"By far the greater part of Asia remains uncultivated, primarily because climatic and soil conditions are unfavourable. Conversely, in the best growing areas an extraordinarily intensive agriculture is practiced, made possible by irrigating the alluvial soils of the great river deltas and valleys. Of the principal crops cultivated, rice, sugarcane, and, in Central Asia, sugar beets require the most water. Legumes, root crops, and cereals other than rice can be grown even on land watered only by natural precipitation" This is from a website called https://www.britannica.com/place/Asia/Agriculture
<h2>Demilitarized zone</h2>
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The highest court of the <span>U.S.</span>
This process is called irrigation, and it is claimed that irrigation was developed there (and it was also developed in China independently around the same time).
In Mesopotamia people used an irrigation of canals: they had built a number of small channels that diverted the water from the rivers towards the fields.
In Egypt, the water of flooding was stored and re-introduced at a later time to prolong the "flooding" period.
(Egypt and Mesopotamia were two regions in the Fertile Crescent)
That statement is true.
The research subjects usually required to follow a certain regimen, diet, or even drug consumption in order to gauge the effect that they would have after it'sall done. Sometimes, the effects actually cause several negative characteristics that might make the subjects unable to function as good as they do before the experiment.