Cotton is a plant where the seeds and the parts of those seeds (the soft white fluff) are harvested. This fluff then goes to a factory to be woven into fibrous material called cotton fibre.
In Fall
Slaves Harvested and Planted the cotton and the Wealthy plantain owners got the profit
Cotton comes from a plant. The plants are harvested, and the product is transported by truck to factories for processing.
No. Cotton plants are reproduced through their seeds. Commercial cotton -- the fibre -- is harvested from the cotton bolls what grow on the shrub.
Cotton picking is pulling the soft cotton out of the hard boll that has opened when the cotton is ready to be harvested. Cotton pulling is harvesting the cotton by pulling the entire opened boll, with the cotton in it.
Whenever John Pine decides ...
Field slaves typically worked in the fields planting, cultivating, and harvesting crops such as cotton, tobacco, sugar cane, and rice. They were responsible for manual labor tasks and long hours of work under harsh conditions, often enduring physical abuse and oppressive treatment from overseers.
It was harvested by hand- by plucking the pod of cotton fiber from the plant. Extremely hard work.
That's like asking what chemicals are in Oxygen...cotton is it's own material, harvested from plants.
Cotton is harvested using two methods in North America. The first is the cotton stripper: http://www.deere.com/servlet/com.deere.u90785.productcatalog.view.servlets.ProdCatProduct?tM=FR&pNbr=7460XN The other method is the cotton picker: http://www.deere.com/servlet/com.deere.u90785.productcatalog.view.servlets.ProdCatProduct?tM=FR&pNbr=9996XN
Cotton was not usually produced in Europe.Cotton was not usually produced in Europe.Cotton was not usually produced in Europe.