A standard bale of cotton in India is 170 kilograms (375 lbs US), compared with 218 kilograms (480 lbs US). Bales of cotton can vary in weight from this standard because of variability in ginning operations but, whenever numbers of bales are quoted in reports, this measure, sometimes described as a "statistical bale", is applied.
The largest producers of cotton, currently (2009), are China and India, with annual production of about 34 million bales and 24 million bales, respectively; most of this production is consumed by their respective textile industries. The largest exporters of raw cotton are the United States.
At the onset of the US Civil War, British textile mills, that were large importers of Southern cotton were not affected in that approximately one million bales of surplus cotton were stored in Liverpool warehouses. As the war progressed, however, the surplus was used up, and until cotton from other sources were obtained, the British textile mills had to lay off many workers and some mills were closed.
There were many factors that made the South the worlds greatest producers of cotton. The one factor that did not impact the cotton of the South was the discovery of a new breed of cotton.
it is cotton kingdom (a+answer)
Potatoes
One
The largest producers of cotton, currently (2009), are China and India, with annual production of about 34 million bales and 24 million bales, respectively; most of this production is consumed by their respective textile industries. The largest exporters of raw cotton are the United States.
Between 1.6 million and 2.3 million bales per year over the last 10 years.
In the south it was cotton. Millions of bales of cotton were produced.
The number of bales that are produced per acre varies a lot by area, soil conditions, type of cotton, and weather conditions. For instance, in Lubbock, Texas in 2012, cotton production varied from 1/2 bale per acre to 4 bales per acre. The higher yields came from fields that were irrigated.
one
At least one.
That depends on what type of bale you're referring to. If you're referring to small square bales, that would be about four. If you're referring to small round bales, that would be only one. Large squares: one third. Large round bales, one half.
100/4 = 25 bales a day 25/5 = 5 bales a day by each animal I assume the animals were elephants!
You can't buy a cotton gin. When Whitney made the first one it was small, but today it is a big building that trucks can drive up to with a cotton trailer filled with raw picked cotton. At that point it is sucked into the gin, cleaned and then comes out in large bales.
That big bale is called a module and there are at least 12 bales to a module.
In the US, it's definitely Texas, which produced over 3.5 million bales of the fiber in 2011 in spite of one of the worst droughts in state history.