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irrigation |
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irrigationArtificial water supply for dry agricultural areas by means of dams and channels. Drawbacks are that it tends to concentrate salts at the surface, ultimately causing soil infertility, and that rich river silt is retained at dams, to the impoverishment of the land and fisheries below them. Irrigation has been practised for thousands of years, in Eurasia as well as the Americas. An example is the channelling of the annual Nile flood in Egypt, which has been done from earliest times to its present control by the Aswan High Dam. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| He thinks those higher input costs have knocked 5% to 10% off the Great Plains irrigated land values in the last two years. Today, India has more land in cultivation than the US and the most acres of irrigated land in the world. More and more of the country's irrigated lands inevitably will be abandoned, because the flow of water to Iraq is destined to decline to little more than a trickle. |
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