Farming Systems in India are strategically utilized, according to the locations where they are most suitable. The farming systems that significantly contribute to the agriculture of India are subsistence farming, organic farming, industrial farming.
Each region in India has a specific soil and climate that is only suitable for certain types of farming. Many regions on the western side of India experience less than 50 cm of rain annually, so the farming systems are restricted to cultivate crops that can withstand drought conditions and farmers are usually restricted to single cropping.
Irrigation farming is when crops are grown with the help of irrigation systems by supplying water to land through rivers, reservoirs, tanks, and wells. Over the last century, the population of India has tripled. With a growing population and increasing demand for food, the necessity of water for agricultural productivity is crucial.
Problems from Irrigation Edit
Because funds and technical expertise were in short supply, many projects moved forward at a slow pace, including The Indira Gandhi Canal project. The central government's transfer of huge amounts of water from Punjab to Haryana and Rajasthan contributed to the civil unrest in Punjab during the 1980s and early 1990s. Problems also have arisen as groundwater supplies used for irrigation face depletion.
Shifting cultivation is a type of subsistence farming where a plot of land is cultivated for a few years until the crop yield declines due to soil exhaustion and the effects of pests and weeds.
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A. federalist
They had a strong national government, they favored the national bank, and their supporters where lawyers, merchants, manufacturers, and clergy(church)
Answer:
The industrial revolution resulted in the development of factories and machinery to be capable of producing items on a mass scale. Mass production was fueled by technological advances from the Industrial Revolutions as well as meeting higher consumer demand as a result of free-market enterprises and wealth.
Answer:
The answer is Option B: He led a revolution against the British who controlled his country.
Explanation:
Jomo Kenyatta is important to the movement for independence in Kenya and in anti-colonial resistance in Africa more widely. He was Prime Minister of Kenya from 1963 to 1964 and then the country's first President from 1964 to 1978. He became the leader of an advocacy group called Kikuyu Central Association (KCA), and published a Kikuyu-language newspaper called Mwigithania that pushed for reforms and he was outspoken in his critique of the colonial policies of the British government. He spent a number of years studying abroad in the UK and the Soviet Union, and then he returned to Kenya and became leader of the Kenya Africa Union. He was arrested and imprisoned for 7 years on allegations he helped to lead the Mau Mau rebellion of 1952 but he always denied involvement.