Across
- 4. Type of agriculture where farmers depend on crops/livestock for survival
- 8. Herding or moving livestock based on seasons and climate changes
- 10. A type of rural survey method where property boundaries are established using a grid system; i.e. Western US & Canada
- 13. A type of agriculture in urban areas where members of a neighborhood can access locally sourced produce
- 18. Type of agriculture where farmers grow grain to feed to livestock (i.e. corn in Iowa --> livestock)
- 19. Process of farming only one type of crop/breed of livestock
- 20. Government aid in the form of money; most common in Core and semiperiphery states; allows farmers to offset high-input costs with farming; encourages certain practices
- 22. Settlement pattern where settlements are not near one another
- 23. Settlement pattern of many close urban areas/settlements; local scale: when many families live near one another
- 27. Acronym for a specified feeding area for livestock
- 28. Theory that states land further away from the market/CBD is less expensive
- 29. Latitude region of the world where the most productive farmland/agriculture is located
- 30. An agricultural revolution that was marked by the mechanization of agriculture and technologies that increased yields and reduced labor costs
- 31. Type of agriculture that exploits cheap labor, and produces majority cash crops
- 33. Movement to allow those living on the periphery/semiperiphery greater ownership of goods and direct trade with consumers/third parties
- 34. The process where land loses its arability due to overgrazing or overproduction of crops; major cause of the Dust Bowl in the 1930s
- 36. Type of agriculture characterized by a high amount of labor, capital, and a high amount of labor; located near large populations
- 37. Period of great agricultural diffusion as a result of European exploration to the "new world"
Down
- 1. Type of climate found in California, Chile, coastal Australia; semi-arid and good for produce/grapes
- 2. Major hearth of agriculture and civilization
- 3. Man who adapted proposed that disposable and fragile ag products would be located near the market, while grain crops and livestock would be placed furthest away
- 5. When farmers process their produce into high-value products (i.e. jam, salsa, etc.)
- 6. An area that lacks access to grocery stores/food; common in urban areas; disproportionately affects those in low-income areas
- 7. Period of agricultural advancement in GMOs, Pesticides/herbicides, and Disease resistant and higher yield crops; primarily accessible to Core, limited in Periphery
- 9. Also called "slash-and-burn", it requires a lot of land, and is most common in tropical regions; mostly subsistent
- 11. The science of farming and cultivation
- 12. A type of rural survey method where property boundaries extend out from rivers and roads (or other transportation networks); French Canada
- 14. The integration of steps in the production of food industry
- 15. Process used by corporations to gather resources to transform them into goods
- 16. Settlement pattern that follows along roads, rivers, dikes, etc.
- 17. A type of rural survey method where property boundaries are determined along natural features/landmarks; evident primarily in England and Eastern US
- 21. A type of irrigation method that evenly distributes water over a field; found throughout the US, but notably in the Western US arid climate
- 24. Type of climate where most of the world's intensive farming is located; type of climate throughout most of the Global South
- 25. A common type of agriculture used in urban areas to conserve space using
- 26. Agriculture that does not require a lot of labor, but does utilize large plots of land (i.e. ranching)
- 32. Central Asian trading network that led to increased agricultural diffusion
- 35. Land pattern common throughout hilly/mountainous regions of SE Asia and Latin America; highly productive and sustainable
