Of course. The Sierra Madre mountain ranges are examples of that.
It has more mountains. Almost 60% of the territory is covered by hilly and mountainous regions while 29% is covered by deserts. You should be aware that this percentages overlap (i.e: there are hilly, desertic regions).
Varied. From mountainous Chihuahua to the hilly regions of central Mexico, to the flatlands of the Yucatan peninsula, Mexico has a wide variety of landscapes.
Roads in hilly regions are sometimes called switchbacks. These are roads that sort of meander back and forth to allow for slower rates of climb and descent on hilly areas.
It is mostly hilly terrain.
it can be useful by water for hilly regions
Of course. two of them are the Baja California and Yucatan peninsulas, which are the opposite of each other: Baja California is a hilly, arid peninsula on northwestern Mexico facing the Pacific Ocean while Yucatan is a flat, tropical peninsula on southeastern Mexico facing the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Sea.
Hilly to mountainous and quite arid.
Jhum cultivation
Yes. There are natural regions, socioeconomic regions as well as federal states in Mexico.
The USA is geographically diverse, with many areas that are both flat and hilly. For example, the Midwest region tends to be flatter with expansive plains, while the Western regions have mountainous and hilly terrain. The country's topography varies widely across different states and regions.
Many. Most of them are in the Hilly regions of Chittagong, Mymensingh and Dinajpur
The Hilly Flanks Hypothesis is a theory that suggests agriculture may have originated in regions of the Fertile Crescent characterized by hilly terrain and diverse plant and animal species. This hypothesis proposes that the diverse environments in these regions provided early humans with a range of resources that could have encouraged the transition from hunting and gathering to agriculture.