Opening subject page...
Loading your content
How the independent invention of farming in multiple hearths reshaped human settlement, culture, and the global landscape.
For roughly 95 percent of human history, every society on Earth subsisted through hunting and gathering—small, mobile bands that followed seasonal game and foraged for wild plants. Then, beginning around 10,000 BCE in the Fertile Crescent and independently in at least five other regions, human communities began deliberately cultivating crops and domesticating animals. This shift, commonly termed the First Agricultural Revolution (or the Neolithic Revolution), did not simply change what people ate; it reorganized every dimension of social life—settlement patterns, population density, political organization, and the relationship between culture and landscape. Understanding where and why agriculture originated, and the routes along which it spread, is foundational to AP Human Geography because it illuminates the earliest example of cultural diffusion reshaping the global map.
The fact that agriculture arose independently in multiple, widely separated regions—rather than diffusing outward from a single point—raises a central question in human geography: What environmental, demographic, and cultural conditions made farming both possible and necessary? The geographer Carl Sauer, the archaeologist V. Gordon Childe, and more recently Jared Diamond have each proposed complementary frameworks for answering this question. Their models emphasize climate change at the end of the Pleistocene, population pressure exceeding the carrying capacity of foraging, and the geographic distribution of domesticable plant and animal species. This lesson traces those origins, maps the diffusion pathways, and connects them to the broader AP Human Geography themes of cultural landscape transformation and spatial interaction.
Before examining specific hearths in depth, it is essential to establish the conceptual vocabulary that geographers use to discuss the emergence and spread of agriculture. Five foundational ideas structure the entire topic, and you will encounter them repeatedly on the AP exam.
The diagram above illustrates a critical geographic principle championed by Jared Diamond in Guns, Germs, and Steel: continents oriented along an east-west axis (Eurasia) facilitated rapid agricultural diffusion because crops could move thousands of kilometers without encountering dramatically different day-lengths or temperature regimes. In contrast, continents oriented along a north-south axis (the Americas, Africa) presented ecological barriers—tropical forests, deserts, and shifting frost dates—that slowed the diffusion of crops and livestock by millennia. This axis-of-diffusion thesis helps explain why Eurasian societies accumulated food surpluses, dense populations, and complex political institutions earlier than societies on other continents, a pattern with enormous consequences for subsequent cultural geography.
Agriculture did not spread through a single process. Geographers distinguish several mechanisms of spatial diffusion, each of which played a role in carrying farming practices outward from hearths. Understanding these mechanisms is essential for the AP exam because free-response questions frequently ask you to classify and illustrate specific types of diffusion using agricultural examples.
The archaeologist Albert Ammerman and geneticist Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza proposed the wave-of-advance model to describe the spread of agriculture into Europe. They estimated that farming advanced at roughly 1 kilometer per year from the Fertile Crescent, reaching Britain by approximately 4,000 BCE—a journey of about 6,000 years. This was not purely contagious diffusion; genetic evidence suggests it combined demic diffusion (the physical migration of farming populations who outbred and replaced hunter-gatherers) with cultural diffusion (indigenous foragers adopting agriculture from their farming neighbors). The relative contribution of each mechanism varied regionally: in central Europe, demic diffusion predominated, while in Scandinavia, cultural adoption was more significant.
Each agricultural hearth is characterized by its unique combination of domesticated species, environmental conditions, and subsequent diffusion patterns. The table below synthesizes the key information you need for the AP exam, organized by hearth region, approximate date, primary domesticates, and the dominant type of agriculture practiced.
| Hearth Region | Approx. Date | Key Domesticates | Type | Diffusion Direction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fertile Crescent | ~10,000 BCE | Wheat, barley, lentils, sheep, goats, cattle | Seed | E-W into Europe, South Asia, North Africa |
| East Asia (China) | ~9,000 BCE | Rice (Yangtze), millet (Yellow River), pigs, silkworms | Seed | South into SE Asia, east to Korea and Japan |
| Southeast Asia | ~8,000 BCE | Taro, yams, bananas, coconuts, chickens | Vegetative | Into Pacific Islands (Austronesian expansion) |
| Mesoamerica | ~7,000 BCE | Maize, squash, beans, chili peppers, turkeys | Seed | N-S through Americas (slowly) |
| Sub-Saharan Africa | ~5,000 BCE | Sorghum, millet, yams, coffee, cattle | Seed & Vegetative | South and east via Bantu migrations |
| South Asia | ~5,000 BCE | Cotton, sesame, zebu cattle, water buffalo | Seed | Into Ganges Plain and beyond |
| Andes / Amazon | ~3,000 BCE | Potatoes, quinoa, llamas, alpacas, cassava | Vegetative & Seed | Along Andes and into lowlands |
Carl Sauer proposed that the earliest agriculture was likely vegetative planting in tropical Southeast Asia, where people discovered that cuttings from plants like taro and yams could be replanted to produce new crops. This method required no understanding of seed biology and could have developed through casual observation of plants regenerating from discarded parts. Sauer argued that seed agriculture was a later, more sophisticated development requiring the deliberate selection and storage of seeds from season to season. While not all archaeologists accept Sauer's chronological ordering, his distinction between the two planting systems remains a standard framework in AP Human Geography and helps explain why different hearths produced fundamentally different crop complexes.
The following worked example mirrors the kind of analysis required on AP Human Geography free-response questions. It walks through a prompt about identifying hearths, diffusion types, and consequences step by step.
Geographers and archaeologists have proposed multiple explanations for why human societies transitioned from foraging to farming. No single theory fully accounts for all cases, and the AP exam expects you to evaluate these perspectives comparatively. The table below summarizes the major theoretical frameworks, their key proponents, and their strengths and limitations.
| Theory | Key Proponent(s) | Core Argument | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Environmental Determinism / Climate Change | V. Gordon Childe | Post-Pleistocene warming and drying forced humans and wild plants/animals into river valleys ("Oasis Theory"), intensifying human-plant interaction and leading to domestication. | Archaeological evidence shows early farming did not begin in desiccated oases but in well-watered uplands. Overly deterministic. |
| Invention from Surplus (Cultural Ecology) | Carl Sauer | Agriculture was invented by settled, well-fed fishing communities in tropical regions who had leisure to experiment—not by starving populations under pressure. | Does not explain why agriculture arose in semi-arid regions like the Fertile Crescent; underestimates the role of population pressure. |
| Population Pressure | Ester Boserup, Mark Cohen | Growing populations exceeded the carrying capacity of foraging; farming was a necessary intensification to feed more people per unit of land. | Hard to prove population pressure preceded farming; in some regions, farming seems to have come first, and population growth followed. |
| Geographic Availability of Domesticable Species | Jared Diamond | Agriculture arose where wild ancestors of high-value crops and tameable large mammals were concentrated. Eurasia had a disproportionate share of both. | Critics argue it minimizes human agency and cultural factors; can lean toward environmental determinism. |
The First Agricultural Revolution set in motion a trajectory of intensification that continues to the present day. Each subsequent revolution built upon the spatial patterns and crop distributions established during the Neolithic era, making an understanding of agricultural origins essential context for the rest of the AP Human Geography agriculture unit.
| Revolution | Period | Key Innovations | Connection to Origins |
|---|---|---|---|
| First (Neolithic) | ~10,000 BCE | Plant/animal domestication, sedentary settlement | Establishes hearths and initial diffusion pathways |
| Second (British Agricultural) | 17th–19th c. | Crop rotation, selective breeding, enclosure movement, seed drill | Intensifies Fertile Crescent–derived crops (wheat, barley) in Europe |
| Third (Green Revolution) | 1940s–1970s | High-yield varieties (HYVs), chemical fertilizers, irrigation, mechanization | Transforms wheat and rice—crops from original hearths—with lab-developed genetics |
| Fourth (Biotech/GMO) | 1990s–present | Genetic modification, precision agriculture, vertical farming | Manipulates the same species first domesticated 12,000 years ago; diffusion is now global and instantaneous |
Notice the through-line: the Columbian Exchange (post-1492) serves as the crucial bridge between the first revolution and all subsequent ones. Before Columbus, the Eastern and Western Hemispheres had entirely separate crop complexes—wheat and rice in Eurasia versus maize and potatoes in the Americas. After 1492, these previously independent agricultural systems merged through massive relocation diffusion. Potatoes and maize fueled European population growth, while wheat and cattle transformed the landscapes of the Americas. This global redistribution of crops is arguably the most consequential episode of agricultural diffusion in human history, and it remains a high-frequency topic on the AP exam.
The First Agricultural Revolution (Neolithic Revolution) occurred independently in multiple agricultural hearths—including the Fertile Crescent, East Asia, Mesoamerica, Sub-Saharan Africa, and the Andes—where climate conditions and locally available wild species made plant and animal domestication viable. Carl Sauer distinguished between early vegetative planting (reproducing plants from cuttings) and later seed agriculture (deliberate sowing and harvesting of grain). Agricultural innovations diffused outward from hearths via contagious, relocation, stimulus, and hierarchical diffusion.
Jared Diamond's axis-of-diffusion thesis explains why crops spread faster along Eurasia's east-west axis (consistent climate bands) than along the Americas' and Africa's north-south axis (variable climate zones). Competing theories from V. Gordon Childe (climate change), Carl Sauer (cultural surplus), and Ester Boserup (population pressure) offer complementary explanations for why farming began. The post-1492 Columbian Exchange merged previously separate crop complexes, and subsequent agricultural revolutions (Second, Green, Biotech) continued to transform the species first domesticated in the original hearths thousands of years ago.