Want this question answered?
NO ,it is not true...fertile soil contain nutrients
Alluvial soil comes from the floodplains, streams and rivers; most especially from fertile farmland. It is deposited in the delta or mouth of a river.
red soil is not so fertile that is why the crops are grown in the rainy season in the red soil because they cannot contain moisture
When floods run down they also bring a lot of organic material along with them. Floods also tend to grind up stones/sand to a certain degree. Where the flood deposits this material it helps fertilize the soil. A lot of water keeps the soil very moist, which also increases the rate of organic material to decompose (Bacteria and various insects/larva and of course also fungus does this) Decomposed organic material are the building blocks for new plant life. As we humans eat dead animals (Meat, although not decomposed), plants "eat" or rather suck up the nutrition from the decomposed material left around.
High islands, especially ones with volcanoes, usually contain fertile soil.
Floodplains are good farming areas because they have fertile soil due to regular flooding that deposits nutrient-rich sediments. The water also helps to irrigate crops during dry periods, reducing the need for additional watering. Finally, floodplains can support a variety of crops and vegetation due to the diverse habitats created by the mixture of water and land.
NO ,it is not true...fertile soil contain nutrients
Yes, ancient farmers often lived next to floodplains because floodplains provided fertile soil for agriculture. The annual flooding of the nearby rivers deposited nutrient-rich sediment onto the floodplains, making the land ideal for farming. Farmers utilized the regular inundation of floodwaters to irrigate their crops and maximize agricultural production.
Alluvial soil comes from the floodplains, streams and rivers; most especially from fertile farmland. It is deposited in the delta or mouth of a river.
They can fertile soil from mountain slopes onto their floodplains to the south
red soil is not so fertile that is why the crops are grown in the rainy season in the red soil because they cannot contain moisture
because rice need fertile soil and ganga and brahmaputra basin contain fertile soil
When floods run down they also bring a lot of organic material along with them. Floods also tend to grind up stones/sand to a certain degree. Where the flood deposits this material it helps fertilize the soil. A lot of water keeps the soil very moist, which also increases the rate of organic material to decompose (Bacteria and various insects/larva and of course also fungus does this) Decomposed organic material are the building blocks for new plant life. As we humans eat dead animals (Meat, although not decomposed), plants "eat" or rather suck up the nutrition from the decomposed material left around.
High islands, especially ones with volcanoes, usually contain fertile soil.
fertile and drain well
On a steep slope where the climate is dry
:) It depends what kind of soil you use and how often it rains.