The Central Valley, a major agricultural area, dominates the state's center. |
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The government hopes to industrialize some of the agricultural regions. |
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Filing with the state generally is required to perfect an agricultural lien unless the collateral is in the possession of the lienholder. |
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But aleyrodid pests of agricultural crops are usually highly polyphagous, and a good portion of aleyrodids on palms come from their ranks. |
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For the sake of this support, the party advocated for agricultural tariffs, for antimargarine laws, and for restrictions on meat importation. |
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It is no wonder that itinerant agricultural workers travel on the toby and sleep in casual wards between jobs. |
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Section 404 of the Clean Water Act does not regulate activities such as drainage, ditching, and channelization for agricultural production. |
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He helped transform agricultural practices by inventing or improving numerous implements. |
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In the past tidal flats were considered unhealthy, economically unimportant areas and were often dredged and developed into agricultural land. |
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Erosion causes loss of the fertile top soil and reduces its fertility and quality of the agricultural produce. |
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Beginning in the 1950s these agricultural methods became increasingly more sophisticated. |
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Climate change in the recent past may be detected by corresponding changes in settlement and agricultural patterns. |
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In Roman Britain, embankments were built around the Wash's margins to protect agricultural land from flooding. |
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With the support of this drainage system, the Fenland has become a major arable agricultural region in Britain for grains and vegetables. |
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The Fens are particularly fertile, containing around half of the grade 1 agricultural land in England. |
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The natural gas and coal consumed by the production of nitrogen fertilizer can account for over half of the agricultural energy usage. |
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The energy used to manufacture farm machinery is also a form of indirect agricultural energy consumption. |
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Maerl has been extracted for centuries mainly for use as an agricultural fertilizer. |
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Humankind has increased the rate of phosphorus cycling on Earth by four times, mainly due to agricultural fertilizer production and application. |
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Draining of submerged wetlands is often used to reclaim land for agricultural use. |
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In the Great Plains, wind erosion of agricultural land is a significant problem, and is mainly driven by the prevailing wind. |
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Rollo shared out the large estates with his companions and gave agricultural land to his other followers. |
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Early tribal peoples migrated to the Nile River where they developed a settled agricultural economy and more centralised society. |
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The agricultural turned healing god Eshmun was worshipped at Carthage, as were other deities. |
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This land contained some of the most fertile agricultural land upon which the agricultural economy had been constructed. |
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Javan rice terraces have existed for more than a millennium, and had supported ancient agricultural kingdoms. |
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About 73 percent of Japan is forested, mountainous and unsuitable for agricultural, industrial or residential use. |
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The other category of agricultural diversity is called interspecific diversity and refers to the number and types of different species. |
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The control of associated biodiversity is one of the great agricultural challenges that farmers face. |
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If a crop fails in a monoculture, we rely on agricultural diversity to replant the land with something new. |
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Even an agricultural society which primarily grows monocultures, relies on biodiversity at some point. |
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Some rodent species are serious agricultural pests, eating large quantities of food stored by humans. |
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These have been associated with the intensification of agricultural practices. |
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It is extensively, and usually unsuccessfully, persecuted as an agricultural pest. |
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Usually, it is regarded as a pest, since it consumes agricultural products and spreads disease to humans and their domestic animals. |
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It has a wide variety of landscapes, from the rich agricultural straths in the east, to the high mountains of the southern Highlands. |
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The roots then improve water quality by consuming nutrient pollutants, such as from agricultural runoff. |
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The plant suffered a decline due to changing agricultural practices throughout the 1970s and 1980s in Britain. |
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This has generated strong interest in practical applications that use these fungi in the biological control of these agricultural pests. |
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Since it shares its climate and agricultural practices with Northern Europe, Lithuanian cuisine has some similarities to Scandinavian cuisine. |
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Africa is starting to focus on agricultural innovation as its new engine for regional trade and prosperity. |
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The earlier inhabitants of the Balkan Peninsula were an agricultural people who, using Animism, assigned a spirit to every aspect of nature. |
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Other older gods of the agricultural world fused with those of the more powerful invaders or else faded into insignificance. |
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Numerous such agricultural products retain their native names in the English and Spanish lexicons. |
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The major environmental threats to the Gulf are agricultural runoff and oil drilling. |
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Also, nutriments from agricultural fertilizers and wastewater from the cities, that end up in the sea, could also make the algae bloom. |
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The growth in tourism has positively affected the agricultural, commercial, and finance industries, as well as the construction industry. |
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Historians have debated whether economic differences between the industrial Northeast and the agricultural South helped cause the war. |
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High nutrient levels such as those found in runoff from agricultural areas can harm the reef by encouraging the growth of algae. |
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Continuing industrial and agricultural developments place huge strain on these freshwater systems. |
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They were ground into mortar, used as filler in roads, and used as a source of lime in agricultural fertilizer. |
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After 1950, the conversion of forests and wetlands for agricultural and urban developments accelerated. |
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They have been drained to create agricultural land or filled to accommodate urban sprawl. |
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Traditional folk music, both song and dance, was important in the agricultural communities. |
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Mary's, he sowed gorse and trees to provide shelter for the agricultural land. |
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The stock market crash of 1929 and the Great Depression resulted in widespread unemployment, worsened by drought and low agricultural prices. |
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The forest is protected as a national park, limiting development and agricultural use to protect the landscape and wildlife. |
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A large area of the downs is now protected from further agricultural damage by the East Hampshire Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. |
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The economy of the area is largely agricultural and rural with farming using most of the land area. |
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The south shore of the harbour, including Wytch Heath and Godlingstone Heath, is open heathland of little agricultural use. |
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Caterpillars as a rule are voracious feeders and many of them are among the most serious of agricultural pests. |
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In many areas of the world, dairy rations also commonly include byproducts from other agricultural sectors. |
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Feeding of byproducts can reduce the environmental impact of other agricultural sectors by keeping these materials out of landfills. |
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In the first years of the nineteenth century, the Isle of Wight was established as a successful agricultural base, and there was some fishing. |
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New Zealand is heavily dependent on international trade, particularly in agricultural products. |
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Wool was New Zealand's major agricultural export during the late 19th century. |
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The major agricultural products can be broadly grouped into foods, fibers, fuels, and raw materials. |
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In the vast human pantheon of agricultural deities there are several deities who combined the functions of agriculture and war. |
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In addition, incidences of death, injury and illness related to agricultural activities often go unreported. |
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This is an approach that verifies values and rewards the benefits of ecosystem services provided by green agricultural practices. |
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The twenty largest countries by agricultural output in 2015, according to the IMF and CIA World Factbook. |
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Agricultural policy is the set of government decisions and actions relating to domestic agriculture and imports of foreign agricultural products. |
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Governments usually implement agricultural policies with the goal of achieving a specific outcome in the domestic agricultural product markets. |
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There are many influences on the creation of agricultural policy, including consumers, agribusiness, trade lobbies and other groups. |
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These subdivisions are hunting and gathering, pastoral, horticultural, agricultural, and feudal. |
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Agrarian societies use agricultural technological advances to cultivate crops over a large area. |
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Now the surplus was not just agricultural goods, but also manufactured goods. |
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However the nobility responded with a new agricultural system that restored prosperity. |
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Those who resisted were arrested and deported and agricultural productivity greatly declined. |
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Where, in these pinchbeck days, can we hope to find the old agricultural virtue in all its purity? |
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This is consistent with the spread of agricultural peoples from the Middle East at about that time. |
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Another idea is that the Viking population had exceeded the agricultural potential of their homeland. |
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However, no rise in population, youth bulge, or decline in agricultural production during this period has been definitively demonstrated. |
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The engravings show depictions of a wide range of topics including agricultural and war scenes alongside more abstract symbols. |
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Morocco's major exports are phosphates and agricultural produce, and as in Egypt and Tunisia, the tourist industry is essential to the economy. |
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The Pechenegs were nomads roaming the steppe raising livestock which they traded with the Rus' for agricultural goods and other products. |
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Draught animals were first used about 4,000 BC in the Middle East, increasing agricultural production immeasurably. |
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A still lower class, according to their assigned values, were the agricultural slaves. |
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During the 12th century, population levels rose and extensive tracts of new agricultural land were brought into production. |
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The Bafours were primarily agricultural, and among the first Saharan people to abandon their historically nomadic lifestyle. |
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Some bought up large amounts of the rich agricultural land, others organised the exploitation and modernisation of mines and harbours. |
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Madagascar's natural resources include a variety of unprocessed agricultural and mineral resources. |
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Again, the fact that Europe in the early Middle Ages was largely rural and agricultural influenced folk medical practices at the time. |
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A significant portion of its economy involves tourism and trade of fish, dates, and certain agricultural produce. |
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However, with irrigation from the Colorado River, this area has become truly an agricultural center. |
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This mite was collected at the Maui Community College agricultural field on popolo berry on 19 July 1995 by C. McGrath. |
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He redistributed land, founded agricultural schools to improve farming techniques, and took a personal interest in the expansion of exports. |
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The Zanj who were taken as slaves to the Middle East were often used in strenuous agricultural work. |
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There was no research being conducted in either medical or agricultural sciences. |
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In the 1970s, a major water project brought Orange River water, via the Fish River, for agricultural and industrial use. |
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Cuba's leadership has called for reforms in the country's agricultural system. |
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Santa Catarina has one of the highest standards of living in Brazil, and is a major industrial and agricultural center. |
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Pachacuti is thought to have built Machu Picchu, either as a family home or summer retreat, although it may have been an agricultural station. |
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At that time, they were sedentary and agricultural, subsisting largely on manioc, maize, wild game, and honey. |
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The country's main economic sectors are tourism, tea export, clothing, rice production and other agricultural products. |
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A few Spaniards acquired prime agricultural lands left vacant by the indigenous demographic disaster. |
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Missions were established to convert the locals, and manage the agricultural industry. |
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Mexico is the site of the domestication of maize, tomato and beans, which produced an agricultural surplus. |
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In the 18th century, then, it became a major agricultural and industrial exporter. |
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Significant agricultural production was not achieved until the 18th century, primarily in cacao and cattle. |
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The basic Mesoamerican diet of maize and beans continued, although agricultural output was improved by the introduction of steel tools. |
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They entered the Basin of Mexico around the year 1250 AD, and by then most of the good agricultural land had already been claimed. |
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These conquests provided the new empire with a large influx of tribute, especially agricultural goods. |
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Wholesale vendors focus on agricultural products such as wood, livestock and food products. |
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Panama's economy is also very much supported by the trade and export of coffee and other agricultural products. |
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Trujillo is an agricultural, commercial and transport center due to production areas that account. |
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Today, Jauja is a city whose main activity is in the retail trade of agricultural products produced in the Mantaro Valley. |
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Supplying the armies, both in the Netherlands and in Germany, proved a boon for the agricultural areas in the Dutch inland provinces. |
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Major agricultural outputs of the state are tobacco, poultry, cotton, cattle, dairy products, soybeans, hay, rice, and swine. |
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Maine's agricultural outputs include poultry, eggs, dairy products, cattle, wild blueberries, apples, maple syrup, and maple sugar. |
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More problems built up with the boll weevil infestation, when thousands of agricultural jobs were lost. |
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Other horse breeds developed specifically for light agricultural work, carriage and road work, various sport disciplines, or simply as pets. |
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In the days of the Soviet Union, the Aral Sea was tapped for agricultural irrigation, largely of cotton, and now salination is widespread. |
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In addition, agricultural plantations increased significantly and became a key aspect in many societies. |
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In Asia, it became an agricultural mainstay and this region is now the largest producer in the world. |
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He then returned to Shanghai around April, turning his attention to the study of military and agricultural subjects. |
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This influx caused a relative decrease in the value of these metals in comparison with agricultural and craft products. |
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In some remote areas, agricultural terms used by the rural workers may have been derived from Norman French. |
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When the Spanish arrived in 1494, except for small agricultural clearings, the country was deeply forested. |
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There is a considerable amount of technical support for transport and agricultural aviation. |
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Being a newly industrialized country, Mexico maintains both modern and outdated industrial and agricultural facilities and operations. |
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Above all, they continued the agricultural work at home to feed their families and the armies. |
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While the southern two counties have historically been predominantly agricultural, New Castle County has been more industrialized. |
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Delaware's agricultural output consists of poultry, nursery stock, soybeans, dairy products and corn. |
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Changes to the labor structure and an agricultural depression throughout the South caused severe losses in wealth. |
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It also connected the burgeoning agricultural production of the Midwest and shipping on the Great Lakes, with the port of New York City. |
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New Orleans was already important for shipping agricultural goods to and from the areas of the United States west of the Appalachian Mountains. |
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Consequently, administrative law is a significant component of the discipline of agricultural law. |
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It became increasingly agricultural and was socially organised around the hierarchy of the four varnas, or social classes. |
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Hundreds of men, women, and children from Sandino's agricultural colony were executed later. |
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Nicaragua's agricultural sector has benefited because of the country's strong ties to Venezuela. |
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Rural workers are dependent on agricultural wage labor, especially in coffee and cotton. |
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The growth in tourism has also positively affected the agricultural, commercial, and finance industries, as well as the construction industry. |
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The majority of the country's employment is provided by its agricultural and manufacturing sectors. |
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Massive industrialisation eventually caused young men to move to urban centres, depressing agricultural productivity. |
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In 1980, the Soviet Union took first place in Europe and second worldwide in terms of industrial and agricultural production, respectively. |
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Significant imports of potash obtained from the ashes of trees burned in opening new agricultural lands were imported. |
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The great empires depended on military annexation of territory and on the formation of defended settlements to become agricultural centres. |
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Nearly all the agricultural civilizations have been heavily constrained by their environments. |
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Cotton was a staple that could be stored for long periods and shipped long distances, unlike most agricultural products. |
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Cast iron became widely used, and many towns had foundries producing industrial and agricultural machinery. |
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They were protesting agricultural mechanization and other harsh conditions. |
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A flail is an agricultural tool used for threshing, the process of separating grains from their husks. |
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As with most agricultural tools, flails were often used as weapons by farmers who may have lacked better weapons. |
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The Swing Riots were a widespread uprising in 1830 by agricultural workers in southern and eastern England. |
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These cities drew in the population that was rapidly growing due to increased agricultural output. |
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Some 60 percent of the child labour was involved in agricultural activities such as farming, dairy, fisheries and forestry. |
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Millions of children worked in colonial agricultural plantations, mines and domestic service industries. |
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With a low population, agricultural productivity was higher and families did not face starvation as in established industrialised countries. |
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A row of cottages, housing agricultural workers and a museum, and a row of seated statues commemorate the martyrs. |
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Historically, this loess belt has underlain some of Germany's richest agricultural regions. |
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Between the constituent urban areas are relatively open suburbs and some open land with agricultural fields. |
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The increased population growth rate was stimulated by Mughal agrarian reforms that intensified agricultural production. |
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During the 13th century, agricultural land around the town was acquired by Fountains and Furness Abbeys. |
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The method of harvesting of energy wood can be mechanized by adaptation of specialized agricultural machinery. |
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Remains of agricultural settlements from the Bronze Age have been found near the shores of Coniston Water. |
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Dry stone retaining walls were once built in great numbers for agricultural terracing and also to carry paths, roads and railways. |
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Surrey's agricultural wealth was limited by the infertility of most of its soils. |
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Unsustainable agricultural practices are the single greatest contributor to the global increase in erosion rates. |
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The tillage of agricultural lands, which breaks up soil into finer particles, is one of the primary factors. |
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The Royal Cheshire Show, an annual agricultural show, has taken place for the last 175 years and includes exhibitions, games and competitions. |
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Nottingham Trent University also has an agricultural college near Southwell, while the University of Nottingham has one at Sutton Bonington. |
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The primary agricultural use of the Cheshire Plain is dairy farming, creating the general appearance of enclosed hedgerow fields. |
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Other initiatives included the standardization of all weights and measures throughout the kingdom, and an agricultural survey and registry. |
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These reforms were possible because agricultural prices steadily rose in the second half of the century. |
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Between 5,000 BC and 4,000 BC the earliest agricultural settlements appeared around the Oslofjord. |
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Leeds developed as a market town in the Middle Ages as part of the local agricultural economy. |
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The alluvium provided fertile agricultural land and the river itself stocks of fish. |
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This left behind a legacy of fine agricultural soil and created a booming farming industry. |
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Between 100 AD and the present, they were drained and converted to agricultural land. |
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Early agricultural peoples preferred good forests on hillsides with good drainage, and traces of cattle enclosures are evident there. |
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Merrivale Quarry continued excavating and working its own granite until the 1970s, producing gravestones and agricultural rollers. |
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To do this, the commission bought large amounts of former agricultural land, eventually becoming the largest land owner in Britain. |
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Such rights sometimes had the effect of preventing enclosure and building development on agricultural land. |
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This may be where commons are in agricultural use, but where it can be difficult to reach agreement on collective management. |
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But the agricultural laborer and the unagricultural ruricolist can no longer be ignored. |
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In the Netherlands, the most problematic agricultural waste is liquid pig manure or pig slurry. |
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Also, societies cannot be dichotomized into hunter-gatherer bands and agricultural civilizations. |
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The largest industry is tourism, but the island also has a strong agricultural heritage, including sheep and dairy farming and arable crops. |
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Barley and wheat were the most common agricultural products and were used for baking a certain flat type of bread as well as brewing beer. |
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Enclosure of common land and the related agricultural revolution made a supply of this labour readily available. |
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Even before the 8th century was out, the Farmer's Law signalled the resurrection of agricultural technologies in the Roman Empire. |
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Fertilizer runoff from surrounding agricultural land has exacerbated the problem and led to increased eutrophication. |
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Those who survived focused on their agricultural duties to grow food and stay alive. |
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The plough represents one of the major agricultural inventions in human history. |
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The community at Hallstatt was untypical of the wider, mainly agricultural, culture, as its booming economy exploited the salt mines in the area. |
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However, except for the provinces along the lower Rhine, the agricultural economy was generally doing well. |
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Veterinary physicians were there to tend to livestock for agricultural purposes as well as combat purposes. |
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Most medieval settlements remained small, with agricultural land and large zones of unpopulated and lawless wilderness in between. |
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Henry became the focus of discontent as the population, agricultural production, prices, the wool trade and credit declined in the Great Slump. |
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Following the Black Death and the agricultural depression of the late 15th century, population began to increase. |
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As of 2012 Tomatoes surpassed soy as the most profitable crop in Virginia in 2006, with peanuts and hay as other agricultural products. |
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New France had a rather small population, which resulted from more emphasis being placed on the fur trade rather than agricultural settlements. |
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France's population and agricultural capacity far outstripped that of Britain. |
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The boll weevil infestation and agricultural problems had cost sharecroppers and farmers their jobs. |
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Lincolnshire and Rutland are very agricultural, with much of the UK's arable crops grown in this area. |
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The economy in Norfolk, Cambridgeshire and Suffolk is traditionally mostly agricultural. |
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Further problems were lower rents and lower demand for food, both of which cut into agricultural income. |
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Queen Victoria and the Prince of Wales attended to view a working dairy, agricultural machinery and a wide range of farm animals. |
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How much of our current agricultural policy can we lay at the feet of the Iowa caucuses? |
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These are usually designed to resemble a small agricultural tractor, with the cutting deck mounted amidships between the front and rear axles. |
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Drilling is the term used for the mechanised sowing of an agricultural crop. |
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In 1854 British governor William Reid launched an agricultural show at Buskett which is still being held today. |
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This new approach sheds new light on the agricultural and horticultural practices of the Vikings and therefore also on their cuisine. |
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The structure of the Pakistani economy has changed from a mainly agricultural to a strong service base. |
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Mughal Viceroys promoted agricultural expansion and turned Bengal into the rice basket of the Indian subcontinent. |
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Physiocrats believed that only agricultural production generated a clear surplus over cost, so that agriculture was the basis of all wealth. |
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The land use is predominantly agricultural and the county is well known for its fruit and cider production, and the Hereford cattle breed. |
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The agricultural economy has changed massively in recent years within the county. |
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In the last few years, soft fruits such as strawberries have become a new and rapidly expanding area of the agricultural economy of the county. |
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The agricultural produce of Herefordshire is represented by the bull's head, fleece, hops and apples. |
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When related to other data sources such as housing or agricultural censuses, or sample surveys, the data becomes even more useful. |
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Furthermore, the development of tithe as a compulsory tax on agricultural production resulted in greatly increased incomes for incumbent clergy. |
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Black African slave labor from Portugal's West African possessions was imported to do the grueling agricultural work. |
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Tighe was an agricultural theorist, and provided the younger man with a great deal of material on chemistry, biology and statistics. |
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Louis Renault enlarged Renault's scope after 1918, producing agricultural and industrial machinery. |
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In hill states of India, besides fuelwood and timber, the local people use oak wood for making agricultural implements. |
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Much of the area is still rural in nature with many villages surrounded by agricultural land. |
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Danish dishes are highly seasonal, stemming from the country's agricultural past, its geography, and its climate of long, cold winters. |
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The common agricultural policy of the EU does not apply to the Crown dependencies. |
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Moreover, these new monasteries, and the Cistercian ones in particular, introduced new agricultural practices. |
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The officers of the infantry were from the upper classes and aristocracy, while the rank and file were made up of poor agricultural workers. |
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The process of enclosure began to be a widespread feature of the English agricultural landscape during the 16th century. |
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The loss of agricultural labour also hurt others like millers whose livelihood relied on agricultural produce. |
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Enclosure was not simply the fencing of existing holdings, but led to fundamental changes in agricultural practice. |
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While encouraging agricultural productivity, the British also provided economic incentives to have more children to help in the fields. |
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Poland was developing as a feudal state, with a predominantly agricultural economy and an increasingly powerful landed nobility. |
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Thanks to the Plan, during 1952, it went up 35 percent of the industrial and agricultural. |
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Major agricultural products include rice, wheat, oilseed, cotton, jute, tea, sugarcane, and potatoes. |
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An overwhelmingly rural and mainly agricultural region, the Southern Uplands are partly forested and contain many areas of open moorland. |
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While most of the land is either open or mountainous land, there is a significant amount of agricultural activity within the park. |
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At the time, there was no example of a successful agricultural integration in Europe. |
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As part of building a common market, tariffs on agricultural products would have to be removed. |
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Outside Brussels proper, the farming lobby's power has been a factor determining EU agricultural policy since the earliest days of integration. |
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Faced with the increasingly angry reaction of the agricultural community, Mansholt was soon forced to reduce the scope of some of his proposals. |
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This new definition is aimed to exclude payments to applicants who exercise no real or tangible agricultural activity on their land. |
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In the last round of world trade negotiations rich countries promised to cut agricultural subsidies. |
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A common view is that the CAP has traditionally promoted a large expansion in agricultural production. |
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Research suggests that hydraulic fracturing wells have an adverse impact on agricultural productivity in the vicinity of the wells. |
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Monitoring is also carried out of many discharges to the aquatic environment including sewage effluents and trade and agricultural discharges. |
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No EU country achieves full compliance with the directive, mainly because of the geological nature of its soil and agricultural activity. |
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Russia, for example, remained largely rural and agricultural, and its autocratic rulers kept the peasants in serfdom. |
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They are complicated by climate change and changes in agricultural practices. |
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In addition, agricultural productivity remains low, and frequent droughts still beset the country, also leading to internal displacement. |
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Many other economic activities depend on agriculture, including marketing, processing, and export of agricultural products. |
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There are four main seasons around which pastoral and agricultural life revolve, and these are dictated by shifts in the wind patterns. |
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The Kenyan Highlands are one of the most successful agricultural production regions in Africa. |
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Despite low tax rates, agricultural assistance is the highest among OECD countries and a potential impediment to structural change. |
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According to the USDA in 2011, the three largest California agricultural products by value were milk and cream, shelled almonds, and grapes. |
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The Dutch agricultural sector is highly mechanised, and has a strong focus on international exports. |
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The Dutch rank second worldwide in value of agricultural exports, behind only the United States. |
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Generally speaking, predominantly agricultural or built environments became constituents of Brabant, while other parts devolved to Breda. |
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Generally speaking, predominantly agricultural or built environments became constituents of Brabant and other parts devolved to Breda. |
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The Neolithic Revolution was characterized by people moving from nomadic lifestyles to agricultural lifestyles. |
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The level of protection in commodity trade has been low, except for agricultural products. |
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While the volcanic ash has resulted in fertile soils, it makes agricultural conditions unpredictable in some areas. |
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The transition into the subsequent Neolithic period is chiefly defined by the unprecedented development of nascent agricultural practices. |
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In this time, the priesthood was the only path for those whose inclinations were academic rather than mercantile or agricultural. |
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Rural boards favoured economy and the release of children for agricultural labour. |
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Italian Sikhs are generally involved in agriculture, agricultural processing, the manufacture of machine tools and horticulture. |
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The Scottish Land Court has jurisdiction over disputes involving agricultural tenancies and crofting rights. |
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Work on field systems and environmental archaeology has also highlighted how much agricultural practice continued and changed over the period. |
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Gordon Childe to describe the first in a series of agricultural revolutions in Middle Eastern history. |
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Once early farmers perfected their agricultural techniques like irrigation, their crops would yield surpluses that needed storage. |
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The territory between the Danube and the Tisza rivers was a powerhouse of agricultural knowledge. |
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Iron was mainly used for agricultural and other tools, whereas ritual and ceremonial artifacts were mainly made of bronze. |
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The farmers, especially around Llanbrynmair, employed their agricultural labourers in spinning and weaving in the winter months. |
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Many of the migrants came from the rural parts of west Wales which had been affected by an agricultural depression. |
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It acted as a proxy for the agricultural quality, natural resource availability, and arability of a parcel of land. |
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As a result, much former agricultural land was bought, and new Council Housing was built. |
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As world trade slumped, demand for South African agricultural and mineral exports fell drastically. |
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Livestock are domesticated animals raised in an agricultural setting to produce commodities such as meat, milk, leather, and wool. |
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Water pollution from agricultural runoff causes dead zones for plants and aquatic animals due to the lack of oxygen in the water. |
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The interwar agricultural depression aggravated traditional income inequality, raising fertility and impeding the spread of mass schooling. |
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Jibla was strategically near the Sulayhid dynasty source of wealth, the agricultural central highlands. |
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The economy also boomed due to the agricultural development programs instituted by the kings who promoted massive cultivation of palms. |
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Some agricultural practices are drying the Sana'a Basin and displaced vital crops, which has resulted in increasing food prices. |
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Half of agricultural water in Yemen is used to grow khat, a drug that many Yemenis chew. |
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Pembrokeshire is well known for its excellent food, having capitalised on the quality of its agricultural produce. |
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In the medieval agricultural year, Lammas also marked the end of the hay harvest that had begun after Midsummer. |
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Of 5,981 agricultural holdings, more than half were between 5 and 50 acres. |
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In the 1960s, larger sections of swamps and bogs in Western Russia were drained for agricultural and mining purposes. |
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Increased nutrients, ascribed to agricultural runoff, have been cited as contributing to jellyfish proliferation. |
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For example, about 4000 BC the Nile was dammed to improve agricultural productivity of previously barren lands. |
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The tenants came from Sir Vere Hunt's Irish estate and they experienced agricultural difficulties while on the island. |
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The colours, instead, respectively represent the cities of Palermo and Corleone, at those times an agricultural city of renown. |
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In the 16th century the Portuguese started building levadas or aqueducts to carry water to the agricultural regions in the south. |
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They are usually restricted to ancient agricultural land and only rarely penetrate into undisturbed native vegetation. |
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Much of the population of the Scandinavian Peninsula is naturally concentrated in its southern part, which is also its agricultural region. |
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Wheat, poultry, dairy, beef, and pork, as well as internationally recognised processed foods are the primary French agricultural exports. |
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