front 1 Algal Blooms | back 1 ab 3rd Agricultural Revolution environmental effect |
front 2 what is causing algal blooms | back 2 fertilizer and waste getting into waterways |
front 3 Factory Farms Polluting rivers and spreading disease to neighboring towns. | back 3 p 3rd Agricultural Revolution environmental effects |
front 4 increased exposure to toxic chemicals | back 4 c 3rd Agricultural Revolution environmental effect |
front 5 antibiotic-resistant bacteria/ diseases | back 5 a 3rd Agricultural Revolution environmental effect |
front 6 what caused antibiotic-resistant bacteria/ diseases | back 6 an overuse of antibiotics in factorie farms |
front 7 Banana plants are being destroyed | back 7 d 3rd Agricultural Revolution environmental effect |
front 8 why are banana plants being destroyed | back 8 A fungi diseases is spreading because of mono cropping. |
front 9 mono cropping | back 9 only planting one strain or type of plant |
front 10 an increase in methane is worsening global warming. | back 10 m 3rd Agricultural Revolution environmental effect |
front 11 what is causing an increase in methane that is worsening global warming | back 11 livestock burping and gassing. |
front 12 beef production is increasing our global water footprint | back 12 b 3rd Agricultural Revolution environmental effect |
front 13 farmers have to leave their fields behind because of salt | back 13 f 3rd Agricultural Revolution environmental effect |
front 14 why is salt causing farmers to leave their fields | back 14 because of an increased salt concentration in the soil from the water. |
front 15 the second agricultural revolution brought knowledge of | back 15 fertilizers and sselective breeding |
front 16 when/where did the second agricultural revolution begin | back 16 1600's europe |
front 17 the second agricultural revolution brought | back 17 better crops from the americas |
front 18 what crops were in the americas | back 18 potatoes and corn |
front 19 the second agricultural revolution brought new technology from | back 19 the industrial revolution |
front 20 enclosure act | back 20 larger, more productive, farms
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front 21 what is fallow land | back 21 land left unused to recover nutrients |
front 22 enclosure act was bad because there were | back 22 less jobs |
front 23 seed drills | back 23 controlled where seeds were placed so the crops grew correctly.
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front 24 four-crop rotation system | back 24
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front 25 economic effects of the second agricultural revolution | back 25
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front 26 what are some features of a good map | back 26
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front 27 contextualization | back 27 describing what was going on before an event occured that is relevant to understanding the event itself. |
front 28 what is accurate on a Mercator map | back 28
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front 29 the second agricultural revolution brought knowledge of | back 29 fertilizers and selective breeding |
front 30 what parts of the mercator map are too big | back 30 Greenland and Antartica |
front 31 what is correct on an equal area projection map | back 31 the size |
front 32 what is wrong on an equal area projection map | back 32 the shape |
front 33 what continent did the human race begin in | back 33 africa |
front 34 what was the neolithic revolution | back 34 when farming was created |
front 35 fertile | back 35 capable of reproducing |
front 36 what four continents was farming invented in | back 36 North America, Asia, South America, Africa |
front 37 what is the first place farming began called | back 37 mesopotamia or the fertile crecent |
front 38 what year did farming begin | back 38 8,000 BC |
front 39 what are the Tigris and Euphrates | back 39 Rivers in Egypt around Mesopotamia |
front 40 farming led | back 40 more food |
front 41 farming - more food - | back 41 staying in one place and free time |
front 42 farming- more food- staying in one place and free time- | back 42 civilization and advances |
front 43 specialization | back 43 increased division of labor |
front 44 what was the top of the hierarchy of early agricultural civilizations | back 44 religious leaders |
front 45 initialy life was harder, there was | back 45 more work and a lower life expectancy |
front 46 distance decay | back 46 the further away from something you are the less you interact with it |
front 47 space-time compression | back 47 the more connected we become the less distance decay matters |