Economic activities are essential for generating income and are grouped into primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary activities. Primary activities depend on the environment and involve using resources like land, water, vegetation, minerals, and building materials. The most common primary activities include hunting, gathering, pastoralism, fishing, agriculture, and mining.
Learning Outcomes:
- Understand primary economic activities and their reliance on the environment.
- Explore key factors influencing primary activities in different regions.
- Examine the role of physical and social factors in the variation of these activities.
Humanity’s earliest sustenance strategies were hunting and gathering. These activities are still practiced in regions with harsh climates and by primitive societies, although modern technology has influenced them. Coastal communities continue fishing, while hunting has been curbed due to illegal poaching and species extinction. Primitive tools limited early hunting, and now hunting is mostly banned in countries like India. Gathering, although an ancient economic activity, remains prevalent in high-latitude and low-latitude zones. Gatherers collect plants for various products like quinine, tanin, cork, and rubber, but their contributions to the global market remain small due to competition from synthetic products.
Pastoralism involves the domestication and rearing of animals. It developed when hunting became unsustainable, and various communities adopted the practice based on geographic and climatic conditions.
Agriculture varies widely based on physical and socio-economic factors, with major systems including subsistence agriculture, plantation farming, and commercial grain cultivation.
Plantation agriculture was introduced by European colonists and involves large-scale, profit-oriented production of crops like tea, coffee, rubber, and cocoa.
Important Note: In intensive subsistence agriculture, rice is the dominant crop, but productivity per labor is often low due to small landholdings and manual labor practices.
Mediterranean agriculture focuses on producing high-value crops such as citrus fruits, grapes, and olives in regions like southern Europe, North Africa, and California. The cultivation of grapes is especially notable for producing high-quality wines, while fruits and vegetables are grown during the winter to meet market demand in Europe and North America.
Market gardening and horticulture specialize in growing high-value crops like fruits, vegetables, and flowers for urban markets. This type of farming is labor-intensive and capital-intensive, utilizing irrigation, HYV seeds, and greenhouses. It is common in densely populated regions of Northwest Europe and the United States.
Farming can be classified based on the type of ownership and organizational structure.
Mining has played a crucial role throughout history, marking different ages like the Copper Age and Bronze Age. With industrialization, the importance of mining increased, driven by physical and economic factors like deposit size, demand, and technological advancements.
Mining is conducted through two main methods:
Important Note: Mining operations are shifting from developed to developing countries due to labor costs, with many African and South American countries relying heavily on mineral exports for income.
Aspect | Nomadic Herding | Commercial Livestock Rearing |
---|---|---|
Mobility | Herders move with livestock seasonally | Animals reared on permanent ranches |
Capital Investment | Low | High, with emphasis on scientific breeding and disease control |
Region | Deserts, tundras, and mountainous regions | Developed countries like New Zealand and the USA |
Products | Meat, milk, wool | Meat, wool, hides, scientifically processed for export |
MCQ:
Which one of the following types of agriculture involves the seasonal migration of herders and their livestock from plains to mountains in the summer and back to the plains in winter?
a) Intensive subsistence agriculture
b) Plantation agriculture
c) Nomadic herding
d) Commercial grain cultivationAnswer: c) Nomadic herding