Across
- 2. Producers cooperatives whos unpaid members lost their own land and joined brigades of other workers assigned specific tasks.
- 5. Planning mechanism created to achieve such economic development.
- 6. Largest volume or rate of use that will not impair its ability to be renewed or to maintain the same future productivity.
- 10. Introduction of a foreign element.
- 11. Wandering, but controlled movement of livestock.
- 13. Results that were in the VonThunen model.
- 17. Private firms.
- 19. Those that add value to materials by changing their form or combining them into more useful commodities.
- 21. Goods and services are created for the use of the producers and their kinship groups.
- 22. Producers or their agents disposed of goods and services through government agencies that controlled both supply and price.
- 23. Government enterprises operated by paid employees of the state.
- 24. Involves large areas of land and minimal labor input per hectare.
- 25. Removing nonrenewable metallic and nonmetallic metals. Mining and quarying.
- 26. Farmers producing for off-farm sales who apply large amounts of capital engage in this.
Down
- 1. A theory proposed by the German location economist Alfred Weber.
- 3. Large wheat farms and livestock ranching.
- 4. Farmers hack down the natural vegetation, burn cuttings, and then plant crops.
- 7. Accrue in the form of savings from shared transport facilities.
- 8. Those that harvest or extract something from the earth.
- 9. Consist of those business and labor specializations that provide services to the primary and secondary sectors.
- 12. Cultivation of small land holdings through the expenditure of great amounts of labor per acre.
- 14. Composed entirely of services rendered by white collar professionals.
- 15. Study of how people earn their living, how livelihood systems vary by area.
- 16. Based on harvesting and the natural bounty of renewable resources. Forestry and fishing.
- 18. Tells us that areas tend to specialize in the production of those items for which they have the greatest relative advantage over other areas.
- 20. refers to the clustering of productive activities and people for mutual advantage.
