The question as worded is confusing.
If the question is asking why Mesopotamia as a geographic formation occurred, the word simply means "the land between the rivers" in Greek. It came into existence because there were two rivers and there was land in between them. The term "Mesopotamia" is far older than the term "Fertile Crescent" which sought to link the kind of fertility found in Mesopotamia with the similar level of fertility found in the Levant region along the Mediterranean coast.
If the question is asking why Mesopotamia developed using the term "Mesopotamia" as a collective term for the various civilizations that formed in Mesopotamia (Sumerians, Akkadians, Babylonians, Assyrians, etc.), these civilizations formed because the river valleys were fertile areas in which people could grow crops and raise livestock.
Mesopotamia, the valleys of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, form the eastern part of the crescent which reaches across to Syria.
mesopotamia? :D
It's the other way around; Mesopotamia is part of the Fertile Crescent.Mesopotamia is only the eastern part of the Fertile crescent, in the current country of Iraq. The western part included Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel, and Palestine. It is called the fertile crescent because it is a fertile area in the surrounding desert and mountains, and it is shaped in a crescent.
The Fertile Crescent, of which Mesopotamia is the eastern half, is surrounded on four sides by different geographic formations. Due west of the Fertile Crescent is the Mediterranean Sea, which is not a plateau or a peninsula.Plateaus: Iranic Plateau (due east of the FC) and Anatolian Plateau (due north of the FC)Peninsula: Arabian Peninsula (due south of the FC)
The Fertile Crescent, formed by Mesopotamia, the Levant and the Nile valley.
Actually, Mesopotamia is only the eastern part of the Fertile crescent. The western part included Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel, and Palestine. It is called the fertile crescent because it is a fertile area in the surrounding desert and mountains, and it is shaped in a crescent. It was given the name Fertile Crescent by archaeologist and historian James Henry Breasted in 1906.Its fertility is because of the Tigris, Euphrates, and Jordan Rivers and their tributaries. Unfortunately much of it lost its fertility over a thousand years ago due to salt buildup in the soil from improper irrigation methods.Mesopotamia is shaped like a crescent and the land was very fertile due to irrigation.Mesopotamia is a crescent-shaped territory and has an area surrounded by two rivers namely Tigris and Euphrates River. Soil, a porous matter, absorbs water. The soil constantly absorbs water from the bodies of water surrounding it, thus, making Mesopotamia both fertile and crescent-like, Fertile Crescent.because its near the water and it made all the soil fertile and it sort of looks like a crescentbecause it was near water and a good area to grow crops(: It was also shaped like a crescent.Ancient Mesopotamia was a fertile place in an area that was largely desert, and it was roughly in the shape of a crescent.
The fertile Crescent is a boomerang-shaped territory from the eastern Mediterranean to the Persian Gulf. The best farmlands were between the Tigris and the Eufrates Rivers, people settled down there and started to build an irrigation system so that they could use the annual floodings and the fertile silt that the rivers left behind. This territory was called Mesopotamia - between rivers - by the Greeks.
Mesopotamia is loated in the Middle East on the Fertile Crescent between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. That is in present-day Iraq and some other Middle Eastern countries.
The Ancient Near Eastern Chalcolithic (Ubaid period, Naqada culture) civilization, especially in the Fertile Crescent (Levant and Mesopotamia).
Mesopotamia is loated in the Middle East on the Fertile Crescent between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. That is in present-day Iraq and some other Middle Eastern countries.
The fertile crescent is a crescent-shaped area in the Middle east. It is composed of Mesopotamia, the area between the rivers Tigris and Euphrates (Iraq and eastern Syria) and the Levant, the coastal areas on the Mediterranean (the coastal area of Syria, Lebanon and part of Israel). The ancient civilisations of this area were the Sumerians, Assyrians, Babylonians and Phoenicians.
he Taurus Mountains, the Zagros Mountains, and the Caucasus MountainsRead more: What_mountain_ranges_help_define_the_fertile_crescent