HSC Geography ยท People, Patterns & Processes ยท 7.4

Patterns of Economic Activity โ€” Agriculture

The teaching lesson ยท where the world farms, and why ยท NESA Stage 6 (2022)
Laptops away ยท copy the โœ๏ธ slides into your notebook
By the end of this lesson

What you will be able to do

  • Define agriculture and sort it into subsistence vs commercial systems.
  • Describe the spatial pattern of agriculture using a distribution map.
  • Explain the physical & human factors that decide where each system operates.
  • Examine case studies โ€” the Canadian Prairies, Tuscany, and tropical plantations.
  • Evaluate agriculture's environmental & climate impacts, and write an extended response.
This lesson at a glance
  • 7 farming systems
  • 3 case / place studies
  • 1 distribution map
  • 1 essay + scaffold
Mechanised commercial farming โ€” a combine at harvest.
Intensive subsistence โ€” terraced rice paddies.
๐Ÿ“˜ Syllabus: Spatial patterns of economic activity โ€” agricultural production๐Ÿงญ Skill: Maps ยท Statistics ยท Graphs
7.4.1 ยท What is it?

Two big families of farming

Agriculture โ€” the cultivation of crops and the raising of animals for food, fibre and other materials.

Geographers sort farming by its purpose, its intensity (inputs per hectare), and the environment it suits. The two big families are:

  • Subsistence โ€” grown mainly to feed the farmer's own family, little surplus (much of Africa, South & SE Asia).
  • Commercial โ€” grown mainly to sell for profit, using capital, machinery and global markets.

The seven systems you should know: subsistence ยท shifting cultivation ยท pastoral nomadism ยท extensive commercial ยท intensive commercial ยท Mediterranean ยท plantation.

Extensive vs intensive โ€” Extensive = spread thin over lots of land (low inputs/ha). Intensive = concentrated inputs on a small area (high yields/ha).
Extensive commercial โ€” vast, mechanised.
Intensive โ€” high labour per hectare.
โœ๏ธ Copy into your notebook
๐Ÿ“˜ Syllabus: Types of agricultural production๐Ÿงญ Skill: Statistics โ€” classifying systems
7.4.2 ยท Read the data

Who grows what โ€” top producers

Crop / product#1 producer#2 producer
WheatChinaIndia
RiceChinaIndia
CoffeeBrazilVietnam
TeaChinaIndia
BeefUSABrazil
SoybeansBrazilUSA
Source: FAO (approximate โ€” verify before assessment). Notice both developed (USA) and emerging (China, India, Brazil) nations lead.
Population + climate + history shape the map: China & India lead the staples that feed billions; Brazil leads the tropical cash crops.
What the table shows
  • Staples (wheat, rice) โ†’ huge-population Asia
  • Tropical cash crops (coffee, tea) โ†’ the tropics
  • Beef & soy โ†’ the Americasโ€™ vast land
  • No single country dominates โ€” climate rules
โœ๏ธ Copy into your notebook
๐Ÿ“˜ Syllabus: Spatial pattern of agriculture โ€” reading data๐Ÿงญ Skill: Statistics โ€” ranking; interpreting a table
7.4.2

Where each system sits

7.4.2 ยท The spatial pattern

The distribution of agriculture

Extensive commercial (grain / grazing)SubsistenceMediterraneanPlantation (tropical)

The pattern is not random: climate sets the limits, soils, water & terrain refine it, and human factors (technology, markets, history) decide the system.

  • Subsistence clusters in the developing world.
  • Extensive commercial holds the vast mid-latitude interiors.
  • Mediterranean sits in five warm-temperate pockets.
  • Plantations ring the tropics.
โœ๏ธ Copy into your notebook
๐Ÿ“˜ Syllabus: The spatial pattern of agricultural production๐Ÿงญ Skill: Maps โ€” describing distribution
7.4.3 ยท Case study

Extensive commercial โ€” grain & grazing

The Canadian Prairies (Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta) are one of the world's great grain regions โ€” wheat & canola on very large, highly-mechanised farms with low labour per hectare. Canada is a top wheat & canola exporter.

Australia mirrors this: a broad wheat-sheep belt arcs through WA, SA, Vic, NSW & southern Qld; the arid outback carries extensive cattle & sheep grazing on enormous stations (Anna Creek in SA is often cited as the world's largest, ~23,000 kmยฒ).

Why extensive? Deep fertile soils, a warm-enough growing season, moderate rainfall โ€” and vast, cheap, flat land where machinery can work huge fields.

Grain on a continental scale โ€” highly mechanised.
Low labour per hectare โ€” a single machine.
โœ๏ธ Copy into your notebook
๐Ÿ“˜ Syllabus: Case study โ€” extensive commercial farming๐Ÿงญ Skill: Statistics โ€” inputs/area; Maps
7.4.4 ยท Place study

Mediterranean โ€” tuned to hot dry summers

Tuscany (central Italy) is a classic Mediterranean landscape: olives, grapevines & cereals across hills with hot dry summers & mild wet winters. The climate suits deep-rooted, drought-tolerant tree & vine crops; the produce (Chianti wine, olive oil) carries strong cultural identity & premium value.

The same climate + crop mix reappears in Napa Valley (California), and in south-western & southern Australia โ€” one climate type reproducing a farming system in five separate world regions.

Vines & olives tuned to the Mediterranean climate.
(compare) a tropical plantation โ€” a different climate, a different crop.
โœ๏ธ Copy into your notebook
๐Ÿ“˜ Syllabus: Case study โ€” Mediterranean agriculture๐Ÿงญ Skill: Climate graphs; place study
7.4.5 ยท Case study

Plantation โ€” one crop, for export

Plantations are large commercial estates specialising in a single export cash crop (monoculture), usually in the tropics and often a legacy of the colonial era.

  • Coffee โ€” Brazil is the world's largest producer.
  • Tea โ€” estates in India (Assam, Darjeeling) & Sri Lanka.
  • Rubber โ€” mainly South-East Asia (Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam).

Plantations bring export income & jobs but raise sustainability (monoculture, deforestation), vulnerability to a single world price, and labour & ethics questions.

A tea plantation โ€” a single cash crop on a tropical estate.
(compare) subsistence rice โ€” grown to eat, not export.
โœ๏ธ Copy into your notebook
๐Ÿ“˜ Syllabus: Case study โ€” plantation agriculture๐Ÿงญ Skill: Interconnection through trade
7.4 ยท Watch (โ‰ˆ 5 min)

The many types of farming

โ–ถโ–ถ Watch: Different Types of Farming โ€” How Has Agriculture Changed? โ€” GCSE Geography (click โ†’ opens on YouTube)

As you watch, note one difference between extensive and intensive farming for your notebook.

7.4 ยท Think

Reflect & discuss

๐Ÿค” Reflect & discuss

Why do the world's biggest wheat belts sit in interior grasslands rather than near the coast or in the tropics?

โœ๏ธ How to build your answer
  1. State your view in one sentence.
  2. Give a reason (a “โ€ฆ because โ€ฆ”).
  3. Support it with an example.
  4. Note the other side, then conclude.
Think about: soils, growing season, rainfall, flat land, cheap land, and why coasts & tropics get other, higher-value uses.
7.4.7 ยท Think

Reflect & discuss

๐Ÿค” Reflect & discuss

Agriculture feeds us but is a major driver of land clearing, water use & greenhouse gases. Can farming feed 8 billion people and be sustainable? Argue one side.

โœ๏ธ How to build your answer
  1. State your view in one sentence.
  2. Give a reason (a “โ€ฆ because โ€ฆ”).
  3. Support it with an example.
  4. Note the other side, then conclude.
Weigh it up: higher yields & new tech vs deforestation, soil loss, water & emissions. Name a real practice (e.g. no-till, drip irrigation) if you can.
Putting it together

Extended response & scaffold

"Explain the spatial pattern of ONE agricultural system, and analyse the physical and human factors that produce it." (~600 words)

Introduction โ€” name the system (e.g. extensive commercial) & a case study.
Body 1 โ€” the pattern: where it is on the map (distribution, scale) with data.
Body 2 โ€” physical factors: climate, soils, water, terrain.
Body 3 โ€” human factors: technology, markets, land tenure, history.
Conclusion โ€” synthesise: environment + people โ†’ the pattern; link to interconnection.
๐Ÿ“˜ Syllabus: Extended response โ€” pattern & process๐Ÿงญ Skill: Writing geographically ยท using evidence
โœ๏ธ Copy into your notebook
Before you go

Key terms โ€” learn these

Agriculture
cultivation of crops & raising of animals
Subsistence
farming to feed the family, little surplus
Commercial
farming to sell for profit
Extensive / Intensive
spread thin / concentrated inputs per ha
Mediterranean
olives, vines & citrus in warm-temperate pockets
Plantation
a single export cash crop (monoculture)
โœ๏ธ Copy into your notebook
End of 7.4

Recap

Farming splits into subsistence & commercial ยท the map is set by climate + soils + people ยท extensive grain, Mediterranean vines, tropical plantations ยท with real sustainability trade-offs. Revise with the study guide & activity sheet.
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