There was a surplus of food, and farmers moved to the city.
Early humans gathered food through hunting and foraging. During their time, inhospitable environments forced them to live in groups. As groups grew larger they became tribes. As tribes grew, hunting and foraging became undependable sources of food. This predicament made humans find new ways of getting food, predictable ways. This paved the way for the discovery of agriculture / farming.
The used three different methods to get their food. They grew their own food by farming, they also hunted, and they gathered plants, seeds, and nuts to eat.
tobacco farming and ship building and farming
Farming
The opposite of farming (agriculture) would be hunting or foraging.
it is considered to be important because from farming we get food
farming affected the economy in early amarian western movement by...
Southern society was traditional and based on farming
Non cooperation movement
farming affected the economy in early amarian western movement by...
I would consider this to be in a non-sport catergory. But you to get a good work out :)
Southern society was traditional and based on farming Apex
Environmental changes such as the end of the last Ice Age led to the availability of more stable and predictable food sources, which allowed for experimentation with farming techniques. Additionally, changes in climate and vegetation provided the conditions necessary for the transition from foraging to agriculture.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_were_the_English_settlers_self-sufficient_in_their_new_land" By being successful in living off the land, in foraging and hunting, and then by farming storing and building communities.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_were_the_English_settlers_self-sufficient_in_their_new_land" By being successful in living off the land, in foraging and hunting, and then by farming storing and building communities.
Hunter gatherers began farming as a way to secure a more stable and consistent food supply. Farming allowed them to cultivate their own crops and rear animals, rather than relying solely on foraging for wild plants and hunting animals. This shift also led to the development of settled communities and the eventual establishment of civilizations.