Further, large tracts of its marshy breeding grounds were rendered unsuitable as they were drained and cleared for cultivation. |
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Moral development is a prerequisite for the cultivation of Meditation and Wisdom. |
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Such climatical conditions are conducive for the cultivation of mulberry trees, sericulture and fish farming. |
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They can be modified and refined through cultivation, but must also come naturally. |
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The ancestors of modern professors, humanists tried to reconcile labor with the cultivation of idleness based on classical paradigms. |
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In the US, however, despite the high paddy productivity, farmers find its cultivation uneconomical. |
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This created peer pressure and the cultivation of rough manners, coarse language and status symbols like the body tattoos. |
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Admittedly, dictatorships do not encourage the cultivation of colourful eccentrics such as Montgomery or Patton. |
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Cattle farming required a more intensive cultivation of fodder crops such as maize, potatoes, turnips, and mangels. |
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The cultivation of detachment encourages an unselfish appreciation and enjoyment of nature without thought of profit and exploitation. |
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Selective cultivation may be performed with a rotary hoe, rolling cultivator, shovel cultivator, or similar implement. |
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He said cultivation of paddy and bajra would receive a boost from the rain and added that the rain would also do good to cotton and guar crops. |
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A tractor had been employed in the initial stages to level the existing fields to make it fit for the cultivation of rice. |
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There is a tendency for people on both sides of politics to neglect the cultivation of social skills and personality. |
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Southernwood rarely persists after cultivation and is not an important member of plant communities in the United States. |
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Much of the early cultivation work was without Roundup and Truebridge says the browntop returned within two years. |
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Large-seeded weeds like velvetleaf that can emerge from deep in the soil are very resistant to shallow cultivation with weeders. |
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He legitimated the cultivation of lyrical tropes, as the poet used them to enrich what is otherwise a lofty epic poem on the First Crusade. |
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Most of these older forests have been selectively logged but never cleared for cultivation. |
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Careful cultivation of the UN pays dividends, like the need to present its policies abroad in a more reassuring manner. |
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He started the cultivation scheme five years ago to beautify a street often littered with trash. |
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Until the drought of the 1960s and 1970s which accentuated brackishness in the river, it was most suitable for rice cultivation all year round. |
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Permanent cultivation forces shifting cultivators to move to more marginal areas and the grasslands. |
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It is most likely that the two trees are escapes or remnants from cultivation. |
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Native Americans certainly altered the landscape with the use of fire, land cultivation, plant domestication, and hunting. |
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Traditional practices of cultivation and storage, reduced the impact of the recurring droughts on food intake. |
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These were of relatively good quality and well suited to arable cultivation, but suited also to pastoral husbandry. |
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More additions to the site will be coming soon including comprehensive guides to the cultivation and maintenance of Helianthemums. |
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Soil loss and runoff were evaluated over a 2-year period on the taluses of terraces, in this zone of intense subtropical orchard cultivation. |
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While long-tubed painted lady has been long in cultivation, it is still rare. |
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An awful lot of landed gentry are going to end up in the docks for cultivation of a Class A drug on their land. |
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In the late nineteenth century, women were primarily responsible for cultivation, food preparation, and housecleaning. |
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Between banana plantations however are large areas unsuited for their cultivation. |
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However, the art schools formally disseminated the knowledge of the medium and technique of its usage, alongside cultivation of a taste for it. |
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The cultivation of these eight qualities requires both internal and external development. |
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The bulk of the book is an encyclopedia covering 700 species of ferns found in cultivation. |
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Cultural capital can be gained individually through the process of learning, adaptation, and cultivation. |
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Since they die at the end of each growing season, annual weeds may be successfully controlled by cultivation or mowing. |
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In a word, teachers are playing a critical role in the cultivation of high quality students. |
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Soil erosion was mainly the result of arable cultivation brought about by the demand for cereals and legumes. |
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After all, of the 42 million hectares of potentially arable land in Zambia, only about three-million is under cultivation. |
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Democracy does not mean unmitigated majority rule, but recognition and cultivation of minorities. |
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Pots lend themselves to the cultivation of annuals and throughout the year they can accommodate a changing display of flowers. |
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The effects of slash-and-burn cultivation on soil are more critical in the tropical regions than in boreal forests. |
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Aquaponics, or the cultivation of plants that grow on the surface of nutrient rich ponds, is the final stage in the system. |
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About 85 percent of all work resides in the traditional agricultural sector, comprising cultivation of crops and rasing of livestock. |
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Guarded or shielded sweeps are very useful because they permit shallow cultivation of a wide strip without forming ridges. |
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It is the seed of the plant Vigna radiata, a native of India where it has for long been under cultivation. |
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Flat alluvial fields rise up from the river to meet undulating slopes and escarpments that have been in cultivation since the sixteenth century. |
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After retirement he pursued his love of rose cultivation, music, history, and genealogy. |
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The linear grass verge along the village has some attractive planting but many stretches are in need of cultivation. |
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We also chose to incorporate fish cultivation through the use of aquaponics, allowing us to farm protein and produce at the same time. |
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Access to agricultural land for cultivation and capital for undertaking non-farm self-employment is critical. |
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At present, however, only about 10 percent of the nation's agricultural land is under cultivation, and subsistence farming is all but dead. |
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The oaks were planted in special soil and tended carefully during cultivation. |
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Here we see the beginnings of plant selection, soil cultivation, plant propagation, land clearing and the using of manures. |
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Secondary succession is central to the agricultural system of shifting cultivation or slash and burn agriculture. |
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He suggests reloading denuded slopes with soil and terraced cultivation to arrest soil erosion. |
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The maritime climate ensures that there are very few winter frosts, allowing the cultivation of many tender and unusual plants. |
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Most certainly, this dainty little madam busted out of garden cultivation to spread fast and loose. |
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This rationality, though, is directed at improvement and cultivation of the body rather than the mind. |
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Over 11.85 lakh hectares, roughly 20 per cent of the wasteland in Madhya Pradesh, has been acquired for jatropha cultivation. |
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He said tobacco farmers could explore the cultivation of the jatropha plant, whose seed contains edible oil. |
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As the plants mature, wire weeders can be run extremely close to the cotton's woody stalks without doing harm, allowing thorough cultivation. |
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The general strategy of his university reform can be located within the cultivation or development of our essential human capacities. |
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Intensive aquaculture of rainbow trout and other salmonids is a relatively new innovation, compared to the cultivation of most other animals. |
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Agricultural officials estimate that 150,000 hectares of paddy rice cultivation has been ruined. |
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We have given a commitment to deal expeditiously with illegal drug cultivation and sales in Accrington. |
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They were generally used in the cultivation of staple crops for purposes of long-distance trade. |
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The economy of colonial America grew rapidly because of sustained population growth and profitable cultivation of staple crops. |
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The beekeepers became interested in enhancing their production through the cultivation of melliferous plants. |
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There is not a land shortage, but not all arable land is under cultivation. |
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The growth of artistic expressions is a sign of cultivation of sensitivity, of mellowing, of humanism. |
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The 3,000 students the academy will be able to take will also learn animal husbandry and crop cultivation to help themselves out of poverty. |
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The village council or the lineage group did not have effective control over lands under cultivation or fallow fields. |
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Some land was tilled, mainly for the cultivation of oats that formed a staple part of the diet of the settler community. |
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They were the fellow travellers who prided themselves on their cultural cultivation and their disdain for the brutish loyalty of party members. |
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Growing intercrops also helps in regular cultivation, efficient weed, pest and disease management. |
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His father was a well-known physician, said to be a man of cultivation and taste. |
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But Trinidad planters soon began to complain about the high cost of provisions, and sugar estates neglected the cultivation of provision crops. |
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Today very little Renosterveld is left as most of it has been ploughed up for crop cultivation. |
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In 1992, a bulldozer was engaged for over three months for developing the nine-acre laterite quarry into land suited for cultivation. |
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The LBK economy was based on cattle husbandry and the cultivation of cereals, mainly wheat and barley. |
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He also introduced sericulture to Mysore and mulberry cultivation was started in 21 locations in the state. |
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For the first time in living memory significant amounts of arable land were withdrawn from cultivation. |
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Government policy has tried to stop or at least restrict slash-and-burn cultivation, both in Finland earlier and in the tropics today. |
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During prolonged cultivation, subclones with various deletions were isolated. |
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Tolerance to anoxia is relevant to wetland species, rice cultivation and transient waterlogging of agricultural crops. |
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Caraway can be grown on a variety of soils, although it thrives on fertile, water-retentive soils, it also benefits from deep cultivation. |
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Such traditional methods of rice cultivation have proven a good match with today's environmentally-conscious consumers. |
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The small fields we see around us, which tourists come to look at, are not helpful when it comes to modern equipment and cultivation techniques. |
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In colonial Burma, valuable resources of oil, tin, and rubber were more fully exploited and commercial rice cultivation was developed. |
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We used to have five rondavels, big land for cultivation and livestock, but when we were removed we lost virtually all of that. |
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Even with Fujian's particular traditions in tree cultivation, the Fujianese had difficulty keeping pace with harvesting in the premodern period. |
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It paid farmers to take acreage out of cultivation and to reduce livestock herds. |
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Other cultural practices of tillage, cultivation, herbicide application, and fertility were conducted as considered standard for the region. |
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The dst1-1 mutant regularly developed mature fruiting bodies at the top of dark stipes after a prolonged cultivation. |
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By 1844 the Bethany settlers, almost all of them of peasant stock, had nearly five hundred acres under cultivation, most of them with wheat. |
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Gardeners from all around the state come for tours and education on the cultivation and use of food plants that are basic to Montagnard cooking. |
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A long frostless period encourages cultivation of crops such as olive, fig, pomegranate, and date palm. |
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Britain took a more prominent role than other European countries in developing the cultivation of improved kinds of damson. |
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Clean cultivation should serve as an effective aid in managing white fringed beetles. |
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Certain fields around the community have become waterlogged to the point that cultivation has become impossible, he pointed out. |
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Improved seeds have contributed to augmented cultivation as is testified by the experience of the Land Development Agency during the last year. |
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It is considered a more eco-friendly method of cultivation and its high yields can help the community overcome food insecurity. |
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Both can also be referred to as shifting cultivation, and forest pioneers are sometimes called shifted cultivators. |
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They follow a slash-and-burn method of clearing the soil and use the hoe for cultivation. |
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On Wednesday police raided an address in the Fell Lane area and discovered cannabis plants and cultivation equipment in the loft. |
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Tigers thrive in the areas known as ecotones that exist between cultivation and dense forest. |
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Here, the snow peaks of the Karakorums widen and thaw into a landslide of cultivation terraces. |
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Where cultivation is used between rows, cover crops planted in August can accelerate acclimation for winter. |
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With subsequent control of the boll weevil, cotton cultivation has increased but has not surpassed peanuts as the primary cash crop. |
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A red-petal variety of poppy related to the Asian opium poppy grows wild and under cultivation across the Czech Republic. |
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Seeds of wheat and barley were also found, providing evidence of crop cultivation. |
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The spodic horizon can be destroyed under cultivation, particularly if lime and nitrogen are applied. |
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The trekkers also planted maize wherever they settled, and this soon came into cultivation by the Africans. |
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Cereal collecting soon gave way to cereal cultivation and the domestication of sheep and cattle. |
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The survival of poor landless farmers depends on the availability of forest resources for shifting cultivation and supplies of fuelwood. |
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The third category of tillage is selective cultivation, which is used to control weeds after the crop has emerged from the soil. |
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It is actually a form of qigong, a traditional Chinese practice of exercise and meditation for the cultivation of mind, body and spirit. |
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Areas unsuited for cultivation are used to graze large herds of sheep, cattle, and goats. |
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During the latter part of the last century, the cultivation of maize, which originated in the subtropics, has been extended to higher latitudes. |
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Clearly, for many Maasai, cultivation has played an increasingly important role in subsistence and nutrition. |
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He has the intellect and cultivation of one, and the survival skills and supernatural instincts of the other. |
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Reason is what distinguishes us from plants, nonhuman animals, and nonliving things, and so our purpose must involve its fruitful cultivation. |
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Weeders allow delaying the first cultivation until the crop is large enough to cultivate deeply and rapidly. |
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Most farmers have two oxen or buffalo for wet rice cultivation, a hoe, and a cart. |
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The bailiff managed the property of the manor and superintended its cultivation. |
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The Parnassians contributed to the cultivation of this taste for chinoiserie. |
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In this island very few of the many important indigenous plants have ever been brought within the pale of cultivation. |
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Amongst the fruit crops grown in the country, banana ranks first in production and third in area under cultivation. |
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Although the pomegranate is not native, it has a long history of cultivation in desert regions and is often mentioned in ancient literature. |
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Spiritual advance came from the cultivation of appropriate attitudes rather than outward behaviour. |
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Yet this last, the cultivation of sublime indifference, may not be the easiest but the toughest way of all into the snob-free zone. |
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Spanish-speaking peon laborers from Venezuela arrived in the nineteenth century to clear forests and work in cocoa cultivation. |
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The steep north faces of the escarpments escaped cultivation and the worst effects of logging. |
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It's understood as a mark of educated cultivation, not wilful indulgence or evasion. |
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Half a century after Cook's arrival, the Austrian botanist Ferdinand Bauer collected seed of the glory pea for cultivation. |
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But problems in the nation's baseball development due to a lack of systematic cultivation and training is more worrisome. |
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Unusual and rare plants, trees and shrubs will be on display with advice from experts on cultivation. |
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According to Li, Falun Gong is a cultivation system aimed at cultivating both human life and nature. |
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Indians had to labor hard for their food, and consequently they developed sophisticated systems of collection and cultivation. |
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On one hand the government takes on money from JBIC and on the other it is promoting the destructive prawn farm cultivation. |
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Mechanization of cotton cultivation has cut employment dramatically, and the use of defoliants and pesticides has caused health problems. |
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The cultivation of witloof was discovered by accident in a dark cellar in 19th century Belgium. |
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The increase in cultivation of maize and sweet potatoes was also significant. |
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In the areas of eastern Finland active in swiddening, most forests suitable for slash-and-burn cultivation were privately owned. |
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In the Middle Ages, the cultivation of permanent fields first began to replace swiddening on the southern coast. |
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Rice paddies in varying states of cultivation are parceled out in crazy-quilt patterns. |
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Later, cultivation was taken up enthusiastically in Japan, where the cold winters made citrus growing difficult. |
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Red soil and sandy loam were most suitable for plant cultivation, compared to clay soil or clay loam soil. |
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He criticised modern methods of cultivation and pointed out that the use of chemical fertilisers had affected soil fertility. |
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The agricultural base of the settlement was a mixed economy dominated by sheep and cattle husbandry and wheat cultivation. |
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The traditional Polynesian foodstuffs of taro, yams, and breadfruit were not well adapted for cultivation on the temperate islands of New Zealand. |
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Environment Secretary Margaret Beckett approved cultivation of the herbicide-tolerant maize but rejected commercial cultivation of GM beet and oilseed rape. |
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Networking and the cultivation of contacts are both professional skills and survival skills, as is the continual updating of technological expertise. |
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One must mature beyond eating things simply because they taste good and develop an attitude of eating for health preservation and personal cultivation. |
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Neither Curran nor Linder are against the cultivation of oil palms for human consumption. |
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They urged instead the cultivation of what they called ataraxia, the complete suspension of belief and consequently of all emotional involvement with anything. |
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Beyond that, however, the cultivation of olive groves reaches back centuries, and trees typically live for 200 years or more. |
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Typically, herbicides are applied only to the strip of ground directly under the vine, and weeds growing between the rows are controlled by cultivation or mowing. |
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By the 1950s, he says, some Maasai had begun to hire outsiders to grow and tend small plots for them, and some were contemplating taking up cultivation themselves. |
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The country's lack of mineral resources, weak colonial institutions and early cultivation of coffee allowed stable democratic foundations to form. |
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Few applicants had a location nailed down to accommodate their indoor cultivation and dispensary needs. |
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Rural villages on high islands are located within a short distance of both the sea and extensive family gardens devoted to taro, yam, sweet potato, or cassava cultivation. |
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The additional time they gain allows farmers to use their knowledge of cultivation practices, their soils, and landraces on which these measures are based, to capacity. |
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Chalcatzingo had many Olmec features in addition to the rock carvings, including crypt burials, human sacrifice, and the use of cultivation terraces. |
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Now it is all twitter and branding and the dedicated cultivation of inauthenticity. |
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Of the positive environmental impacts, the most noticeable are the rich cultural biotopes, such as meadows and pastures, created by slash-and-burn cultivation. |
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Therefore, it was well accepted, as Candolle had suggested in 1886, that since wild wheats grow in the Euphrates basin, wheat cultivation must have originated there. |
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Yet, with the population explosion and reclaiming lands for cultivation, part of the forest has been converted to farmland to grow corn and beans. |
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The British arrived from a land of neat farms, specific hedgerows, a regular cycle of tilling the land and a cultivation timetable based on seasons. |
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A wide area of coastal plains extends across the western seaboard, a region of phosphate mining and the cultivation of citrus, olives, tobacco, and grains. |
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Famous for his slow tempos and his cultivation of a titanic, monumental style, he was a superlative interpreter of Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, and Mahler. |
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Men engage in open sea and lagoon fishing from canoes as well as the gathering of coconuts and palm toddy and the more strenuous forms of cultivation. |
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This grassland-dependent species is fairly intolerant of cultivation and tends to avoid areas that contain extensive woody vegetation or that occur near roads. |
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Some of the many points of interest include early features such as burial mounds, stone circles and cairns that mark areas of prehistoric cultivation. |
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Dozens of cultivation tools are at the organic producer's disposal, he added, from rotary hoes to new machines that simply vibrate soil to uproot newly sprouted weeds. |
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The former slaves of Saint Domingue and Guadeloupe abandoned plantation toil whenever they could, instead devoting themselves to subsistence cultivation. |
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The juxtaposition of the fussily constructed trees and their funky, expressionistic bases brings home the schizoid quality of our cultivation of nature. |
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It is the Mundas who brought rice cultivation from Southeast Asia to the Ganga basin, whence it reached the Indus Valley towards the end of the Harappan age. |
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Before the Modern Age, the last quarter of the eighteenth century, and the logging of major forests, slash-and-burn cultivation was widely used in Europe. |
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In 1690 an area for the cultivation of medicinal plants was set up in nearby Fort Saint Elmo, and the crops would no doubt have been used to make ointments and medicinals. |
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They often blame poor rural producers for what are perceived to be unsound practices including slash and burn cultivation, overgrazing, and deforestation for fuel wood. |
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With an expansion in poppy cultivation comes an increase in supply in our backyards. |
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A major cause of the dwindling numbers has been degradation of habitat through overstocking of sheep, bush encroachment, cultivation, erosion and alien invaders. |
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Because it is through the cultivation of physical and mental faculties that we relate to our surroundings, and create conditions for our survival. |
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Although labour has been plentiful and cheap, vineyards are designed wherever possible to permit the passage of tractors for cultivation and treatment purposes. |
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The cultivation of genetically modified crops is increasing at an explosive rate, now covering a global area more than two times the size of the United Kingdom. |
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Activities such as slash-and-burn cultivation, logging for firewood, and livestock pasturage by the landless seem to have been tolerated in commonly owned village forests. |
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And that crop must justify its cultivation by being multi-purpose. |
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As a result, the demand exceeded the supply and linhu tree fellers stripped the mountains of trees for the market faster than the limited cultivation could replace them. |
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Contrast this with the typical Zapotec Indian corn field in Oaxaca, Mexico, the world center of corn diversity and corn's point of original cultivation. |
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For example, before collectivization there were currents among the peasants which supported cooperatives or agricultural communes and community-based cultivation. |
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He feared the danger of excitement replacing understanding, and the awakening of feelings supplanting the indoctrination of the understanding and the cultivation of the heart. |
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They also reported that many of the limestone cedar glade endemics grow well under cultivation in a greenhouse mixture of calcareous topsoil and river sand. |
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This tropical China native is a rare escape from cultivation. |
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In turn, these Central American countries disbanded cultivation of staple crops like corn and bean, and have now become major importers and that too from the United States. |
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Chinese hybrid rice production has developed from the utilization of advanced breeds to that of sub-breeds, and from tri-linear cultivation to bilinear cultivation. |
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I recognise the imperial shelteredness, the island suspiciousness, the old-world cultivation of private hopes and habits which leave the status quo alone. |
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Even new technologies have, in a sense, merely allowed anthropology to intensify its traditional practices, like New Guinea Highlands cultivation of the sweet potato. |
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Studies have proved that, contrary to arguments of soil infertility, this primitive cultivation practice ensures that fallowness in the soil is not compromised on. |
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Because researchers have focused their analyses on plant domestication and cultivation, questions related to wood use have received less attention. |
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Vineyard terraces are supported by small retaining walls known as feixes, made with the stones picked up during the initial weeding out of the land prior to cultivation. |
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The 70-acre grassed area has important historical and archaeological features including ridges and furrows of medieval cultivation as well as a rich store of flora and fauna. |
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A 28-year-old Nimbin man has been charged with the cultivation, possession and supply of a prohibited drug, and goods in custody, following a police raid last Wednesday. |
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Afghan farmers have returned to cotton cultivation, sowing the crop over 6,000 hectares of land in the northern Kunduz province after decades of strife. |
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According to estimates of the Agriculture Department, the area under soya cultivation is going to increase by another 30,000 hectares from last year's 70,000 hectares. |
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They are spurred on by big oil companies like BP and the British biofuel giant D1 Oils, which are investing millions of dollars in jatropha cultivation. |
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Mr Sharma said the farmers were apprised about the cultivation of different medicinal plants like jatropha, guarpatha and amla and also how to rotate their cycle. |
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Use herbicide and cultivation in grain cropping systems to reduce weeds. |
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This success in weed control has resulted primarily from the extensive use of herbicides, changes in crop rotations and a range of cultivation methods. |
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Less than 15 percent of its land is suitable for cultivation. |
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If the government wanted more reasons not to embrace commercial cultivation of genetically modified crops then it need look no further than yesterday's findings. |
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But he repeatedly returned to education and cultivation as central. |
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The second half of the text presents practical suggestions for religious cultivation so that readers may develop faith and ultimately attain liberation. |
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If we entirely ignore the examination of one's character in the recruitment of students, the cultivation of character will never become the core of domestic education. |
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Both show her surrounded by evidence of her cultivation and enlightened tastes in literature, her refined aesthetic sensibilities, and her talent in music. |
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The balm-of-Gilead tree, which has mostly escaped from cultivation, is found along roadsides or streams from Newfoundland to Minnesota and Georgia. |
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Restoration of the stabilising biotic potential would mean relaxation of anthropogenic pressure on perturbed territories and complete abandonment of further cultivation of the natural biota. |
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Overfarming was often ascribed to immigrants farming too much, and creating pressure on land so that the villagers could not give their own farmland a rest from cultivation. |
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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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Since this is one of the oldest species found in cultivation, it is likely to have been introduced into Kashmir. |
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Diseases of Narcissus are of concern because of the economic consequences of losses in commercial cultivation. |
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Of all the flowering plants, the bulbous have been the most popular for cultivation. |
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Laver cultivation as food is thought to be very ancient, though the first mention was in Camden's Britannia in the early 17th century. |
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However, the cultivation of padi and other cultigens such as maize, tubers, vegetables, and fruit trees in swiddens is central to their diet. |
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In addition to land for cultivation there was also a demand for pasture land to support more livestock. |
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This change was possible because of a random mutation in the wild populations at the beginning of wheat's cultivation. |
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True improvement results from educational cultivation in favorable environments. |
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The object of education is the cultivation of benevolence, otherwise known as Ren. |
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Sarracenia is the pitcher plant genus most commonly encountered in cultivation, because it is relatively hardy and easy to grow. |
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California Carnivores is a notable example of such a nursery that specializes in the cultivation of carnivorous plants. |
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Although different species of carnivorous plants have different cultivation requirements in terms of sunlight, humidity, soil moisture, etc. |
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The garden was used by Ruskin to experiment in various forms of cultivation and drainage and it contains a series of steep and winding paths. |
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It was consumed daily by all social classes in the northern and eastern parts of Europe where grape cultivation was difficult or impossible. |
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The Iron Age allowed for easier cultivation and thus new areas were cleared as the population grew with the increased harvests. |
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The cow is a large, raw, high-boned, unfattenable animal, and being regularly wrought in the cultivation of the soil the milk is bad. |
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Not unrelatedly, it also presumes a higher degree of aesthetic cultivation. |
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The hippies were mostly interested in legalized grass and wanted NORML to back initiatives permitting backyard pot cultivation. |
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Ideas of companionate marriage and the cultivation of an affective self imply masculinities that are more sensitive and less domineering. |
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Fujitsu and FPT will officially open the showcase on February 24, 2016, after starting Akisai and trial cultivation today. |
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In this present study, both mycelia and fruiting bodies were produced from laboratory cultivation. |
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The end of the Indian Wars further expanded acreage under mechanical cultivation, increasing surpluses for international markets. |
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There are export opportunities in agribusiness in areas such as floriculture, fruit cultivation, cashewnut and groundnut. |
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Black plastic and sweet potato intercrop plots were compared to unmulch plots in a study to determine weeding cost in tomato cultivation. |
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Giving farmers access to markets also helped them shift away from opium poppy cultivation. |
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One success story was Assam, a jungle in 1840 that by 1900 had 4,000,000 acres under cultivation, especially in tea plantations. |
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To keep a commonplace is instinctual to intellectual cultivation. |
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AaAaAa The dam, whose storage capacity will amount to 14 million m3, will rev up arboriculture, greenhouse cultivation and fodder. |
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Since beans are considered a monoculture for the region and occupies 56 percent of land under cultivation, land is degenerating. |
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Classical writers described peoples who practiced shifting cultivation, which characterized the Migration Period in Europe. |
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Tacitus describes it as a strange cultivation method, practiced by the Germans. |
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In Italy, shifting cultivation was a thing of the past by the birth of Christ. |
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Cassava brown streak virus disease has been identified as a major threat to cultivation worldwide. |
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Further climatic deterioration is thought to have brought about cereal cultivation. |
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Often called 'junos', this type of iris is one of the more popular bulb irises in cultivation. |
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Elms also have a long history of cultivation for fodder, with the leafy branches cut to feed livestock. |
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The rise in temperature could lead to outdoor citrus cultivation being possible. |
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A land of green fields for crop cultivation and cattle rearing limits the space available for the establishment of native wild species. |
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Nevertheless, agrarian communities generally proved successful, and their growth and the expansion of territory under cultivation continued. |
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The cultivation of rice was introduced during the 1690s and became an important export crop. |
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Property includes green houses set up for fish farming, hydroponic cultivation, vertigro systems, and microgreen cultivation. |
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For garden cultivation, iris classification differs from taxonomic classification. |
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Some Caribbean islands have terrain that Europeans found suitable for cultivation for agriculture. |
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The Bangladesh Plain is famous for its fertile alluvial soil which supports extensive cultivation. |
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Private tube wells led to a 50 percent increase in the cropping intensity which was augmented by tractor cultivation. |
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Forest clearances were undertaken to provide room for cereal cultivation and animal herds. |
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It also allowed the growing of potatoes in bogs as well as on mountain slopes where no other cultivation could take place. |
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Philippine waters also sustain the cultivation of pearls, crabs, and seaweeds. |
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According to police, the cultivation on the disputed 30 bighas of land is said to be reason behind the attack. |
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In tunnel cultivation process, two methods named walk in tunnel and low tunnel are highly implementable. |
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The cultivation of seaweed is an important activity in some parts of the province. |
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This land was divided into the infield, which was in continuous arable cultivation, and the outfield which was rotated between arable and grass. |
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They will also create a bee pasture there through the cultivation of honey plants. |
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Chemically defined media were needed for the cultivation of heterotrophs by defining nutritional requirements. |
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In such areas, the land is generally flatter, coastal, and the climate less harsh, and more suited to cultivation. |
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Freshwater mussels are used as host animals for the cultivation of freshwater pearls. |
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Deforestation continued to the more remote areas as a warmer climate allowed the cultivation even of upland areas. |
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One cause of high sediment loads from slash and burn and shifting cultivation of tropical forests. |
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Shifting cultivation is a farming system which sometimes incorporates the slash and burn method in some regions of the world. |
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Using his considerable knowledge of hydraulics, he built a sophisticated cultivation system, including channels and locks, to control the tides. |
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Foundational work toward the idea of improving marine water quality through shellfish cultivation was conducted by Odd Lindahl et al. |
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From the thirteenth to the fifteenth centuries, however, a remarkable transformation took place in Thai rice cultivation. |
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Unlike fishing, aquaculture, also known as aquafarming, is the cultivation of aquatic populations under controlled conditions. |
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As such, it is related to Virgil's Georgics, where the cultivation of bees is also discussed. |
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The centre of the island is largely moorland covered with heather, and cultivation is confined to the coasts. |
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Soybeans are a major crop in the eastern part of the state, and cultivation is common in the southeast part of the state. |
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The house sparrow is closely associated with human habitation and cultivation. |
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Norway maple has been widely taken into cultivation in other areas, including western Europe northwest of its native range. |
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Due to a wide variety of geographic origins, and thus great genetic diversity, cultivation needs of iris vary greatly. |
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The other important use of orchids is their cultivation for the enjoyment of the flowers. |
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Both serve to encourage cultivation and collection of orchids, but some go further by concentrating on conservation or research. |
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In cultivation this plant has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit. |
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There was an explosive growth of cotton cultivation throughout the Deep South and greatly increased demand for slave labor to support it. |
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After the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, Americans entered the state and joined the sugar cultivation. |
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When Britain did face a cotton shortage, it was temporary, being replaced by increased cultivation in Egypt and India. |
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Foundational work toward the idea of improving marine water quality through shellfish cultivation to was conducted by Odd Lindahl et al. |
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The cultivation and trade of flowers is a specialization in horticulture, specifically floriculture. |
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Their use in agriculture led to an increase in the land available for cultivation. |
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