It effects form
land use, the crop cultivated, and the production model
The thirteen colonies with the best soil for large scale agriculture were Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. These colonies had fertile soil that was well-suited for growing cash crops such as tobacco, rice, and indigo.
Mountains do not have the climate nor the soil quality needed to support large scale agriculture. Conditions are often too cold, too harsh, or too unpredictable to maintain a steady growth in crops. The soil is often much too thin and poor quality to be of much value for growing crops on.
The Great Plains have fertile soils that support crop growth and a semi-arid climate that is ideal for agriculture. Additionally, the vast open spaces in the region provide opportunities for large-scale farming operations.
The three map scales are small scale, medium scale, and large scale. Small scale maps cover large areas with less detail, medium scale maps cover regions with more detail, and large scale maps cover smaller areas with the most detail.
The Midwest has fertile soil, abundant rainfall, and a temperate climate that make it well-suited for growing a variety of crops. The flat terrain also allows for large-scale mechanized farming operations, contributing to its productivity in agriculture. Additionally, the region has a strong agricultural infrastructure and transportation network for efficiently distributing crops.
Good growing conditions
Good growing conditions
promote large scale agriculture
because they are stupid
Through the use of dams and canals.
large-scale irrigation
The thirteen colonies with the best soil for large scale agriculture were Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. These colonies had fertile soil that was well-suited for growing cash crops such as tobacco, rice, and indigo.
In the late 19th century, the development of agriculture in California was characterized by large-scale farming. A large amount of migratory workers was another characteristic.
The Sovkhoz was the Soviet agricultural system.
Duan Le has written: 'Some present tasks' 'Towards a large-scale socialist agriculture' -- subject(s): Agriculture, Economic aspects, Economic aspects of Agriculture
Nozipho Shabalala has written: 'Report on the survey of large and small scale agriculture' -- subject(s): Agricultural surveys, Agriculture, Statistics
"Factory farming" is just a phrase coined by animal rights activists to refer to large-scale animal agriculture. So the first improvement would be to simply call it what it is -- large-scale animal agriculture, or, in the US at least, Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations or CAFO's.