irrigation
Irrigation
The word is irrigation.
They dug canals from the Nile to their lands and made gates to adjust the amount of the water flowing into the canals. The higher lands were watered from the canals using the saduf (shadoof). It was a sweep-pole well with a leather bucket.
Yes, most people use sprinklers, a form of irrigation. Also, on farms, people irrigate their crops using ditches alongside the rows.
The ancient Chinese obtained water from low irrigation ditches and canals up to their crops by using the chain pump. The chain pump made it easier to bring water from low land to higher land. Chinese workers used pedals to turn a wheel that pulled a series of wooden planks that brought their water uphill. This was created during the Han Dynasty, China's golden age.
The canoe went up one of these canals. The canals of Mars bear further investigation.
Crop health depended on the rain which was undependable, and the whole area has no running water above ground except for rivers that were quite a distance away. To make it easy, settlements were not built far away from these water sources. Farming irrigation when needed was done by using canals and terraces, called Chinampas, a raised area to plant crops in and move amongst the areas by canoe. They built canals and diverted rivers to provide water to their crops.
The piping in water from elsewhere and using it for crops is Irrigation.
In locations where it seldom rains farmers have to find a way of getting water from a source such as a pond, stream, or river to their fields. This is usually done with a pump and a series of pipes or hoses, or in some locations, by using buckets. Their crops are then watered by means of irrigation ditches. This is known as "Wet Farming."
Canals were built along major trade routes to facilitate the movement of goods and merchandise over waterways using ships or barges.
The Aztecs of central Mexico were known for using chinampas, which were artificial islands made of mud and reeds that they used for agriculture. These floating gardens allowed them to grow crops in the shallow waters of lakes and canals.
which of the following examples best describes using an inclinied plane
they were using irrigation.