No, geography is geography and agriculture is agriculture.
The word geography is a noun. The plural term is geographies but it is usually uncountable.
The geography of Mesopotamia, with its fertile land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, enabled the growth of agriculture and city-states. In contrast, Egypt's geography, with the Nile River's annual flooding, facilitated farming and centralized governance, which influenced the development of their cultures by focusing on agriculture, social hierarchy, and centralized political authority.
Topical geography is a branch of geography that focuses on specific themes or topics such as population, urbanization, agriculture, or climate change. It involves studying the spatial distribution and patterns of these topics and how they interact with the environment and each other.
In general, the word "geography" is not capitalized unless it is the first word in a sentence or part of a title.
The rugged terrain of the Andes made it difficult to cultivate large areas of land and limited the types of crops that could be successfully grown. The high altitudes also presented challenges in terms of temperature, oxygen levels, and water availability, impacting agricultural productivity for the Incas.
There are 2 parts of geography. One is Physical Geography (biomes, climate, rocks e.g.) and the other is Human Geography (urbanisation, poverty, agriculture practices e.g.). Therefore, physical geography is considered to be part of science, and Human Geography is not part of science.
No it isn't.
geography
The study of countries and things about them is a large part of geography.
Agricultural activities are studied in the branch of geography known as Agricultural Geography. This field examines the spatial aspects of agriculture, including how environmental conditions, land use patterns, and socio-economic factors influence agricultural practices and productivity. It also explores the relationships between agriculture and rural development, food systems, and sustainability.
David Grigg has written: 'An introduction to agricultural geography' 'The dynamics of agricultural change' -- subject(s): Agricultural geography, Agricultural innovations, Agriculture, Economic aspects, Economic aspects of Agriculture, History
yes, jobs are part of a geography. If you have anymore questions just ask. 8-)
Anna Burger has written: 'The agriculture of the world' -- subject(s): Agricultural ecology, Agricultural geography, Agriculture, Economic aspects, Economic aspects of Agriculture
Yes, Geography is part of Earth Sciences.
No it is a branch of anthropology not Geography.
Everything. Dairy is a part of agriculture, just like crops or ranching or raising alpacas is a part of agriculture.
Bernd Andreae has written: 'Weltwirtschaftspflanzen im Wettbewerb' -- subject(s): Agricultural ecology, Agricultural geography, Agriculture, Economic aspects, Economic aspects of Agriculture, Field crops 'Farming, development and space' -- subject(s): Agricultural geography 'Allgemeine Agrargeographie (Sammlung Goschen)' 'Die Farmwirtschaft an den agronomischen Trockengrenzen' -- subject(s): Arid regions agriculture 'Agrargeographie' -- subject(s): Agricultural geography 'Landwirtschaftliche Betriebsformen in den Tropen' -- subject(s): Agricultural geography, Agriculture 'Agrarregionen unter Standortstress' -- subject(s): Agricultural ecology, Agricultural geography, Crop zones 'Die Bodenfruchtbkeit in den Tropen ='