Introduction to Agricultural Geography

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The appearance of agriculture and pastoralism (maybe the single most important change in history)
Advertisements

Early Humans and the Neolithic Revolution.  Modern humans evolved in eastern Africa between 50,000 and 100,000 years ago  Modern?  Physically modern.
 Sauer, a cultural geographer, believed that the earliest form of plant cultivation was vegetative planting, in which new plants were produced from existing.
Paleolithic Era Through Bronze Age. Early Migrations of People Historians think that people started in Africa about 90,000 years ago Moved to Asia, then.
PREHISTORIC PEOPLE.
Agriculture and Rural Land Use. Agriculture Is the raising of animals or the growing of crops to obtain food for primary consumption by the farm family.
Where did agriculture originate?
Welcome to Class Why do you think some countries have accumulated great riches over time while others remained historically poor?
AGRICULTURAL LAND USE Agriculture – the deliberate tending of crops and livestock in order to produce food and fiber Less than 2% of Americans are farmers.
How did humans become civilized?
The Old Stone Age (The Paleolithic Era)
Key Issue 1 Where did Agriculture Originate?
Where Did Agriculture Originate?
Agricultural Innovation and World Population – 10,000 to 500 B.C.E. PopulationYearAgricultural Innovation 1–5 million10,000 B.C.E.Neolithic Revolution.
The Neolithic Revolution
Origins of Mankind and Civilization
There are 4 sectors of the economy ppl might work in.
Agriculture Chapter 10 An Introduction to Human Geography
Agriculture and other primary economic activities Agriculture: the deliberate tending of crops and livestock in order to produce food and fiber.
AGRICULTURE “Where did agriculture originate?”. AGRICULTURE: Case study Read case study on page 328. Compare and contrast the life of a farmer in Pakistan.
Agriculture AP Human Geography.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Bellringer: What do you like to eat most? Pick one item and try to think about where it came from, be very detailed.
AP Human Geography Origins and Diffusion of Agriculture Spring 2015 Origins and Diffusion of Agriculture Spring 2015.
+ © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. T3/20/12 The Origins of Agriculture (Ch. 10.1)
American Farms are vastly different from farms around the world. Farming practices are different around the world. Agriculture is deliberate modification.
Open your textbook and read the Agriculture intro from pg On your paper you’re using for today’s notes, write down 2 questions you have about.
The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography
AGRICULTURE Chapter 10 An Introduction to Human Geography The Cultural Landscape, 8e James M. Rubenstein.
Agricultural Geography
The First Agricultural Revolution Where did plant domestication begin? South and Southeast Asia early domestication of root crops, up to 14,000 years ago.
Intensive subsistence
Origin of Agriculture Intro and Chp 10 sec 1. Terms/Concepts Agriculture Crop Vegetative Planting Seed Agriculture 1 st Industrial Revolution.
Agriculture Caty Brown. Agricultural Revolutions First Agricultural Revolution- Neolithic Revolution Saw the human development of seed agriculture and.
January 22, 2016S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 10 Key Issue 1 Where Did Agriculture Originate?
Prehistory Period 1: up to 600 BCE. Searching for Human Origins ▪ There are three main groups of scientists that search for and study the origins of humans.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Agriculture  The deliberate modification of Earth’s surface through cultivation of plants and rearing of animals to obtain.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Agriculture Defined  The deliberate modification of Earth’s surface through cultivation of plants and rearing of animals.
HUMANS TRY TO CONTROL NATURE
Agriculture. Economic Activities 1. Primary  Extraction of products 2. Secondary  Taking a primary product & turning into something else 3. Tertiary.
CROP HEARTHS * Agriculture originated in multiple hearths around the world * Certain crops are “native” to certain areas of the world * Because of colonization.
APHuG Dec. 4 AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTIONS What is it? Where did it begin?
SECTION 3 BREAKTHROUGHS TO AGRICULTURE. INTRODUCTION/BIG PICTURE Chief feature of Paleolithic Era – initial settlement of the earth Chief feature of Neolithic.
Small-Scale Economic Systems  All economic activity takes place within an economic system  Earliest economic systems were marked by: Reliance on subsistence.
Human Migration and the Neolithic Revolution
Chapter 10 Agriculture. Agricultural Origins & Regions Origins of agriculture – Hunters and gatherers – Invention of agriculture Location of agricultural.
Unit V – Agriculture & Rural Land Use. 2 A. Before Agriculture Mostly nomadic Hunter-Gatherers Alternating periods of plenty & scarcity (due to Ice Age)
Doc Holley’s AP World History Chapter 1 From Human Prehistory to Early Civilizations.
Key Issue 1: Where did Agriculture originate?. Invention of Agriculture Prior to the advent of agriculture, all humans probably obtained needed food through.
Agricultural Revolutions
Agricultural revolutions
Key Issue 1 Where did Agriculture Originate?
History of Agriculture
Agriculture Ap Human Geography.
Chapter 10 Agriculture By Eugene Stanton.
INTRODUCTION TO AGRICULTURE: What is it and where did it begin?
Why Did Europe Conquer the Americas?
Agriculture Chapter 10 An Introduction to Human Geography
Open your textbook and read the Agriculture intro from pg
The Neolithic Revolution and Early Agricultural Societies
Inventing Agriculture
Key Issues Where did agriculture originate? Why do people consume different foods? Where is agriculture distributed? Why do farmers face economic difficulties?
Agriculture Chapter 10 An Introduction to Human Geography
The Neolithic Revolution
Agricultural Revolutions
Agriculture: Deliberate modification of Earth’s surface through cultivation of plants and rearing of animals to obtain sustenance or economic gain. Began.
AIM: How do farming practices vary around the world?
Open your textbook and read the Agriculture intro from pg
Open your textbook and read the Agriculture intro from pg
Agriculture Chapter 10 An Introduction to Human Geography
Presentation transcript:

Introduction to Agricultural Geography

Banaue Rice Terraces, Philippines Agriculture: the deliberate modification of Earth’s surface through the cultivation of plants and rearing of animals to obtain sustenance or economic gain. Banaue Rice Terraces, Philippines

Agriculture has been traditionally considered the dominant primary sector activity. How does the modern commercial farmer pictured above challenge this classification of agriculture as a purely primary sector activity?

It was him, he did it! About 200,000 years ago, we, (Homo sapiens) first appear in the archeological record.

For the next 190,000 years (or about 95% of our history) we obtained our food through a kind of nomadism known as hunting and gathering.

Uncontacted Yonomami Village (Venezuela/Brazil border)

Inuit Amazonian Tribes San and Bantu peoples of South Africa Australian Interior: Aborigines Surviving Hunter Gatherer Populations Sadly, these last remaining hunter gatherers are too small, isolated, and politically weak stop the vicious stereotyping against them in the form of….

Ouch!

To avoid further unhealthy evolution…

The Paleo Diet! (aka: “Eat like the hunter gatherer that you are!”)

Men probably did most of the hunting, and they did it well Men probably did most of the hunting, and they did it well. In fact, the Pleistocene overkill theory argues that after the end of the last ice age about 10,000 years ago, hunter-gatherers caused the extinction of several large mammal species, including the saber-toothed tiger, the woolly mammoth, and the giant ground sloth.

Deexinctable? The Siberian Woolly Mammoth Clone Project

Women probably did most of the gathering Women probably did most of the gathering. This means women were likely the first to cultivate plants and therefore the first to make the jump from harvesting wild plants to planting them purposefully to be harvested later. In other words, women probably played the major role in inventing agriculture. But when and where did this so called First Agricultural (aka Neolithic Revolution) first take place?

All contemporary discussions (and most AP HG questions All contemporary discussions (and most AP HG questions!) about the origins of agriculture begin with Carl Sauer's seminal work, Agricultural Origins and Dispersals, published in 1952. Where else did we run into Carl Sauer in this course?

He’s the Berkley geographer who gave us the concept of the cultural landscape, the visible human imprint activity on the landscape, which he believed was the proper focus for all geographers. Think of him as the guy who put the nail in the coffin of the environmental determinists.

Theories of Plant Domestication Pre-Sauer Sauer SW Asia Hearth Multiple hearths but 1st in SE Asia Seed Agriculture (grains) came first Vegetative Planting (root crops) came first. Occurred in harsh climates that forced innovation due to population pressure and hunger Occurred in areas of high biodiversity (many habitats and plant species). This allowed hunter gatherers to become sedentary which naturally lead to experimentation with root crops. Rapid innovation Gradual innovation 10,000 years ago 14,000+ years ago

Location of Agricultural Hearths Vegetative planting (aka root cropping) is the reproduction of plants by direct cloning from existing plants, such as cutting stems and dividing roots [Cassava (manioc or yucca), yams, sweet potatoes] 29

FIRST VEGETATIVE PLANTING: SE ASIA (?) According to Sauer, the earliest vegetative agriculture appeared in Southeast Asia, and probably involved root vegetables like taro and yams, and perhaps tree crops like bananas. Vegetative agriculture then diffused throughout Asia and eventually to the Near East and Europe. Other, perhaps independent inventions took place in West Africa (oil palm, yam) and South America (manioc, arrowroot).

Sauer’s Three Hearth’s of Vegetative Planting: SE Asia, West Africa, and Peruvian Highlands

Agricultural Origins and Regions Location of agricultural hearths Seed agriculture the reproduction of plants through annual planting of seeds that result from sexual fertilization rice millet sorghum flax barley wheat 32

First Seed Planting: N. China, W. India, E. Africa (?) Seed Planting also had multiple hearths: Northern China, Western India, Ethiopia Diffused rapidly from India into SW Asia (Fertile Crescent) and then into Europe. Later independent hearths in Mexico and Northern Peru SW Asia, once thought to be the sole hearth of all kinds of agriculture, still holds onto its title as the first place to combine seed agriculture with the domestication of herd animals (cattle, goats, pigs, sheep).

Sauer’s Three Hearth’s of Seed Agriculture: Northern China, Western India, Ethiopia (also later Mexico and Northern Peru

Animal Domestication The best animals to farm are large, plant eating mammals. Over the years, humans have probably tried to domesticate all of them, usually without success. For example, despite repeated efforts, Africans have never domesticated the elephant. Jared Diamond counted 148 different species of wild, plant eating, terrestrial animals that weigh over 100 pounds. Of those, we have only successfully farmed for any length of time –just 14. They are: goats, sheep, pigs, cows, horses, donkeys, Bactrian camels, Arabian camels, water buffalos, llamas, reindeers, yaks, mithans and Bali cattle. All but one of these animals are native to Asia, North Africa and Europe. All were domesticated at least 4500 years ago. The Big Four livestock animals: cows, pigs, sheep and goats were native to the SW Asia (Middle East/Fertile Crescent) 35

The Fertile Crescent

And now, an brief “archeology is cool moment”: Can 10,000 year old gazelle teeth tell us something about when hunter gatherers first settled down and started domesticating animals? As it turns out, yes! The outer layer of a gazelle’s teeth at the time of its death will vary depending on what it was eating during the months before it died. Archeologists studying the teeth of butchered gazelle in a Natufian cave site in modern Israel that had been occupied by homo sapiens from about 200,000 year ago, found that only after around 10,000 BCE or so were gazelle eaten in the cave year round, suggesting the date of earliest human sedentism (=staying in one place.)

Proof of early agriculture in Fertile Crescent: Natufian sickle (bone handle with microliths) c. 9000 BCE:

Takeaways: The First Agricultural Revolution (aka Neolithic Revolution) South and Southeast Asia: Root crops, up to 14,000 years ago Southwest Asia (the Fertile Crescent): Seed crops, about 10,000 years ago Why the “First” Agricultural Revolution…

Second Agricultural Revolution The Second Agricultural Revolution combined innovations in farm machinery (seed drill, McCormick Reaper), livestock breeding, and land consolidation (Enclosure Movement) to provide the surplus fencing needed to feed the large urban work force of the Industrial Revolution in Europe. Moved agriculture beyond subsistence to the generation of surpluses. © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. 44

© 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. The Third Agricultural Revolution Also called the Green Revolution. Dates back to the 1930s: agricultural scientists in the American Midwest began experimenting with technologically manipulated seed varieties to increase crop yields. 1960s: the focal point of the Green Revolution shifted to India (IR8). The Green Revolution brought new high-yield varieties of wheat and corn from the United States to other parts of the world, particularly South and Southeast Asia. © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.