the irrigation canals flooded into he crops and then watered them to much and they all died
Irrigation canals do not expand from land. They expand from water into the land.
because they use technology
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.
Becuase water got spread out a lot faster than having egyptians going from crop to crop watering by hand
Canals in ancient Egypt were primarily used for irrigation.
It flows through the irrigation canals - see the link below.
Do you mean little miniature canals? If so, irrigation
The Nile river, which was very useful for irrigation supported farming in ancient Egypt. Ancient Egyptians made canals that connected directly to the Nile. They then made sluices that gave water from the canals to farms. Farming was the key to the development of Egyptian civilization.
Irrigation helped farmers to grow crops because the water in the Nile would spread through the canals and create wet land, so that the wet land would grow crops. Without the river Nile Ancient Egypt would have been a desert and wouldn't have been able to grow crops and create irrigation.
Lower Egypt is the area around the Nile delta.(Upper Egypt is Southern and Lower Egypt is Northern).It is rich farmland.
all the irrigation canals in Egypt would not be filled so the crops will not live and all of Egypt will starve if not already stocked up. all of Egypt will rely on trade to other countries because the rest of them will have nothing
Egypt had more farmland because of the spread of the Nile Delta.