For the past 15 - 20 years, China has produced more wheat than any other country. Of course, China is a very big area.
Tanzanite is found in an area where there are no diamonds. Natural tanzanite is endemic only to the Mererani Hills of Northern Tanzania.
cotton, peanuts, oranges, grapefruit, peaches, rice tobbacco sugar, carrots, asparagus, corn, potatoes and cabbbge
it does, a lot. all you have to do is use a cotton bud and put a little of salicylic acid and gently massage it to the corn or the infected area for atlest 2 weeks.
The stamen is a flower's male reproductive portion. The location of the stamen is in the inner portion of a flower. The stamen area contains a flower's thin filaments as well as its anthers. The stamen area is responsible for producing pollen.
it is there because it is kinda of what there known for.
The area of New Mexico is 121,445 sq mi; Mississippi is 47,358 sq mi ...121445 ÷ 47358 = 2.5644 ≈ 2.6(A little more than 2½ Mississippis can fit into New Mexico.)
No. Mercerized cotton is more absorbant. Mercerising results in the swelling of the cell wall of the cotton fibre. This increases the surface area and reflectance, giving the fiber a softer feel and, if the fiber is held under tension, producing a shiny surface. Due to the increased surface area, mercerised cotton will absorb 7-8% more than unmercerised cotton. The process was originally developed to make cotton more readily absorb dye.
The area of Heuilley-Cotton is 10.09 square kilometers.
The area of Villers-Chief is 7,830,000.0 square meters.
The area of high cotton production became known as the cotton belt.
The area of Granite Chief Wilderness is 77.085 square kilometers.
The chief
A cotton belt is an area where cotton grows well. Probably has a good climate and fertile soils.
Cotton is grown in the northern area like Delaware. Sometimes in Africa or some where like it do. But cotton is grown here in America! The best, most sought after cotton in the world is grown in the San Joaquin Valley area of California.
Cotton
The cotton textile industry in Mumbai grew because of its strategic location on the western coast of India, which allowed for easy transportation of cotton from the hinterlands to the city. Additionally, Mumbai had a skilled labor force, access to ports for exporting finished products, and availability of capital for investment in machinery and infrastructure. These factors combined to make Mumbai a hub for cotton textile manufacturing.