Because this place is known to have a good source of living in ancient times. There are rivers, the Tigres and Euphrates which is mainly the primary source of food.
Anthropologists discovered these through the radio-carbon dating then, that the fossils have older ages than those found. So as a temp conclusion, coz researchers are still searching, that's why temp.., the Fertile Crescent is the "cradle of life".
hope this helps :)
the fertile soil led to crop production..
The Fertile Crescent
Because the soil is rich in nutrients.
Because food was plentiful. No need to hunt, the animals came to the water. Irrigation was easy.
No. The Fertile Crescent was the first civilization. The civilizations of the Indus Valley, Egypt, and China all predated the Greeks.
The fertile soil led to crop production. That allowed a population to grow in the area which was the beginning of a civilization. The larger population with a stable source of food attracted others, some of whom only wanted to take food without work or payment. The populace had to band together for protection, establish a policing force, which required food/payment/taxes, with a leader. This eventually grew into a full fledged civilization.
The Sumerians, because Sumeria was the first true civilization on planet Earth. It developed in Mesopotamia, and the people who created this first civilization are known as the Sumerians.
The characteristics of civilization are structure to support a group. Social, economic, educational, and political structures for the greater good. Mesopotamia was the first civilization.
Because food was plentiful. No need to hunt, the animals came to the water. Irrigation was easy.
Civilizations first rose up along the Fertile Crescent because the region had soil that was very good for farming
Of the coast of Lominos
The lands of the Fertile Crescent (Egypt, Mesopotamia) were important because the ability to grow sufficient food meant the development of some of the first advanced civilizations in the world. These areas represented the beginnings of modern science, religion, and society.