash crops and reducing inputs of fertilizer and pesticides.
Thomas Malthus
One of the first to argue that the worlds rate of population increase was far outrunning the development of food populatio
seed agriculture hearths
Place around the world where the seeds of popular crops originated. (Mexico, Southeast Asia, etc.)
vegetative agriculture hearths
Places around the world where plants originated. (Southeast Asia, West Africa, South America, etc.)
parameters of the von thunen model
-Distance - How far to go? -Price - How much are you gonna sell it for? -Yields - Amount -Transport Costs - How much will transporting it cost? -In defining the "highest and best" use of land and hence allocation of land use on the market principles -Improvements in transportation make some of his Model outdated. -Intensity of cultivation declines with increasing distance from market -Land values decrease father from market -Perishable products need to be produced near the market
Agricultural success? of the green revolution
-Emergence of new human diseases from animal diseases -dense urban populations allow spread/persistence of disease -Lower standard of living for many people -archaeological evidence of serious malnourishment among early farmers -many modern impoverished and malnourished farmers -famine virtually non-existent in hunter-gatherer societies -Increased susceptibility to plant blights and increased dependence on complex economic systems -Environmental degradation -topsoil loss, desertification, eutrophication, PCBs in fish and other pesticides
technical problems with the green revolution
-Heavy Use of fresh water -High dependence on technology and machinery provided/sold by core countries -Heavy use of pesticides and fertilizer -Reduced genetic diversity/increased blight vulnerability (disease of crops)-makes it not consumable -Questionable overall sustainability
fences
-New england, western irelnad, and the yucatan use stone fencing -barbed wire swept across america -in appalachia, traditional split-rail zigzab fencing survives in some places
ethical issues with the green revolution
-Starvation can be prevented, but extra food may lead to higher birth rates -Life expectancy in less developed countries increased by 10 years in less than 20 years -Dependency on core countries increased; rich-poor gap increased -Wealthy farmers and multinational companies do well, small farmers become wage laborers or unemployed - dependent -More at risk? More people malnourished/starving today than in 1950's -US spends 10 billion dollars a year on farm subsidies, damaging farmers and market in LDC's
policies that US government have implemented to address problem of excess productive capacity
-farmers are encouraged to avoid producing crops that are in excess supply -the government pays farmers when certain commodity prices are low -the government buys surplus production and sells or donates it to other countries
characteristics of shifting cultivation
-farmers clear land by slashing vegetation and burning debris -farmers grow crops on cleared field, until soil nutrients are depleted, then they leave it so it can recover
cons of shifting cultivation
-preliminary step in development. should be replaced by more sophisticated agriculture to yield more crops -contributes to global warming
percentage of workforce in agribusiness
20%
percentage of land devoted to shifting cultivation
25%
Outsourcing
A decision by a corporation to turn over much of the responsibility for production to independent suppliers.
Maquiladora
A factory built by a U.S. company in Mexico near the U.S. border to take advantage of the much lower labor costs in Mexico.
Ranching
A form of commercial agriculture in which livestock graze over an extensive area.
"Fordism"/ Fordist production
A form of mass production in which each worker s assigned one specific task to perform repeatedly.
pastoral nomadism
A form of subsistence agriculture based on herding domesticated animals.
intensive subsistence agriculture
A form of subsistence agriculture in which farmers must expend a relatively large amount of effort to produce the maximum feasible yield from a parcel of land.
shifting cultivation
A form of subsistence agriculture in which people shift activity from one field to another; each field is used for crops for a relatively few years and left fallow for a relatively long period of time.
Plantation
A large farm in tropical and subtropical climates that specializes in the production of one or two crops for sale.
break-of-bulk point
A location where transfer is possible from one mode of transportation to another.
location theory
A logical attempt to explain the locational pattern of economic activities and the manner in which its producing areas are interrelated
Combine
A machine that reaps, threshes, and cleans grain while moving over a field.
varignon frame
A system of weights and pulleys used by geographers to help determine optimum location. For example, the weights might represent the relative cost of transporting particular goods to or from particular locations, to help a firm decide the most cost effective site to locate a prospective production facility.
subsistence agriculture
Agriculture designed primarily to provide food fro direct consumption by the farmer and the farmer's family. - number of farmers is large in LDC's, mostly hand tools, small farms
commercial agriculture
Agriculture undertaken primarily to generate products for sale off the farm. - number of farmers is decreasing in MDC's, lots of machinery, large farms
least-cost theory
Alfred Weber's theory of industrial location, explaining and predicting where industries will locate based on cost analysis of transportation, labor, and agglomeration factors.
basic industry
An Industry that sells their products or services primarily to consumers outside the settlement.
organic farming
An approach to farming and ranching that avoids the use of herbicides, pesticides, growth hormones, and other similar synthetic inputs.
GDP per capita
An approximation of the value of goods produced per person in the country, equal to the country's GDP divided by the total number of people in the country. Used as economic factor in HDI.
labor-intensive industry
An industry for which labor costs comprise a high percentage of total expenses.
bulk-reducing industry
An industry in which the final product weighs less or comprises a lower volume than the inputs.
bulk-gaining industry
An industry in which the final product weighs more or comprises a greater volume than the inputs.
nonbasic industry
An industry that sells their products primarily to consumers in the community.
assembly line
Arrangement of workers, machines, and equipment in which the product being assembled passes consecutively from operation to operation until completed.
example of a bulk reducing industry
Copper
cash crop
Crops grown for money; more specifically refers to more specialized crops located mainly in or near the tropics (e.g., sugar, cotton, rubber, bananas, oranges, etc.)
genetically modified organisms (GMO)
Crops that carry genetically engineered traits.
Fallow
Cultivated land that is not seeded for one or more growing seasons
Textile
Fabric that is woven or knitted; material for clothing.
double cropping
Harvesting twice a year from the same field.
economies of scale
Increase in effiency of production as the number of goods being produced increases
second agricultural revolution
Increased the productivity of farming through mechanization and access to market areas due to better transportation.
footloose industry
Industry in which the cost of transporting both raw materials and finished product is not important for the location of firms.
site factors
Location factors related to the costs of factors of production inside a plant, such as land, labor, and capital.
situation factors
Location factors related to the transportation of materials into and from a factory. proximity to inputs or proximity to markets
MDC's vs. LDC's daily consumption
MDC's - 2x recommended calories - 3600 a day (obesity) LDC's - 2600 (undernourishment)
difference of source of proteins in MDC's vs. LDC's
MDC's - meat (beef, pork, poultry) LDC's - cereal grains
region that is the largest producer of dairy products
New Zealand
luxury crops
Non-subsistence crops such as tea, cacao, coffee, and tobacco.
where most vehicle production plants are located
North America (US), Europe (Germany), East Asia (China)
Agglomeration
Phenomenon of economic activity congregating in or close to a single location, rather than being spread out uniformly over space.
Boserup hypothesis
Population growth influences the distribution of types of subsistence farming.
substitution principle
Principle that maintains that the correct location of a production facility is where the net profit is the greatest. Therefore in industry, there is a tendency to substitute one factor of production (e.g., labor) for another (e.g., capital for automated equipment) in order to achieve optimum plant location.
Deindustrialization
Process by which companies move industrial jobs to other regions with cheaper labor, leaving the newly deindustrialized region to switch to a service economy and to work through a period of high unemployment.
Deforestation
The clearing and destruction of forests to harvest wood for consumption, clear land for agricultural uses, and make way for expanding settlement frontiers.
Aquaculture
The cultivation of seafood under controlled conditions.
Agriculture
The deliberate effort to modify a portion of Earth's surface through the cultivation of crops and the raising of livestock for sustenance or economic gain.
Columbian Exchange
The exchange of plants, animals, diseases, and technologies between the Americas and the rest of the world following Columbus's voyages.
mixed farming
The growth of crops, feed, and livestock all on the same farm.
secondary industry
The portion of the economy concerned with manufacturing useful products through processing, transforming, and assembling raw materials.
primary industry
The portion of the economy concerned with the direct extraction of materials from Earth's surface, generally through agriculture, although sometimes by mining, fishing, and forestry.
crop rotation
The practice of rotating use of different fields from crop to crop each year to avoid exhausting the soil.
Transhumance
The seasonal migration of livestock between mountains and lowland pastures.
Neolithic Revolution
The shift from hunting animals and gathering food to the keeping of animals and the growing of food (8,000 BCE).
market gardening
The small scale production of fruits, vegetables, and flowers as cash crops sold directly to local consumers. Distinguishable by the large diversity of crops grown on a small area of land, during a single growing season. Labor is done manually.
Infrastructure
The stock of basic facilities and capital equipment needed for the functioning of a country or area
Irrigation
The supplying of water to land through means human intervention in the environment.
international division of labor
Transfer of some types of jobs, especially those requiring low-paid less skilled workers, from more developed to less developed countries.
mid-twentieth century: east and west coasts
Transportation. able to import and export goods to make steel
Von Thünen's model of agriculture
Used to explain the importance of proximity to market in choice of crops on commercial farms. Must combine the value of high yield crop per hectare and the cost of transporting the yield per hectare. (For example something like dairy products can't be located far away from cities because the milk would spoil before they could get it to the city)
things that Von Thunen didn't take into consideration in his model
Von Thunen assumes that the area is an isolated agricultural region, that it has a homogeneous in soil, climate, etc., the agricultural region is served by a single market/central, the central place functions to sell and consume agricultural products, farmers will allocate land use to its highest and best use (most profitable function), that the transportation costs are linear and proportional to distance in all directions (assume no terminal costs), and that they may vary for different crops/commodities(products).
Capital
Wealth in the form of money or property owned by a person or business.
industrial inertia
When an industry stays in a location even after the advantages for locating there have ceased to exist
export processing zone
Zones established by many countries in the peripherary and semi-peripherary that offer favorable tax, regulatory, and trade arrangements to attract foreign trade/investments
sanitary landfill
a place to deposit solid waste. need land to put the solid waste in - the US is running out of land
example of break-of-bulk point
a steel mill near Baltimore may receive iron by ship and coal by train
transplanting of wet rice
after a month of growing on dry land, they submerge them in water
swidden
cleared area used for 3 years or less
Colombia grows the most
cocaine
effect of drug crops on subsistence farmers
cocaine - derived from coca leaf - grown in columbia, peru, and North America heroin - derived from raw opium gum - grown in Afghanistan, Burma, Laos Marijuana - produced from Cannabis Sativa plant - grown in Mexico
benefits of railroads
don't have to stop during journey
open range and cattle drives of ranching
driven on hoof by cowboys on trails to railhead, then they rode in cars
climate of pastoral nomadism
dry climate
importance of iron
first industry to benefit from Watt's steam engine
effect of africa's food supply on subsistence farmers
food production has increased but so has population. the threat of famine hits the horn of africa and sahel. the government tries to keep prices low to make it affordable but the farmers aren't making money.
US corn belt
from Ohio to the Dakota's - goes through Iowa
acreage and yield trends during the green revolution
gains were made by: -dwarf varieties: plants are bred to allocate more of their photosynthetic output to grain and less to vegetative parts -planting in closer rows, allowed by herbicide, increases yields -bred to be less sensitive to day length, thus double-cropping is more plausible -very sensitive to inputs of fertilizer and water
spring wheat belt
goes through Dakotas, Montana, and southern Saskatchewan, Canada. Planted in spring and harvested in late summer
winter wheat belt
goes through Kansas, Colorado, and Oklahoma. Planted in autumn and develops a strong root system before growth crops winter
cereal grain
grass that yields grain for food
greenhouse effect
greenhouse gases trapping some of the radiation emitted by the surface of the earth
Specialty farming
growing crops that have limited but increasing demand. in the New England area of the US
Horticulture
growing of fruits and vegetables and flowers
green revolution - 1990's
growth in food supply continues, but slows to below the rate of population growth, as the results of unsustainable farming practices take effect.
mid-nineteenth century: southwestern Pennsylvania
iron ore and coal were mined there
early twentieth century: southern lake michigan
iron ore, coal
environmental factors for why agriculture developed
it started at the end of the last ice age and resulted in a massive redistribution of humans, animals, and plants
pros of shifting cultivation
most environmentally sound keeps local diversity of cultures
BRICS
most of the world's future growth in manufacturing expected to locate. Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa
effect of international trade on subsistence farming
must trade to earn supplies. sell to developed countries for a high price
effect of food prices on subsistence farmers
poor weather - south pacific and North America higher demand - China and India smaller growth in productivity - no break throughs use of crops as biofuel instead of food - Latin America
Afghanistan grows the most
poppies
importance of coal
principle source of energy to operate ovens and steam engines
example of single-market manufacturers
producer of buttons, zippers, clips, pins, etc.
why horticulture and dairying are placed where they are on the von thunen model
production of fruits, vegetables, and dairying are labor intensive activities
Von thunen model
proposed an "isolated state" - no imports or exports - self sufficiency approach. common in LDC's -Addis Ababa, Ethiopia -Colonial Mexico during the period of Spanish Rule
pros and cons of maquiladoras
pros-companies receive tax breaks cons-taking advantage of people and that environment laws aren't strictly enforced in Mexico
sensitive land management
protects soil through ridge tillage. lower production on costs, greater soil conservation. maintool-row-crop cultivator that forms ridges
why three field is placed where it is on the von thunen model
rotation crops among 3 different fields. doesn't require that much supervision. cost of shipping to city.
why crop rotation is placed where it is on the von thunen model
rotation crops. doesn't require that much supervision. cost of shipping to city.
local-scale pollution
severe where emission sources are concentrated -carbon monoxide-reduces oxygen -hydrocarbons-cause respiratory problems -particulates-dust and smoke particles
ranching in australia
sheep is most common
four work rules of post-fordist production
teams-working together to accomplish a goal problem solving-talking with other employees before filing a complaint leveling-equal treatment no matter what productivity-more machines and operators
how to cultivate hilly or mountainous regions
terrace farming
green revolution - 1943
the rockefeller foundation begins work in short stature hybrid corn in Mexico
global warming
the world's average temperature has increased by 2 degrees Fahrenheit since 1880. burning fossil fuels causes this
late twentieth century: moving closer to markets
their main input if widely available
intensive subsistence farming in communist China - communes
they grouped up the people and land and thought that productivity would improve but people weren't as motivated when working for the commune (group). the people were more motivated for themselves.
how farmers and combine companies make use of the different seasons of wheat
they have 2 sets of fields to distribute workload and machinery
ways modern government threaten pastoral nomads
they try to resettle nomads in China, Kazakhstan, and southwest asia. they force groups to give land up to the government can have the land
importance of chemicals
to bleach and dye cloth
climate of shifting cultivation
tropical - high temperature, lots of rain
benefits of trucks
unloaded and loaded quickly and cheaply