Yes
Corn and wheat were primarily cultivated as main cash crops in the United States, particularly in the Midwest region, known as the "Corn Belt" for corn and the "Wheat Belt" for wheat. States like Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, and Kansas are key producers of these crops. Additionally, corn has historically been significant in regions of Mexico, while wheat has been a staple cash crop in countries like Canada and Russia.
Corn and wheat were primarily the main cash crops in the United States, particularly in the Midwest region known as the "Corn Belt." This area includes states like Iowa, Illinois, and Indiana, where conditions are ideal for growing these crops. Additionally, wheat was also a significant cash crop in the Great Plains states, such as Kansas and Nebraska. These crops played a crucial role in the agricultural economy and food supply of the region.
A cash crop.
the cash crop are the main source of earning foreign exchange
When you sell that crop or grow it to sell
sugarcane and corn
Corn
Corn
Cash crops are crops that make money. Their cash crop is wheat. That farm's cash crop is corn.
Corn and wheat
corn and wheat
it is actually counted as both. it depends on where you are. it is considered a cash crop in Nebraska. it is there most grew crop there. any where else it is a food crop.
corn or soybeans I would think
Yes, it was their main cash crop
Yes but tobacco was the cash crop.
kentucky corn i would think or kentucky peanuts
The cash crop list from several southern colonies included rice, corn, tea and coffee. However, tobacco was the main cash crop in most colonies.