By Fatskills Exam Guides Team — the exam nerds behind 28,500+ quizzes and 2.1M practice questions across 500+ global exams.
The Von Thünen Model is a 19th-century economic model that explains how agricultural land use is organized around a central market city based on transportation costs and perishability. It matters on the AP exam because it’s a foundational location theory in human geography, often tested in FRQs about agricultural patterns, urban planning, or economic geography. Real-world example: In 1820s Germany, dairy farms clustered near cities (like Berlin) to sell fresh milk, while wheat farms were farther out because grain was cheaper to transport and lasted longer.
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