makes land around it very fertile
How did the nile river shaped ancient egypt
The five longestrivers are - Nile Amazon Yangtze Mississippi - Missouri Yenisei - Angara - Selenga
Useful Wavy Long Beautiful Amazing
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Transport. Drinking water. Water for irrigation. Water for animals. Fishing.
The five agricultural hearths are believed to be the Fertile Crescent in the Middle East, the Nile River Valley in Egypt, the Indus River Valley in South Asia, the Yellow River Valley in China, and Mesoamerica in Mexico and Central America. These regions were where agriculture independently developed and spread to other parts of the world.
The five longest rivers are all over the world. They are: the Nile in Africa, the Amazon in South America, the Yangtze in China, the Mississippi in the United States, and the Yenisei in Russia.
The Delta is formed by the division of the branches of the River Nile as it flows south through the Valley formed by the Nile in Upper Egypt. The river branches spread out in a V-shaped fan and make their way towards the Mediterranean through Lower Egypt. The Delta begins north of Cairo. In ancient times the Nile flood deposited layers of silt in this area, making the deltaic fan expand from east to west and push out into the sea. The construction of the Aswan dam has limited this expansion in modern times and the earlier seven to five branches of the Nile and distributaries have been reduced to two main branches, the Rosetta (Rashid on the west) and the Damietta (Dumyat on the east). This paragraph is copied from: www.dur.ac.uk
Absolutely, it was extremely important. This is because of the five main reasons. 1. The Nile guaranteed water supply. 2. Land alongside the Nile provided a fertile place to grow crops. 3. The climate was warm so it was pleasant to live in. 4. It provided transportation. 5. It encouraged trade.
Most rivers flow through more than one country and the links below will five a full listing.
Absolutely, it was extremely important. This is because of the five main reasons. 1. The Nile guaranteed water supply. 2. Land alongside the Nile provided a fertile place to grow crops. 3. The climate was warm so it was pleasant to live in. 4. It provided transportation. 5. It encouraged trade.