The land in Harappa was made fertile primarily due to its location along the Indus River and its tributaries, which provided a consistent supply of water for irrigation. The annual flooding of these rivers deposited nutrient-rich silt onto the surrounding fields, enhancing soil fertility. Additionally, the region's favorable climate, with seasonal rains from the monsoon, further supported agricultural productivity, allowing the Harappan civilization to thrive.
It's called black land because black is fertile soil, and fertile soil is black. Soil is the land so it's named black land.
Harappa is located in Punjab in northeast Pakistan. The ancient village of Harappa is now an archaeological site so the modern village has been resettled 6 kms from there.
Yes.
Various groups from inside and from outside the area sought to control Mesopotamia (Sumer, Akkad, Assyria, Babylon) because of the fertile agricultural land between the rivers. Much of the adjacent geographic areas are comparatively dry.
the Fertile Crescent, the Land Between Two Rivers.
It's called black land because black is fertile soil, and fertile soil is black. Soil is the land so it's named black land.
It's called black land because black is fertile soil, and fertile soil is black. Soil is the land so it's named black land.
Harappa is located in Pakistan so it would be on the continent of Asia.
the reason Egypt's location made it it successful was that it was beside the Nile so the land was fertile to grow crops.
Harappa is located in Punjab in northeast Pakistan. The ancient village of Harappa is now an archaeological site so the modern village has been resettled 6 kms from there.
Since the Fertile Crescent extended from the Persian Gulf till the Nile River Valley. The rivers flooded often and the water extended to the land, as the water returned to the water land, or absorbed into the land, it left a lot of SILT. This element caused the soil to be really rich and fertile. HOPE THIS HELPS :))
Yes.
no
The land is very flat and also very fertile.
they were very lucky because most of their land was on fertile cresent. it was hilly, so the houses were on the hills and the crops were down below the hills, where the fertile was.
Various groups from inside and from outside the area sought to control Mesopotamia (Sumer, Akkad, Assyria, Babylon) because of the fertile agricultural land between the rivers. Much of the adjacent geographic areas are comparatively dry.
No. The "Fertile Crescent" was in Mesopotamia, the land between the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers. Considering that that's modern-day Iraq, it doesn't seem so fertile any more.