Inundation canals Provide a high flow of water. Cheapest source of water. Helps in the irrigation of flood plains. Provides fresh water. Can vary in sizes.
Yes. They did
Rivers, lakes, canals, even sewers are bodies of water that flow downhill in a channel.
Irrigation canals were made in Mesopotamia as early as the 4th millennium BCE. The Sumerians, who lived in the region, utilized canals to control the flow of water from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers and irrigate their fields, allowing for successful agriculture in an otherwise arid environment. These canals played a crucial role in sustaining the civilization of Mesopotamia.
Irrigation canals expanded farmland because they haelped farmers bring water to areas of farmland that were not close to rivers or lakes. Irrigation canals were set up so that water would flow to vegetation and crops that were farther from the rivers or lakes.
They built many canals that flowed from the Lake into the rivers, and the rivers into the Mississippi. As they moved along, they got progressively deeper, moving the water in a certain direction. Why don't you try researching it?
The Mesopotamians built canals because they need a way to water there plants and they need a way to control there river flows
Canals so the water didn't flood the city.
seasonal canals are those canals that are not having water throughout the year
Canals can connect bodies of water, usually rivers.
they pulled the bots in the water and they pulled tools while they walked along side of the boat or tool. That's my a seventh graders answer;) tada
Inundation canals are canals that are linked to large rivers. Perennial canals are the canals which are linked with dams. Inundation canals provides water only when rivers are flooded while perennial canals supplies water all the time.