Absolutely, it's done all the time. All you need to do is just rely on the water that comes in drops from the sky, called rain.
The Los Angeles basin was quite arid prior to the introduction of irrigation. Without irrigation, Las Vegas Nevada will wither. Without irrigation, the garden would wither and die.
Steel plow, irrigation, fertilizers, hydraulic gardening, and farm machineary.
If you can't use gravity you have to use a pump of some sort.
Examples of irrigation system are,Perennial irrigation (Dams)Direct irrigation (river canal irrigation)Storage irrigation (tanks and resevoirs)
mainly the man made resources are: chemical fertilisers pesticides farm machinery HYV seeds and many modern irrigation methods
Farm application and areas where you need a large ammount of water to cover a large area. An application of this may be a farm, where they have canals leading into and out of the farm. Tank irrigation is used for storage of water for later, or immediate application to plants. An application for tank irrigation may be a farm in a arid climate. Thank you
Without water irrigation, the desert areas would be too arid, and food plants would be unable to grow as a farm crop.
They used irrigation systems to farm in the desert area
They used irrigation.
brings water to the land
If water is available for irrigation a desert can be farmed.
Irrigation is needed to farm in the desert.
It let them farm, and have the plants get enough water
By providing stored water for irrigation.
They had to build terraces and irrigation systems.
The People of mesopotamia develop a irrigation system because they didn't want to keep on going to the river to get there water. Also it was hard to farm without irrigation. The irrigation system made farming easier and help people get more water.
In the 19th century, farm irrigation systems typically relied on gravity to distribute water from a water source, such as a river or reservoir, to the fields. Channels or ditches were dug to divert water to the crops, and levees or gates were used to control the flow of water. Some systems also utilized primitive pumps or windmills to lift water from a source to higher elevation areas. These irrigation systems required manual labor to operate and maintain, and were often supplemented by rainfall to ensure adequate water supply for crops.