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How Did Human Civilization Spread? (North America)

How has agriculture spread across North America? What patterns do you notice?

Historic population and cropland data illustrate the relationship between the spread of human population and agriculture in North America between 2,000 BCE and 2,000 CE.

Guiding Questions

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Sample Lesson that Directly Integrates This Science Visualization

From Farms to Phytoplankton (grades 6-11)
Can we use a model to predict the impacts of nutrient pollutants on an aquatic ecosystem? In this activity, students participate in a kinesthetic simulation to illustrate how nutrient pollution from agricultural runoff can lead to a dead zone at the mouth of a drainage basin.
 

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Connections to Standards

Next Generation Science Standards Disciplinary Core Ideas

California's Environmental Principles and Concepts

California History and Social Studies Standards

Depending on the History and Social Studies content standards you are covering in your K-12 classroom, this visualization may serve useful, even as a “hook” to capture students attention for a new unit of study.

Vocabulary for Students

How Have Teachers Used This Video Clip?

"I would love to use some of the videos and guiding questions as a way to provide connections to real-world phenomenon." -High School Life and Physical Science Student Teacher from Berkeley, CA

"I am primarily using the videos as hooks to begin learning about a topic. I will hopefully be able to have students watch them independently to gain further knowledge for reporting on a subject." -Elementary Environmental Science Teacher from San Francisco, CA

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Visualizations based on aggregated data provide the unique opportunity to engage your students in various Science Practices highlighted in the Next Generation Science Standards, including asking questions, analyzing and interpreting data, and constructing explanations. As an example, Academy educators developed sample activities such as this one and this one.

Explore more ways to use video in the classroom

Other Related Activities

Agriculture + Human Population Growth (grades 6-11)
Trace patterns of agricultural expansion through space and time, especially as they relate to climate and geography. How are patterns of human settlement and human population growth linked? Do you see evidence for how agriculture spread and retreated from different places based on historical events?

Sustainable Grazing (grades 4-12)
Humans need food and water to survive. In this activity, students will learn what it takes to develop, grow and consume some of the foods and water we need. Using math and problem solving skills, they will learn how many animals can live on their imaginary 100 acre ranch, discovering how land use and food consumption can be sustainable.

Recommended Resources

Bay Area Urban Farms
Urban farms are part of a movement to bring fresh produce to people who often have no access to healthy food—and a way to take a small amount of the pressure off using more land to feed our growing population.

Botanical Gardens to Feed the World
How will we feed a growing population in the future without using more resources? Between cropland and pastures, agriculture already covers more than 30% of the land on Earth.

Data Sources

Goldewijk, K.K., Beusen, A., & Janssen, P. (2010). Long term dynamic modeling of global population and built-up area in a spatially explicit way, HYDE 3 .1. The Holocene (20.4), 565-573.

Goldewijk, K.K., Beusen, A., van Drecht, G. & de Vos, M. (2011). The HYDE 3.1 spatially explicit database of human-induced global land-use change over the past 12,000 years. Global Ecology and Biogeography (20.1), 73-86.