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How the shift from foraging to farming reshaped landscapes, settlement patterns, and global economies.
For roughly 95 percent of human history, societies relied on hunting and gathering to secure food, moving across landscapes in small, mobile bands. The transition to deliberate cultivation and animal domestication—what geographers call the First Agricultural Revolution—was arguably the most consequential transformation in human geography, because it allowed sedentary settlement, population growth, and the emergence of complex social hierarchies. Understanding this transition and the subsequent revolutions in farming technology is essential for analyzing modern patterns of rural land use, food production, and global trade.
Each revolution raises a central geographic question: how do changes in agricultural technology alter the spatial organization of production, the relationship between humans and the physical environment, and the distribution of wealth across regions? This lesson introduces the foundational vocabulary, models, and spatial concepts you will need to analyze those questions throughout the Agriculture and Rural Land-Use unit.
Before examining specific farming systems, it is important to establish several foundational concepts that recur throughout AP Human Geography. Agriculture is not simply "farming"; it encompasses a broad spectrum of practices shaped by climate, culture, technology, and economic systems. The following core ideas underpin all subsequent analysis of rural land use.
The spatial origins of agriculture are central to the AP Human Geography curriculum. The following diagram illustrates the major hearths of domestication and the key crops and animals associated with each region. Notice that agriculture was not a single invention that diffused outward from one source; it arose independently in several distinct locations, each contributing different staple crops to the global food system. This concept of independent invention is crucial for understanding why different world regions developed different agricultural traditions.
Carl Sauer's theory of agricultural origins emphasizes that early cultivation likely began in areas of high biodiversity where diverse wild species were available for experimentation. He argued that vegetative planting—reproducing plants from cuttings or tubers—probably preceded seed agriculture, because it requires less botanical knowledge. Over millennia, diffusion carried these innovations outward: wheat and barley moved from Southwest Asia into Europe and North Africa, while rice cultivation spread from the Yangtze River valley across Southeast Asia. These diffusion pathways are visible today in the spatial distribution of staple crops and dietary traditions.
While the AP Human Geography exam does not require heavy calculation, understanding the spatial logic behind von Thünen's Isolated State model demands familiarity with the concept of locational rent (also called land rent or economic rent). Von Thünen assumed a single market city on a uniform plain with no rivers or roads, so that transportation cost is proportional to distance in every direction. The key insight is that a farmer's profit from a given crop depends on the revenue it earns at market minus both production costs and transportation costs.
The equation reveals why perishable or bulky goods (high T) must be produced close to the market: their locational rent drops steeply with distance. Goods that are lightweight and non-perishable (low T) can be produced farther away because rent declines slowly. This produces the famous concentric ring pattern: dairy and market gardening nearest the city, followed by forestry (bulky timber), then field crops, and finally ranching at the outermost ring where land is cheapest.
AP Human Geography classifies agricultural practices into several major types, each associated with distinct regions, climates, and levels of economic development. The diagram below organizes these types along two axes—subsistence versus commercial orientation and intensive versus extensive land use—to reveal the logical structure of the classification scheme.
Several of these systems merit additional explanation. Shifting cultivation (sometimes called slash-and-burn or swidden agriculture) involves clearing small plots of forest, farming them for a few years until soil fertility declines, and then moving to a new plot while the original one regenerates. It is sustainable at low population densities but comes under pressure from deforestation and population growth. Pastoral nomadism relies on the herding of domesticated animals (camels, goats, sheep, cattle) across extensive grazing ranges in arid and semi-arid climates, following seasonal patterns called transhumance. Meanwhile, plantation agriculture is a legacy of colonialism: large-scale monoculture estates producing cash crops (sugar, rubber, tea, coffee) for export to core economies, often with exploitative labor arrangements that have left lasting socioeconomic imprints.
The following example demonstrates how to apply the locational rent equation and von Thünen's logic to determine which crop a farmer would grow at a given distance from market—a skill frequently tested on FRQs.
Von Thünen's model remains a cornerstone of agricultural geography, but like all spatial models, it rests on simplifying assumptions. The AP exam expects you to evaluate models critically—identifying both their explanatory power and the real-world factors they cannot capture.
| Feature | Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Spatial Logic | Clearly demonstrates how transportation cost shapes land use zones; explains why perishable goods are produced near markets. | Assumes uniform terrain and no transportation infrastructure; real landscapes have rivers, roads, and railroads that distort rings. |
| Economic Rationale | Introduces bid-rent concept used in urban geography; integrates production cost, market price, and distance. | Assumes perfect competition and rational farmers; ignores subsidies, tariffs, cultural preferences, and political boundaries. |
| Predictive Power | Concentric patterns roughly visible in some regions (e.g., dairy belts near urban centers in the US Northeast). | Globalization, refrigeration, and air freight allow perishable goods to travel vast distances, weakening ring predictions. |
| Applicability | Foundational framework adaptable to urban land-use analysis and global agricultural trade patterns. | Single-market assumption fails in a world with multiple competing cities and global commodity markets. |
The introductory concepts in this lesson connect directly to the broader themes of the AP Human Geography course—globalization, development, and sustainability. As you proceed through the unit, you will encounter more complex topics that build on these foundations.
| Introductory Concept | Advanced Extension |
|---|---|
| Subsistence vs. commercial agriculture | Dependency theory: how colonial plantation systems locked periphery nations into commodity-export economies, creating structural inequality. |
| Von Thünen's concentric rings | Global-scale von Thünen: core nations as the "market" and peripheral producers as the outer rings; agribusiness supply chains spanning continents. |
| Green Revolution (Third Agricultural Revolution) | Debates over GMOs, food sovereignty, environmental degradation (salinization, aquifer depletion), and the uneven distribution of Green Revolution benefits. |
| Agricultural hearths and diffusion | The Columbian Exchange: bidirectional transfer of crops, animals, and diseases between the Old and New Worlds after 1492, reshaping global diets. |
Looking ahead, you should be prepared to analyze how agribusiness consolidation, international trade agreements, and climate change are reshaping the spatial organization of agriculture. The core question remains constant: who produces what, where, and why? Von Thünen's distance-decay logic, the hearth-and-diffusion framework, and the subsistence-commercial spectrum all provide conceptual tools for answering that question at scales from local to global.