corn
Early Native American farmers used their agricultural techniques to domesticate corn. Despite this, their farms were generally unproductive and they relied heavily on hunting and gathering.
The Pilgrims' first corn crop was so successful because the pilgrims were taught methods of crop planting and fertilization by the Native Americans, such as burying a fish with seeds to fertilize them.
No, corn or maize was native to America and had been domesticated by the Native Americans. Native Americans taught the inexperienced pilgrims to plant corn. The English carried seeds back home and corn became a crop in many European countries as well.
tobacco
Corn/ maize Maize- a earlyer verison of corn. now days people call it corn. Back then they called is Maize
thanksgiving?
tobacco
tobacco
corn
Field Corn
its corn
Squash. Maize
Wheat just like we do today
corn,rice and etc.
thanksgiving?
thanksgiving?
Crop rotation has been part of agriculture since virtually the very beginnings of agriculture, so it is impossible to know the name of the individual who had the idea. Every early agrarian society has had some form of crop rotation. The native Americans even had the idea of beneficial interplantings.