no because it ruins their planting and crops but then it could also help for watering its plants but them too much water can kill plants so the answer is no it doesnt
The flooding destroyed and damaged crops and buildings, but also re-fertilized the soil, making the land ready for more growing.
The floods of the Euphrates and Tigris River are unpredictable because they would flood at any moment without warning. People of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers had some use for the water.
The Euphrates and Tigris River floods brought down silt which provided fertile soil, renewed yearly, and the rivers also provided the water for irrigation.
The Nile River wasn't higher that Tigris and Euphrates, so the Nile River didn't really flood anyting
The Mesopotamians used the Tigris and Euphrates for their crops the only problem was the rivers flooded irregularly and there wasn't enough water when the floods did not occur but this problem was overcome by the invention of canals and irrigation.
They developed the ability to predict floods.
the floods from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers were unpredictable and threatening to the Mesopotamians. The floods would come out of nowhere and wipe out farms and people.
Regular floods provided mud bricks for building, agricultural prosperity, and fresh water.
Mesopotamians greatly depended on the Tigris and Euphrates rivers for their floods that left behind fertile land (silt) for crops to grow
The Tigris and the Euphrates rivers are each a river in its own right, however they join each other in the Middle East. Their history is part of the history of Mesopotamia. The Tigris flows 1,150 miles from the mountains of east Turkey, through Iraq, navigable to Baghdad. The Euphrates also begins in eastern Turkey and flows 1,700 miles through Syria and Iraq and thence into the Persian Gulf. It floods twice a year.
Some of the major problems were that Sumer was weak with protection so when barbarians attacked, they were weakned. Another contributor was floods from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. Hope this helped!
It helped because the floods gave them water, plus, it made soil fertile, and that could help food grow.
Ever heard of West Nile Virus...Kind of the same thing. Disease, Destruction of Crops (Famine), loss of life, loss of dwellings...and did I mention the mosquitos?...