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drip irrigation
Producers in the southwestern United States must use irrigation most of the time to raise crops, simply because, most of the time, there's insufficient moisture, without irrigation, to raise and produce crops. So the answer to this question is no.
they used the irrigation system and sand bags Ryley,albino69
Irrigation systems would be particularly important for early North Americans in arid regions such as the Southwest, where water availability is limited. Building irrigation systems would have enabled them to support agricultural practices and sustain communities in these dry environments.
There's not enough rain to water the crops. The farmers have to get the water that runs off the mountains to where the crops are.
I believe it was (south) india.
Sonora (bordering Arizona), due to extensive artificial irrigation.
Nutrient-rich soil is not a likely outcome after extensive irrigation of dry farmland
It provides irrigation.
The Negev Desert
drip irrigation
Pre-Columbian tribes in the northeast practiced a mix of agriculture, including growing crops such as maize, beans, and squash. They used a system called "slash and burn" agriculture in which they cleared land by cutting and burning vegetation before planting crops. These tribes also practiced crop rotation and intercropping to maintain soil fertility and maximize yields.
extensive deep-water irrigation wells
The moat system of irrigation is used to bring buckets of water where the water is needed. There is a pulley system in this form of irrigation that pulls water to where it will be needed, making it easier for the farmers who no longer have to carry the water to where it belongs.
Mid west
Coastal valley
Irrigation is the prime method used.