farming Crossword Puzzles
Chapter 13: Lesson 3 Quiz 2022-03-29
Across
- which country is the most industrialized
- the majority of South African countries practice this religion
- majority of the people in the region only live to their _________ (decade *twenties, thirties, etc.)
- which country is the poorest
- migration to cities is increasing because of these
Down
- most of Mozambique's people do this for a job
- this term refers to the type of farming used to grow the food you need to survive
- which country is the most populated
- this ethnic group makes up more than 80% of Zimbabwe's population
- the majority of South African countries speak this language
10 Clues: which country is the poorest • which country is the most populated • which country is the most industrialized • most of Mozambique's people do this for a job • migration to cities is increasing because of these • the majority of South African countries speak this language • the majority of South African countries practice this religion • ...
Green Revolution 2021-12-02
Across
- New Agricultural strategy was introduced in the Kharif crop of _____.
- ______ is available to the farmers for sale in the market.
- HYV seeds needed plenty of water and ______ to produce best results.
- Green Revolution helped government to maintain ___ stock.
Down
- Till 1960s, the seeds used in cultivation were ______ one's.
- ____ seeds started replacing the conventional varieties.
- ______ as farm machinery made ploughing and harvesting faster.
- This state was one of the first to to try out the modern farming method in India.
- ______ farming methods require the farmer to start with more cash than before.
9 Clues: ____ seeds started replacing the conventional varieties. • Green Revolution helped government to maintain ___ stock. • ______ is available to the farmers for sale in the market. • Till 1960s, the seeds used in cultivation were ______ one's. • ______ as farm machinery made ploughing and harvesting faster. • ...
Geography 3A 2022-12-04
Across
- FARMING THAT PRODUCES LARGE CASH CROPS FOR PROFIT
- WHEN TAKEN FROM THE EARTH, NATURAL RESOURCES BECOME __________ MATERIALS TO BE USED BY SECONDARY INDUSTRIES.
- COAL (SOLID), PETROLEUM (LIQUID), AND NATURAL GAS ARE __________ FUELS.
- A NATURALLY OCCURRING SOLID MATERIAL FROM WHICH A METAL OR OTHER VALUABLE MINERAL CAN BE EXTRACTED
- A MIXTURE OT TWO OR MORE METALS
- BUSINESSES THAT SELL GOODS DIRECTLY TO CONSUMERS
- CONSTRUCTION AND MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES
- SERVICE INDUSTRIES (INCLUDING INFRASTRUCTURE, TRADE, FINANCE, AND GOVERNMENT)
- METALS ARE __________ (ABLE TO TRANSMIT ELECTRICITY).
- METALS ARE __________ (ABLE TO BE DRAWN INTO WIRE).
- METALS ARE __________ (ABLE TO BE HAMMERED INTO SHEETS).
Down
- BUSINESSES THAT BUY GOODS FROM PRODUCERS IN LARGE QUANTITIES TO SELL TO OTHER BUSINESSES
- INDUSTRIES (AGRICULTURE, FISHING, FORESTRY, AND MINING) THAT TAKE FROM THE EARTH MATERIALS THAT ARE NEEDED FOR FOOD, CLOTHING, AND SHELTER
- UTILITIES (ELECTRICITY, GAS, WATER, AND TRASH & SEWAGE DISPOSAL), TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION (PRINT AND ELECTRONIC)
- FARMING THAT PRODUCES JUST ENOUGH TO MEET THE NEEDS OF THE FARMER'S HOUSEHOLD
- NOMADIC HERDING AND RANCHING ARE FORMS OF ANIMAL __________.
- THE CULTIVATION OF AQUATIC PLANTS AND ANIMALS IN A CONTROLLED ARTIFICIAL ENVIRONMENT
- THE APPLICATION OF SCIENCE TO INDUSTRY
18 Clues: A MIXTURE OT TWO OR MORE METALS • THE APPLICATION OF SCIENCE TO INDUSTRY • CONSTRUCTION AND MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES • BUSINESSES THAT SELL GOODS DIRECTLY TO CONSUMERS • FARMING THAT PRODUCES LARGE CASH CROPS FOR PROFIT • METALS ARE __________ (ABLE TO BE DRAWN INTO WIRE). • METALS ARE __________ (ABLE TO TRANSMIT ELECTRICITY). • ...
APW Early Modern (unit 5.6-5.10) 2023-05-31
Across
- areas in urban centers for low-income earning people
- What sort of natural resource made Britain prosper financially?
- A type of agriculture that includes market gardening/trunk farming and dairy farming would occur.
- The first successful revolution in the Caribbean and South America was launched in?
- The use of economic, political, and social pressures to control former colonies, can be one way to describe the current state of global food distribution.
- The roads, bridges, tunnels, ports, electrical grids, sewers, telecommunications, etc. of a country.
- governor of Egypt, maneuvered himself to take control over egypt
- which political ideologies were gaining increasing influence in Western Europe and parts of the Atlantic world?
- companies that operated across national boundaries
- Public financial support, to farmers to safeguard food production.
Down
- the growth of purchasing power of people
- individuals who own portions of a business
- sought to create the greatest good for the greatest numbers
- former Turkish slaves who were part of a military class, in egypt
- movement to the city and growth of cities, growth of this area
- what restoration was the process of rapid industrialization and changes in japan
- reforms in the ottoman empire to reorganize its government
- Tax on imports
18 Clues: Tax on imports • the growth of purchasing power of people • individuals who own portions of a business • companies that operated across national boundaries • areas in urban centers for low-income earning people • reforms in the ottoman empire to reorganize its government • sought to create the greatest good for the greatest numbers • ...
Semester 1 Review pt 1 2016-12-13
Across
- First monotheistic religion
- Why did Rome want to control the Mediterranean Sea
- Record keeping, large population, complex institutions, specialized workers
- The reason so many civilizations settled by rivers
- Most classical governments started using these
- Rome and Carthage fought the Punic Wars for control of this
- Classical society that gave women more rights
- The continent where human life began
- Region of the world where farming began
- Used the dynastic cycle and mandate of heaven
- Developed in Athens, Government by the people
- The OG of philosophy, Question everything
Down
- The age when stones and sticks were used for tools
- Religion that was widely practiced in the Persian Empire
- In Greek a polis, independent of surrounding areas, has its own ruler
- First writing, developed by the Sumerians
- Rome, Persia, Han China all had these types of governments
- The most popular conquerors had this trait
- Didn't exist as much when women played a bigger role in survival
- The age when farming and domestication of animals was discovered
- Created to represent something important
- People that move from place to place looking for food or shelter
- First civilization in the Americas
- Government Egypt had with their Pharaoh
- Created a huge empire that spread Hellenistic culture
25 Clues: First monotheistic religion • First civilization in the Americas • The continent where human life began • Region of the world where farming began • Government Egypt had with their Pharaoh • Created to represent something important • First writing, developed by the Sumerians • The OG of philosophy, Question everything • The most popular conquerors had this trait • ...
Semester Review Crossword 2023-12-08
Across
- type of farming just for the needs of a family
- market economy
- a cultural hearth we studied in Latin America unit
- process of integration and exchange that results in closer interdependence between nations
- people that were loyal to the king and Britain
- way of life of a group of people who share similar culture traits
- economic stage gathering raw materials
- U.S. form of government
- where most people settled in Latin America due to the rugged interior
- traditional
- canal connected the Pacific to the Atlantic, cutting transportation time significantly
Down
- human barrier to diffusion
- main ecological problem in brazil
- dominant religion of Latin America
- economic stage add value to materials by changing form example trees to lumber
- economy with government ownership
- encourages economic development and interdependence among the 3 nations of Mexico, Canada, and U.S.
- important landform for the first migration to the Americas
- energy resource for Canada
- process of a rural area becoming a city
- highly educated and highly skilled people move to other countries
- type of region that Latin America is
- cause of the diversity of the United States
- language spoken in Brazil
- hearth the place where important ideas(innovation) and technology begin to spread
- physical barrier to diffusion
- type of farming on a large scale basis
27 Clues: traditional • market economy • U.S. form of government • language spoken in Brazil • human barrier to diffusion • energy resource for Canada • physical barrier to diffusion • main ecological problem in brazil • economy with government ownership • dominant religion of Latin America • type of region that Latin America is • economic stage gathering raw materials • ...
China Review Chase.R 2023-03-01
Across
- Confucius had ideas that he wanted people to follow, this idea was called?
- In this idea, people are told to be one with nature
- Confucius was China’s first great?
- Who did the Shang Kings ask to govern their territories?
- Which item is considered and important trade item for the Ancient Chinese?
- In China, rich landowners are also called
- After reading page 297, which word best describes Qin Shihuangdid
- What was the basic building block of Chinese society
- Which weapon was NOT used to bring down the Zhou dynasty
- Which type of weapons did the Shang Dynasty use to take over nearby areas
- Who did the Chinese believe was the __________ between heaven and earth
Down
- these Insects ware destroying cuties trees.
- what was the most popular job in Ancient China?
- What kind of farming did Chinese farmers have to do to find more land for crop growing
- Confucius believed that all people needed a sense of
- In this idea, people are born naturally evil
- Why did the Zhou dynasty failed because _________.
- The proper way a king is supposed to act is called ____________.
- Chinese writing, the verb “to go” is represented by which symbol?
- farmers used this type of plow for farming.
20 Clues: Confucius was China’s first great? • In China, rich landowners are also called • these Insects ware destroying cuties trees. • farmers used this type of plow for farming. • In this idea, people are born naturally evil • what was the most popular job in Ancient China? • Why did the Zhou dynasty failed because _________. • ...
Chapter 8 Vocab: Brazil 2025-02-19
Across
- A steep cliff or slope separating different land elevations.
- – To be made up of or include.
- A flat, elevated landform that rises above the surrounding area.
- The warm regions near the equator with little seasonal change.
- To remove or take out.
- Showing a variety of different elements.
- A densely populated urban slum in Brazil.
- A low-lying area where water collects, often surrounded by higher land.
- To set free from restrictions or slavery.
- forest A dense, tropical forest with high rainfall.
Down
- Required by law or rule.
- The practice of farming crops and raising livestock.
- A climate region with moderate temperatures and seasonal changes.
- A smaller river or stream that flows into a larger river.
- A remote or less-developed area beyond major cities.
- A large city and its surrounding suburbs.
- One of a kind; unlike anything else.
- A farming method where vegetation is cut and burned to clear land.
- Native to a specific place or region.
- Vast, grassy plains in South America, mainly in Argentina.
- – To happen or take place.
- City The main city in a metropolitan area.
- The upper layer of a forest, formed by tree tops.
- – A specific region or section of land.
24 Clues: To remove or take out. • Required by law or rule. • – To happen or take place. • – To be made up of or include. • One of a kind; unlike anything else. • Native to a specific place or region. • – A specific region or section of land. • Showing a variety of different elements. • A large city and its surrounding suburbs. • A densely populated urban slum in Brazil. • ...
Ch 22-24 Geography 2024-11-15
Across
- top layer of a rain forest
- lower layer of the rain forest
- often triangular shaped section of land formed as the waters of a river slow down and split
- the disposal of trash and human waste
- center of an activity or region
- referring to a mountainous area
- present in large amounts
- _____ ____: condition created when winds blow in primarily one direction over mountains
- water that lies underground and feeds wells and springs
- to make difficult
- long cliff that separated lands at two different altitudes
- ____ ___: farm crop grown to be sold
- fuel created from living matter
- migration of people from rural areas to urban areas
Down
- height above sea level
- ________ climate: climate marked by warm dry summers and cool rainy winters
- a large commercial farm growing crops for export
- _____ farming: small scale ag that provides for the needs of a family
- an area drained by a river and tributaries
- son of a Zulu chief and a Langeni princess. Became a Zulu Chief
- able to traveled by boat
- _____ farming: growing large quantities of crops of livestock in order to sell them for a profit
- occurring at irregular intervals
- something given or meriting attention before competing alternative
24 Clues: to make difficult • height above sea level • present in large amounts • able to traveled by boat • top layer of a rain forest • lower layer of the rain forest • center of an activity or region • referring to a mountainous area • fuel created from living matter • occurring at irregular intervals • ____ ___: farm crop grown to be sold • the disposal of trash and human waste • ...
Agriculture and Industrial Revolution Review 2025-02-28
Across
- Minimal government interference in the economy
- Business owner profiting from industrial production
- Private ownership of industry with free market competition
- Idea that policies should maximize happiness for most people
- Unused farmland left to restore nutrients
- Workers specialize in specific tasks to increase efficiency
- Home-based manufacturing before factory system
- Economic policy prioritizing exports and controlling trade
- Growing just enough food for survival
- Economist who promoted free markets and capitalism
- Privatization of communal land forcing small farmers off fields
- Purified coal used for smelting iron and steel production
- Population shift from rural areas to cities
Down
- Farming advances increasing food supply and supporting industrial growth
- Businessperson who invests in industry and innovation for profit
- Karl Marx’s theory advocating class struggle and socialism
- Professionals merchants and skilled workers benefiting from industrialization
- Large-scale production site using machines and specialized labor
- System where production is publicly owned for collective benefit
- Thinkers who study production trade and economic systems
- Shift to machine-based production and factory labor
- Political thinker who co-authored The Communist Manifesto
- Shared land or labor for farming and production
- Alternating crops to maintain soil fertility and increase yields
- Fossil fuel powering steam engines and factories
25 Clues: Growing just enough food for survival • Unused farmland left to restore nutrients • Population shift from rural areas to cities • Minimal government interference in the economy • Home-based manufacturing before factory system • Shared land or labor for farming and production • Fossil fuel powering steam engines and factories • ...
Unit 4: Land Use & Human Impact 2025-11-04
Across
- / A natural resource that can be replenished naturally, like solar energy.
- / A resource that cannot be replaced quickly, such as coal or oil.
- / The process by which fertile land becomes desert due to drought or human activity.
- Mining / A mining process that removes large strips of surface soil and rock.
- Fragmentation / When large habitats are broken into smaller, isolated pieces.
- / When animals eat grass faster than it can regrow, damaging land.
- / The clearing or removal of trees in a forested area.
- / The variety of life in an ecosystem.
Down
- / The growth and expansion of cities into natural areas.
- Sprawl / The uncontrolled expansion of urban areas.
- / Using resources in a way that meets needs without depleting them for the future.
- / A community of living organisms and their physical environment.
- / The process of replanting trees in an area that was deforested.
- / The protection and preservation of natural resources.
- / The practice of farming, including cultivation of soil and raising animals.
- / The process of soil or rock being worn away by wind or water.
- Capacity / The maximum population an environment can support.
- / The introduction of harmful substances into the environment.
- use / The way humans utilize the land, such as for farming or building.
- Footprint / The total amount of greenhouse gases produced by human activities.
20 Clues: / The variety of life in an ecosystem. • Sprawl / The uncontrolled expansion of urban areas. • / The clearing or removal of trees in a forested area. • / The protection and preservation of natural resources. • / The growth and expansion of cities into natural areas. • Capacity / The maximum population an environment can support. • ...
Agriculture Crossword 2025-11-19
Across
- method that avoids synthetic chemicals and focuses on soil health
- term describing food that spoils quickly and must reach markets fast
- growing food in cities through rooftop gardens, community plots, or hydroponics
- farming method where land is cleared by cutting and burning vegetation
- crops or products that gain extra worth through processing or unique qualities
- law that consolidated small farms into private holdings in England
- extensive commercial livestock grazing across large areas
- the period when land is left unplanted so it can recover nutrients
- the practice of growing one crop on a large scale
- the type of lifestyle created when humans stopped moving and began farming
- agriculture that uses high labor and capital inputs in small areas
Down
- system where crops and livestock support each other on the same farm
- agriculture that uses large amounts of land with fewer inputs per acre
- worldwide network that moves agricultural goods from production to consumers
- subsistence system where people move seasonally with their animals
- the term describing societies based on herding animals
- large-scale tropical agriculture focused on monocrop exports
- model explaining why land nearest to the city is most expensive
- intensive agriculture near cities that grows high-value perishable produce
- the process of taming plants or animals for human use
20 Clues: the practice of growing one crop on a large scale • the process of taming plants or animals for human use • the term describing societies based on herding animals • extensive commercial livestock grazing across large areas • large-scale tropical agriculture focused on monocrop exports • model explaining why land nearest to the city is most expensive • ...
ch1-4 Iqbal 2020-04-07
Across
- ,Muslim god
- ,people from outside the country (Pakistan)
- ,speak in a mocking way
- ,money owned to a lender
- ,straw mattress
- ,underground vault for burying the dead
- ,instrument used for weaving yarn
- ,the events that will happen in someone's future
Down
- ,grew (farming)
- ,pull up
- ,free
- ,said rudely
- ,hole in the ground
- ,not a smart kid
- ,jealousy
15 Clues: ,free • ,pull up • ,jealousy • ,Muslim god • ,said rudely • ,grew (farming) • ,straw mattress • ,not a smart kid • ,hole in the ground • ,speak in a mocking way • ,money owned to a lender • ,instrument used for weaving yarn • ,underground vault for burying the dead • ,people from outside the country (Pakistan) • ,the events that will happen in someone's future
The Secret Garden 2015-04-15
15 Clues: worried • obvious • abandoned • nanny in India • a gown or dress • a one-story home • Mary's last name • lady of the house • unwilling to obey • large home or estate • land too wet for farming • an official of the church • to make confused or upset • a hat tied under the chin • a strong feeling or emotion
Industrial Revolution Puzzle 2014-03-03
Across
- Smaller urbanization
- Factories with machines
- Vaccine for rabies
- Textile
- Changed from small, single-family subsistence farms
- Jenny
- Steam engine
- 1769
- Edmund Cartwright
Down
- Steam ships, railroad, horses, walking
- Steamboat in United States
- Large urbanization
- John Kay
- Replaced hand loom and allowed weavers to work twice as fast
- Heavy material made by a power loom
15 Clues: 1769 • Jenny • Textile • John Kay • Steam engine • Edmund Cartwright • Vaccine for rabies • Large urbanization • Smaller urbanization • Factories with machines • Steamboat in United States • Heavy material made by a power loom • Steam ships, railroad, horses, walking • Changed from small, single-family subsistence farms • Replaced hand loom and allowed weavers to work twice as fast
Chrsysalids 2023-01-30
Across
- act or lack of reverence for God
- insufficient
- make illegal
- communication from one mind to another
- completely
- degradation or humiliation
- keenly perceptive
- holier than thou attitude
Down
- disrespectful of religion
- redured in guality or ualur
- small farming community where david strorm lives
- to salvage or recover
- marked departure from acceptred norms
- changes over time
- to socialize
15 Clues: completely • insufficient • make illegal • to socialize • changes over time • keenly perceptive • to salvage or recover • disrespectful of religion • holier than thou attitude • degradation or humiliation • redured in guality or ualur • act or lack of reverence for God • marked departure from acceptred norms • communication from one mind to another • ...
AGRICULTURE 2020-08-27
Across
- crops and rearing livestock Agriculture
- rearing of silk worms and silk production.
- Growing of vegetables, flowers and fruits.
Down
- Breeding of fish.
- Farming farming is practices to meet the needs of the farmer’s family and needs less technology and labour-
- Cultivation of grapes.
- two most important staple food crops of the world are .........and ..........Rice and Wheat
7 Clues: Breeding of fish. • Cultivation of grapes. • crops and rearing livestock Agriculture • rearing of silk worms and silk production. • Growing of vegetables, flowers and fruits. • two most important staple food crops of the world are .........and ..........Rice and Wheat • ...
The Traditional Economy ☻Tandra 2014-03-04
Across
- i am an economy system in which decisions are based on customs.
- this animal was hunted by being chased of a cliff
- who cares for the children?
- substance farmers may own a small plot of land where they raise a mixture of _______ and livestock.
Down
- not only the geography of an area or available resources that affect their economic decisions-cultural values and _________ tradition are also major factors
- _____can produce food for their families and community
- substance farmers work full time to produce_______.
- substance farming takes place in ____________.
- ___________organized hunting,fishing,and farming
- these areas are too hilly,Rockey,or dry for large scale commercial use.
10 Clues: who cares for the children? • substance farming takes place in ____________. • ___________organized hunting,fishing,and farming • this animal was hunted by being chased of a cliff • substance farmers work full time to produce_______. • _____can produce food for their families and community • i am an economy system in which decisions are based on customs. • ...
TX History- cotton, RR, oil 2024-03-07
Across
- a tenant farmer that gives each part of crop for rent
- a railroad that runs across the continent
- a tower-like framework over an oil well used for drilling
- Farming farming techniques, such as terracing, used in a dry climate to keep moisture in the soil.
- the amount of a commodity, product, or service available and the desire of buyers,considered factors of the regulating prices
- a wire with sharp point on it
Down
- a law to control how a business runs
- a system that runs on supply and demand
- a point where two or more lines of rail meet
- a town that becomes popular and rich because of business
10 Clues: a wire with sharp point on it • a law to control how a business runs • a system that runs on supply and demand • a railroad that runs across the continent • a point where two or more lines of rail meet • a tenant farmer that gives each part of crop for rent • a town that becomes popular and rich because of business • ...
The Worlds of the North and South Vocabulary 2025-03-20
Across
- Owners of large factories or other businesses based on manufacturing.
- Cotton and tobacco are examples of...
- The shift from working by hand to working by machine.
- A person who preferred a way of living based on farming.
- Positive aspects of a place that attract people to move there.
- Occurs due to the need land for farming, mining, or to obtain wood.
Down
- The conversion of raw materials or parts into final goods.
- Conditions in a person's home region that drives them to leave.
- A large estate dedicated to the cultivation of cash crops, often relying on slave labor.
- A machine used to separate seeds from cotton fibers.
10 Clues: Cotton and tobacco are examples of... • A machine used to separate seeds from cotton fibers. • The shift from working by hand to working by machine. • A person who preferred a way of living based on farming. • The conversion of raw materials or parts into final goods. • Positive aspects of a place that attract people to move there. • ...
Agroecology 2025-04-14
Across
- (2) Agroecology improves the health of "_______" and "_______"
- In agroecology intercropping (The practice of planting different crops in the same field) helps with what
- Another word for the practice of farming
- (2) Composting is the recycling of "_____""_____" back into the soil
Down
- (2) Agroecology focuses on enhancing the natural enemies of pests: This is a form of what
- One word to describe the practice of agroecology
- Reduces "____" erosion (Found in the ground)
- Agroecology reduces the use of these synthetic substances
- Using mulch and cover crops in agroecology helps to conserve "____"
- (2) Agroecology promotes local, small scale farming which also minimizes food loss: This is one example of it working to increase "____" "____"
10 Clues: Another word for the practice of farming • Reduces "____" erosion (Found in the ground) • One word to describe the practice of agroecology • Agroecology reduces the use of these synthetic substances • (2) Agroecology improves the health of "_______" and "_______" • Using mulch and cover crops in agroecology helps to conserve "____" • ...
Ivan's natural resource review 2021-12-07
Across
- this is the most important factor determining a soil's fertility
- this includes all parts of the natural environment
- these are resources that cannot be replaced once used up
- these items are a uses of forests that use small logs
- this form of energy's source is the sun
- this type of farming involves large areas but a small amount of labour
- this form of mining is used to recover deep mineral deposits
- this type of forest has broad leaves which change colour in autumn
- this type of forest has needles which remain year round
Down
- these are resources that can be regenerated if used carefully
- this form of enegry's source is water
- this method of harvesting trees is the easiest
- these are things found in the total stock that people find uselfull
- this form of energy's source is the rise and fall of tides
- these subject includes camping hiking fishing etc
- this type of farming involves small areas of land but a large amount of labour
- these are resources that are replaced by natural actions
- this form of mining leaves a big scar on the earth
18 Clues: this form of enegry's source is water • this form of energy's source is the sun • this method of harvesting trees is the easiest • these subject includes camping hiking fishing etc • this includes all parts of the natural environment • this form of mining leaves a big scar on the earth • these items are a uses of forests that use small logs • ...
Agriculture Vocab 2013-04-19
Across
- The growing of fruits, vegetables, and flowers
- Subsistence agriculture based on herding domesticated animals
- Farmers must expend a relatively large amount of effort to produce the maximum feasible yield from a parcel of land
- Rapid diffusion of new agricultural technology
- The modification of Earth's surface by cultivating crops and raising crops
- harvesting twice a year from the same field
Down
- A form of subsistence agricultre in which people shift activity from one field to another
- Agriculture that generates products for sale off the farm
- Reproduction of plants by direct cloning from existing
- Resources that will be available for generations to come
- Degradation of land primarily because of human actions
- Fields are cleared by slashing the vegetation and burning the debris
- Provide food for a direct consumption by the farmer
- Reproduction of plants through annual introduction of seeds
- Commercial agriculture associated with large corporations
- Commercial agriculture in which livestock graze over and extensive area
- The practice of rotating use of different fields from crop to crop each year, to avoid exhausting the soil
- Commercial gardening and fruit farming
18 Clues: Commercial gardening and fruit farming • harvesting twice a year from the same field • The growing of fruits, vegetables, and flowers • Rapid diffusion of new agricultural technology • Provide food for a direct consumption by the farmer • Reproduction of plants by direct cloning from existing • Degradation of land primarily because of human actions • ...
focus 3 UNIT 5 2024-04-24
Across
- ... remains a significant challenge in many parts of the world.
- Rivers ... from higher to lower elevations, shaping the landscape over time.
- The ... of hurricanes can cause significant damage to coastal areas.
- Many species face the risk of ... out due to habitat destruction.
- Efforts to ... our understanding of climate change are crucial for finding solutions.
- Remember to separate recyclables and place them in the ...bin. .
- The ... of the Amazon River is approximately 6,575 kilometers.
- Scientists use data to ... changes in the Earth's climate.
- ... farming methods promote healthier soil and ecosystems.
Down
- The ... of the Grand Canyon varies from about 6 to 29 kilometers.
- ... farming offers a sustainable solution for urban agriculture.
- During ... tide, more of the beach is exposed as the water recedes.
- Driving on a ... road requires careful navigation of its curves and turns.
- Renewable energy sources like wind and solar power help reduce dependence on ... from fossil fuels.
- Education programs aim to ... awareness of environmental issues.
- Protecting the ... is essential for future generations.
- Efforts to ... access to clean water are essential for public health.
- The ... of the ocean can be thousands of meters in some places.
18 Clues: Protecting the ... is essential for future generations. • Scientists use data to ... changes in the Earth's climate. • ... farming methods promote healthier soil and ecosystems. • The ... of the Amazon River is approximately 6,575 kilometers. • ... remains a significant challenge in many parts of the world. • ...
The Traditional Economy ☻Tandra 2014-03-04
Across
- i am an economy system in which decisions are based on customs.
- this animal was hunted by being chased of a cliff
- who cares for the children?
- substance farmers may own a small plot of land where they raise a mixture of _______ and livestock.
Down
- not only the geography of an area or available resources that affect their economic decisions-cultural values and _________ tradition are also major factors
- _____can produce food for their families and community
- substance farmers work full time to produce_______.
- substance farming takes place in ____________.
- ___________organized hunting,fishing,and farming
- these areas are too hilly,Rockey,or dry for large scale commercial use.
10 Clues: who cares for the children? • substance farming takes place in ____________. • ___________organized hunting,fishing,and farming • this animal was hunted by being chased of a cliff • substance farmers work full time to produce_______. • _____can produce food for their families and community • i am an economy system in which decisions are based on customs. • ...
Philippines 2022-05-06
10 Clues: - Over, Capital • - Over, Continent • - Geo, ________ Sea • - Eco, Farming Industry • - Geo, Maritime Climate • - Cul, Most popular sport • - Gov,Presidential Republic • - His, Spanish-American ___ • - Cul, Most common Religion • - Over, ________:110,818,325
Philippines 2022-05-06
10 Clues: - Over, Capital • - Over, Continent • - Geo, ________ Sea • - Eco, Farming Industry • - Geo, Maritime Climate • - Cul, Most popular sport • - Gov,Presidential Republic • - His, Spanish-American ___ • - Cul, Most common Religion • - Over, ________:110,818,325
The Colonial Era 2017-05-20
Across
- Founded PA for Quakers
- A colony established by a group of settlers who were given a formal document allowing them to settle on the land
- War that Britain and France fought due to fur trapping conflicts; Seven Years’ War
- Colonial region that was mainly settled on for trade and profit; staple farming
- Explorer who discovered the New World and claimed it for Spain
- A colony in which the English monarch provided land to proprietors in exchange for yearly payment
- A system of trading in which Africans were kidnapped from their homes, deported to America, and sold as slaves
- First barrier colonists faced against westward expansion
- Economic competition with little government control
- A colony that was under the direct control of the British crown
- Publisher who contributed to freedom of the press
- Proclamation issued by King George III that banned colonists from settling west of the Appalachian Mountains (name of document, then year)
- Document written in 1215 that established due process of law and trial by jury
- Political cartoon drawn by Benjamin Franklin that urged the US colonies to unite
Down
- Economic system in which the mother country gets rich at the expense of her colonies by restricting trade
- Leader of the First Great Awakening
- First permanent English settlement in colonial America
- Protected the basic civil rights of individuals; model for the US Bill of Rights
- Founded as a debtor colony and a buffer zone between the colonies and Spanish Florida
- A type of govt in which the people elect representatives to make the laws for them
- Wrote the Fundamental Orders of CT in 1639; first written constitution in colonial America
- First representative form of government in the colonies
- Type of farming in the New England Colonies
- Ended the French and Indian War (name of document, then year)
- Document written by Pilgrims/Puritans aboard the Mayflower, pledging to unite into a civil body politic
- Colony that provided a religious refuge for Catholic people
- Founded RI for the purpose of religious freedom
- The colonial region that relied on plantation farming, cash crops, and slavery
28 Clues: Founded PA for Quakers • Leader of the First Great Awakening • Type of farming in the New England Colonies • Founded RI for the purpose of religious freedom • Publisher who contributed to freedom of the press • Economic competition with little government control • First permanent English settlement in colonial America • ...
Human-Environment Interaction Vocabulary 2023-05-02
Across
- planting and cultivating of new trees
- electricity produced by natural underground sources of steam
- method of farming that involves cutting down trees and underbrush and bruning the area
- raising of animals for food
- precipitation carrying large amounts of dissolved acids
- changes in the factors used to measure the condition of the atmosphere over
- land flooded with water permanently or seasonally
- to give support to
- materials or substances that occur in nature
- complex community of living things and the physical environment
- sudden and extreme even in a nature
- act of protecting Earth's natural resources
- haze caused by chemical fumes from pollution
- forbid somebody from doing something through law or rule
- resource that can't be replaced
- growing large quantities of crops or livestock to sell for a profit
- low lying area from which seawater has been drained to create a new land
- set of things in order
- the loss or destruction of forests
Down
- wide variety of life on Earth
- permanently frozen layer of soil beneath the surface of the ground
- idea of creating conditions where all natural resources are available today and for future generations
- located in the far northern regions of Earth
- plants or animals that ride along with water currents
- farming that only provides the basic needs of a family
- process of collecting and moving water for use in agriculture
- to withdraw
- resources that can be replenished in a short period of time
- energy created by splitting the nucleus of an atom
- electricity that is created by water
- rich soil made up of sand and mud deposited by running water
- area turns into a desert
- removal of salt from seawater to make it useable for drinking and farming
- removal of all trees in a stand of timber
- to regain
- fuel resource formed in the Earth by plant and animal remains
- change the place, position, or direction of
- blocks out many of the most harmful rays from the sun
- boundary where a higher, upland area drops to the lower land of a plain
39 Clues: to regain • to withdraw • to give support to • set of things in order • area turns into a desert • raising of animals for food • wide variety of life on Earth • resource that can't be replaced • the loss or destruction of forests • sudden and extreme even in a nature • electricity that is created by water • planting and cultivating of new trees • ...
Chapter 5.1 Fodd Security Key Terms 2025-01-31
Across
- food derived from organisms in which DNA has been changed known as GM crops.
- to limit the amount of food each person or family is allowed to purchase
- the growth of plants without soil
- an increase in salt content, usually of agricultural soils, irrigation water, or drinking water.
- chemicals used to control unwanted plants in commercial food crops
- the cultivation of single crop in one area
- nutrient deficient soils due to crops being continuously grown on them.
- the extreme scarcity of food
- lack of adequate nutrition, caused by not having a balanced diet, or enough to eat.
- a chemical or natural product that can be added to soils to increase nutrients available for plants
- describing things of the same kind, e.g. the crops produced by a farmer may be all of the same kind.
Down
- the supply of water to land or crops to help plants grow
- chemicals used to control unwanted fungi in commercial food crops
- suffering or death caused by lack of food
- when all people, at all times, have physical, social and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life
- when a farmer grows food for their family and not to sell at the market
- when humans grow plants and animals for specific characteristics, e.g. high yield or drought tolerance
- a soil free farming system that uses the waster produced by aquatic organisms (fish) to supply nutrients to plants being grown hydroponically
- a system of farming that uses a small amount of labour and capital investment to the area of land being farmed
- a system of farming that uses large amounts of investment and labour and capital investment relative to the area of land being farmed
- to store large amounts of good or materials, in this instance food stores
- a fuel derived from biomass (plant or algal material, or animal waste)
- aid help given to a country or region suffering from food insecurity
23 Clues: the extreme scarcity of food • the growth of plants without soil • suffering or death caused by lack of food • the cultivation of single crop in one area • the supply of water to land or crops to help plants grow • chemicals used to control unwanted fungi in commercial food crops • chemicals used to control unwanted plants in commercial food crops • ...
Unit 8 Asia Vocabulary 2025-04-01
Across
- Countries with strong economies, good healthcare, and high living standards.
- The spread of goods, ideas, and culture around the world.
- An economy where the government controls all businesses and industries.
- A policy that limited families to having only one child in China.
- The process of cities growing as more people move into them.
- An area in South Asia known for its Sikh population.
- When mountains block rain, creating dry areas on one side.
- Violent acts meant to scare people or make a political statement.
- System A system in which people are born into a social group and stay in it for life.
- A time when warm ocean waters change weather patterns, causing storms or droughts.
- A religion from India that believes in many gods and reincarnation.
- A seasonal wind that brings heavy rain or dry weather.
- To make a guess based on facts and clues.
- An area around the Pacific Ocean known for many earthquakes and volcanoes.
- Countries that are becoming industrialized and improving their economies.
- large mountain range that separates India and China.
Down
- large landmass that is part of a continent but is separated in some way.
- Jobs that turn raw materials into products, like making cars or clothing.
- Jobs that provide services instead of goods, like teachers and doctors.
- A policy that says Taiwan is part of China.
- an ancient Chinese belief system, which focuses on the importance of personal ethics and morality.
- A period when new farming methods increased food production.
- A strict government where leaders have total control.
- When companies move jobs to other countries to save money.
- Partition The event when India was divided into two countries, India and Pakistan.
- farming^A farming method where land is cut into steps on hillsides
- People who move from place to place instead of settling in one location.
- An economic system where businesses make their own decisions based on supply and demand.
- A religion that follows the teachings of Siddhartha Gautama.
29 Clues: To make a guess based on facts and clues. • A policy that says Taiwan is part of China. • An area in South Asia known for its Sikh population. • large mountain range that separates India and China. • A strict government where leaders have total control. • A seasonal wind that brings heavy rain or dry weather. • ...
ahpg final 2025-06-06
Across
- / Development of industries in a country or region on a wide scale.
- / Method of representing the Earth's curved surface on a flat map.
- / The belief in the superiority of one's own ethnic group or race
- / Distance east or west of the prime meridian.
- / Land suitable for growing crops.
- / Step-like landforms built on hillsides for farming
- / Distance north or south of the equator
- / Forces that strengthen or unify a state or group.
- / Group of people with common cultural characteristics
- / a state in which the cultural borders of a nation correspond with the state borders of a country
- / Positive aspects of an area that attract people to a new location.
- / Manipulating electoral districts or boundaries in favor of a political party or group
- / Physical characteristics of a place
- / Organism whose genetic material has been altered using genetic engineering techniques (acronym)
- Farming / A type of agricultural production where crops are grown for personal consumption
- / Total value of goods and services produced within a country's borders in a specific time period (acronym)
- / Supreme authority within a territory.
- / Average number of children a woman is expected to have (acronym)
Down
- / Location relative to other places and human activities.
- / Period marked by the mechanization of farming practices
- Cleansing / Forced removal or killing of an ethnic group from a territory
- / Process of renovating and improving a district so that it conforms to middle-class taste.
- Sprawl / Unplanned expansion of urban areas into surrounding rural land.
- / Spread of cultural elements from one area to another.
- / A type of agricultural production where crops are grown for profit
- / Geographical area that has been shaped by human activity, reflecting cultural practices and values
- / The statistical study of human populations.
- / Economic activity concerned with the processing of raw materials and manufacturing of goods
- / Protection granted to individuals in a foreign country due to fear of persecution
- / factors that divide a state, leading to instability and potentially weakening its unity
- / Loss of uniqueness in a place due to urbanization.
- / Negative aspects that force or encourage people to move away from a place
32 Clues: / Land suitable for growing crops. • / Physical characteristics of a place • / Supreme authority within a territory. • / Distance north or south of the equator • / The statistical study of human populations. • / Distance east or west of the prime meridian. • / Forces that strengthen or unify a state or group. • / Step-like landforms built on hillsides for farming • ...
Ag crosword 2022-09-15
Across
- the practice of letting or leasing taxes, revenue, etc., for collection
- the main thing we learned in Ag class
- To bring a problem before the chapter
- to again bring the question before the chapter
- the science, art, or occupation concerned with cultivating land, raising crops, and feeding, breeding, and raising livestock; farming
- to take care of plants
Down
- a living organism that feeds on organic matter, typically having specialized sense organs and nervous system and able to respond rapidly to stimuli
- to change the main motion
- the horses, cattle, sheep, and other useful animals kept or raised on a farm or ranch
- to motion to reconsider
10 Clues: to take care of plants • to motion to reconsider • to change the main motion • the main thing we learned in Ag class • To bring a problem before the chapter • to again bring the question before the chapter • the practice of letting or leasing taxes, revenue, etc., for collection • the horses, cattle, sheep, and other useful animals kept or raised on a farm or ranch • ...
Food Security BC 2022-10-27
Across
- Plants grown for their produce
- Animals which are grown for their produce
- used in pesticide and fertilizers, oftentimes harmful towards the environment
- Interaction among companies, people and governments
- Where the city meets the rural area
- ... farming: farming in the city
Down
- same definition as healing, 'replenishing'
- A device invented to take photos of leftovers and notify people when there are leftovers so food isn't wasted
- an organization which donates leftover uneaten food from events such as the superbowl to homeless shelters and the people in need
- ... produce: produce grown near/close to the market(s) it ships to, so the food is fresh (but often rots quickly)
10 Clues: Plants grown for their produce • ... farming: farming in the city • Where the city meets the rural area • Animals which are grown for their produce • same definition as healing, 'replenishing' • Interaction among companies, people and governments • used in pesticide and fertilizers, oftentimes harmful towards the environment • ...
El Cacao 2025-04-13
Across
- A major threat to cacao crops; causes diseases like black pod.
- A group of farmers who work together to share resources and access better markets.
- The outer shell that contains cacao beans.
- The tree that produces the pods used to make chocolate.
- One of the biggest challenges for cacao farmers, becoming more unpredictable.
- Indigenous group in Panama involved in cacao farming.
- A farming method that avoids synthetic chemicals and promotes sustainability.
Down
- A natural process used to develop flavor in cacao beans after harvesting.
- A type of plant that grows year after year, like the cacao tree.
- A certification that ensures farmers get a fair price and good working conditions.
10 Clues: The outer shell that contains cacao beans. • Indigenous group in Panama involved in cacao farming. • The tree that produces the pods used to make chocolate. • A major threat to cacao crops; causes diseases like black pod. • A type of plant that grows year after year, like the cacao tree. • A natural process used to develop flavor in cacao beans after harvesting. • ...
Philippines 2022-05-06
10 Clues: - Over, Capital • - Over, Continent • - Geo, ________ Sea • - Eco, Farming Industry • - Geo, Maritime Climate • - Cul, Most popular sport • - Gov,Presidential Republic • - His, Spanish-American ___ • - Cul, Most common Religion • - Over, ________:110,818,325
Philippines 2022-05-06
10 Clues: - Over, Capital • - Over, Continent • - Geo, ________ Sea • - Eco, Farming Industry • - Geo, Maritime Climate • - Cul, Most popular sport • - Gov,Presidential Republic • - His, Spanish-American ___ • - Cul, Most common Religion • - Over, ________:110,818,325
Philippines 2022-05-06
10 Clues: - Over, Capital • - Over, Continent • - Geo, ________ Sea • - Eco, Farming Industry • - Geo, Maritime Climate • - Cul, Most popular sport • - Gov,Presidential Republic • - His, Spanish-American ___ • - Cul, Most common Religion • - Over, ________:110,818,325
chapter 10 2022-03-10
Across
- an urban area in which it is difficult to buy affordable or good fresh food.
- a form of subsistence agriculture in which people shift activity from one field to another; each field is used for crops for a relatively few years and left fallow for a relatively long period.
- the practice of rotating the use of different fields from crop to crop each year to avoid exhausting the soil.
- commercial agriculture characterized by the integration of different steps in the food processing industry, usually through ownership by large corporations.
- commercial gardening and fruit farming so named truck because in middle English word meaning “bartering” or “exchange of commodities.”
- farming methods that preserve long term productivity of land and minimize pollution, typically by rotating soil restoring crops with cash crops and reducing inputs of fertilizer and pesticides.
- the time when human beings first domesticated plants and animals and no longer relied on hunting and gathering.
- a flooded field for growing rice.
- rapid diffusion of new agricultural technology, especially new high yield seeds and fertilizers.
- a form of subsistence agriculture based on herding domesticated animals.
- growth of fruits, vegetables, and flowers.
- agriculture undertaken primarily to generate products and make sales.
Down
- degradation of land, especially in semiarid areas, primarily because of human actions such as excessive crop planting.
- the area surrounding a city in which milk is supplied.
- harvesting twice a year from the same field.
- for of subsistence agriculture in which farmers must expend a relatively large amount of effort to produce the maximum feasible yield from a parcel of land.
- system of planting crops on ridge tops in order to reduce farm production costs and promote greater soil conservation.
- a large farm in tropical and subtropical climates that specializes in one or two crops for sale, usually to a more developed country.
- a patch of land cleared for planting through slashing and burning.
- agriculture designed primarily to provide food for direct consumption by the farmer and the farmer’s family.
- the seasonal migration of livestock between mountains and lowland pastures.
21 Clues: a flooded field for growing rice. • growth of fruits, vegetables, and flowers. • harvesting twice a year from the same field. • the area surrounding a city in which milk is supplied. • a patch of land cleared for planting through slashing and burning. • agriculture undertaken primarily to generate products and make sales. • ...
Chapter 5.1 Food Security Key Terms Crossword 2025-01-31
Across
- food derived from organisms in which DNA has been changed known as GM crops.
- to limit the amount of food each person or family is allowed to purchase
- the growth of plants without soil
- an increase in salt content, usually of agricultural soils, irrigation water, or drinking water.
- chemicals used to control unwanted plants in commercial food crops
- the cultivation of single crop in one area
- nutrient deficient soils due to crops being continuously grown on them.
- the extreme scarcity of food
- lack of adequate nutrition, caused by not having a balanced diet, or enough to eat.
- a chemical or natural product that can be added to soils to increase nutrients available for plants
- describing things of the same kind, e.g. the crops produced by a farmer may be all of the same kind.
Down
- the supply of water to land or crops to help plants grow
- chemicals used to control unwanted fungi in commercial food crops
- suffering or death caused by lack of food
- when all people, at all times, have physical, social and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life
- when a farmer grows food for their family and not to sell at the market
- when humans grow plants and animals for specific characteristics, e.g. high yield or drought tolerance
- a soil free farming system that uses the waster produced by aquatic organisms (fish) to supply nutrients to plants being grown hydroponically
- a system of farming that uses a small amount of labour and capital investment to the area of land being farmed
- a system of farming that uses large amounts of investment and labour and capital investment relative to the area of land being farmed
- to store large amounts of good or materials, in this instance food stores
- a fuel derived from biomass (plant or algal material, or animal waste)
- aid help given to a country or region suffering from food insecurity
23 Clues: the extreme scarcity of food • the growth of plants without soil • suffering or death caused by lack of food • the cultivation of single crop in one area • the supply of water to land or crops to help plants grow • chemicals used to control unwanted fungi in commercial food crops • chemicals used to control unwanted plants in commercial food crops • ...
Natural Texas & Its People 2024-10-29
Across
- A deep valley with steep sides, often carved by a river.
- Natural features of a place, such as landforms, climate, or vegetation.
- A large body of saltwater partly enclosed by land.
- Important historical periods defined by significant events or characteristics.
- A Native American tribe known for their farming and settled villages in East Texas.
- An underground layer of rock that stores water.
- Indigenous people who lived in South Texas, known for their nomadic lifestyle.
- A Native American tribe known for their skill in horseback riding and hunting.
- Specific areas with distinct geographical or cultural significance.
- A Native American tribe known for farming and trading in present-day Texas and Oklahoma.
- A group of people connected by common culture, language, and ancestry.
- A steep slope or cliff formed by erosion or faulting.
- Traits that make something unique or easily identifiable.
- Indigenous people known for living in multi-storied adobe dwellings in the Southwest.
Down
- Indigenous people who lived along the Texas Gulf Coast, known for fishing and hunting.
- Native American tribe known for farming and trading in the Southwest.
- Refers to tribes or cultures from the southeastern regions of North America.
- A Plains tribe known for their nomadic lifestyle and reliance on buffalo.
- Features created by humans, such as buildings, roads, or cultures.
- A lifestyle involving moving from place to place without a permanent home.
- To change or adjust something for a specific purpose.
- A building material made from earth, clay, and straw, used to make bricks.
- A large area of land where water collects and drains into a river or lake.
- A Puebloan tribe from the Southwestern United States, especially Texas and New Mexico.
- The shared customs, beliefs, and practices of a group of people.
- Large areas of flat or gently rolling grassland.
- A spiritual leader believed to have healing or magical powers.
- Areas defined by shared physical or cultural traits.
- A Native American tribe historically located in the Southwestern United States.
29 Clues: An underground layer of rock that stores water. • Large areas of flat or gently rolling grassland. • A large body of saltwater partly enclosed by land. • Areas defined by shared physical or cultural traits. • To change or adjust something for a specific purpose. • A steep slope or cliff formed by erosion or faulting. • ...
lesson 2 What is the spatial variation between employment sectors? 2016-10-31
Across
- Developed countries’ – a large tertiary sector and maybe a growing quaternary sector e.g. UK. (also called MEDcs – More economically developed countries)
- Developing countries’ – often many jobs in the primary sector e.g. Ethiopia, Malawi. (also called LEDcs – less economically developed countries)Middle income countries
- Farming for a profit, this often involves farming higher value cash crops involving high tech farming equipment.
- Farming for only your family and sometimes village. Often land is rented and there is lack of high tech farming equipment.
Down
- Emerging countries’ – often has a growing secondary sector but still a large primary sector e.g. China. An older term for this was the NICs – Newly Industrialized Country.
- A group of middle income countries who economists saw as the fastest growing in the 2000s – Brazil, Russia, India, China and later South Africa was added. An up date of BRICs is the MINTs – Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria, Turkey.
6 Clues: Farming for a profit, this often involves farming higher value cash crops involving high tech farming equipment. • Farming for only your family and sometimes village. Often land is rented and there is lack of high tech farming equipment. • ...
Industrial revolution 2017-12-04
6 Clues: relating to farming • the old way of manual labor • President against the industry • was the largest city with 69,000 people • the new and improved way of manufacturing • a government order restricting foreign trade
placemat maker 2024-06-10
Policy 3 - Helping the Economy 2014-06-04
Across
- The railway replaced this method of transporting goods across the country
- The thing that helped increase trade across the Dominion
- These could produce goods more quickly and cheaply (2 words)
- Canadian goods were more ___ compared to American made ones
- First Nations and Metis were ___ by the government and had a hard time adjusting to the new life
- Grain replaced this resource as Canada's main export
Down
- The people responsible for increasing farming output in Western Canada
- What would help the economy in Eastern Canada
- These locations became new cities, such as Fort Edmonton became Edmonton (2 words)
- A tax that Macdonald placed on products not made in Canada (2 words)
- What would help the economy in Western Canada
- Ploughed fields covered this part of Canada, where First Nations traditionally lived
- The new tariff would encourage people to buy ___ made goods
13 Clues: What would help the economy in Eastern Canada • What would help the economy in Western Canada • Grain replaced this resource as Canada's main export • The thing that helped increase trade across the Dominion • Canadian goods were more ___ compared to American made ones • The new tariff would encourage people to buy ___ made goods • ...
Chapter 19 2020-12-07
Across
- - to earn ownership of land by living on it
- - name given to early Great Plains farmers
- - money or goods given by a person or government to support a project that benefits the public
- - enterprise owned by and operated for the benefit of a certain group
- Zone - a geographic region in which the same standard time is used
- Drive - a trip of several hundred miles on which ranchers led their cattle to railroads and distant markets
- - moving from place to place in a fixed pattern
- Grange - a network of local farmers' groups
Down
- - a cowhand of Hispanic origin
- - going across a continent
- - an appeal to the common people
- - an area of land set aside for use by a group
- Farming - a farming method that depends on plowing after every rain and trapping moisture in the soil in dry non-irrigated land
13 Clues: - going across a continent • - a cowhand of Hispanic origin • - an appeal to the common people • - name given to early Great Plains farmers • - to earn ownership of land by living on it • Grange - a network of local farmers' groups • - an area of land set aside for use by a group • - moving from place to place in a fixed pattern • ...
Mesopotamia Economics and Society 2023-12-06
Across
- The groups at the bottom of the social hierarchy had the __ power.
- Division of Labor means an arrangement in which workers ____ in a particular task
- ___generally had more power and more educational opportunities than women.
- ____led to increased communication among the peoples.
- The people of Mesopotamia were often organized into a social ____.
- The Phoenicians most famous product was clothing dyed in __.
Down
- Darius I created a standard currency, or type of ___.
- Irrigation improved farming conditions and resulted in a ___ of food, more than needed.
- ___became skilled sailors and shipbuilders.
- Merchants used the Tigris-Euphrates Rivers and other bodies of water as trade ____ between locations.
- The Mesopotamian economy was originally centered around agriculture, as many people were __.
- The groups at the top of the hierarchy had the most ___, status, and wealth.
- There were few resources in Mesopotamia, so people would ___ their surplus of grain for items they needed.
- Money did not exist right away, so they used a ___system in which they directly traded items.
14 Clues: ___became skilled sailors and shipbuilders. • Darius I created a standard currency, or type of ___. • ____led to increased communication among the peoples. • The Phoenicians most famous product was clothing dyed in __. • The groups at the bottom of the social hierarchy had the __ power. • The people of Mesopotamia were often organized into a social ____. • ...
grapes of wrath make up 2025-06-17
Across
- Stubborn neighbor who refuses to leave his land after eviction.
- Environmental region that had disaster which ruined farmland in the Midwest
- The forced removal of families from their land by banks or landowners.
- Recently released from prison, he returns to his family's farm.
- The hopeful destination where migrant families seek a better life.
Down
- The economic collapse that left millions of Americans jobless.
- A farming system where families worked land they didn’t own for a share of the crops.
- Symbol of industrial farming that replaces tenant farmers and destroys homes.
- A symbolic creature that represents persistence in Chapter 3.
- A relative who takes the Joads in for a short while.
- What desperate families were tricked into buying to travel west.
- The emotional and practical leader of the Joad family.
- Referred to as a “monster,” this entity forces families off land.
13 Clues: A relative who takes the Joads in for a short while. • The emotional and practical leader of the Joad family. • A symbolic creature that represents persistence in Chapter 3. • The economic collapse that left millions of Americans jobless. • Stubborn neighbor who refuses to leave his land after eviction. • ...
Geography of Africa Crossword 2025-12-08
Across
- group, a group of people in a country who share a unique culture and identity
- a mountainous part of a country
- a geographic region with too little rainfall to support much plant life
- a type of tropical grassland
- farming, raising crops for sale, often on large farms
- farming, agriculture carried out mainly to provide food for farm families, with little surplus for sale to others
- a type of thick evergreen forest found in areas of heavy rainfall
Down
- made up of water that is not salty
- a bowl-shaped depression or hollow in Earth’s surface
- feature, any natural characteristic of Earth’s surface
- herding, the raising of livestock for food by moving herds from place to place to find pasture and water
- a raised area of land with a flat top
- activity, any action that relates to the making, buying, and selling of goods and services
13 Clues: a type of tropical grassland • a mountainous part of a country • made up of water that is not salty • a raised area of land with a flat top • a bowl-shaped depression or hollow in Earth’s surface • farming, raising crops for sale, often on large farms • feature, any natural characteristic of Earth’s surface • ...
Weekly Crossword 2026-01-13
Across
- The practice of planting different crops each season to keep soil fertile.
- The movement of people from rural areas to cities.
- A machine that allowed one worker to spin many threads at once.
- A manufacturing process where products are built step-by-step by different workers.
- Man made waterways used to transport goods and raw materials.
Down
- A powerful engine that pulls train cars on railroads.
- A boat powered by steam engines instead of sails.
- A machine that uses steam power to run factories and transportation.
- An economic system where nations increase wealth by exporting more than they import.
- A machine that quickly separates cotton fibers from seeds.
- A farming machine that plants seeds evenly in the soil to increase crop yields.
- A system of communication using dots and dashes sent over wires.
- The practice of fencing off common land for private farming.
13 Clues: A boat powered by steam engines instead of sails. • The movement of people from rural areas to cities. • A powerful engine that pulls train cars on railroads. • A machine that quickly separates cotton fibers from seeds. • The practice of fencing off common land for private farming. • Man made waterways used to transport goods and raw materials. • ...
Vocabulary 2023-11-16
12 Clues: equipment • male Bull • small house • dried crops • a man to fight • gathering crops • seed from a plant • large farming tool • plants grown on a farm • vehicle pulled by a horse • the activity of exchanging • the person who buy and sell
The Dust bowl 2023-02-24
12 Clues: no water • not alive • Our state • Our county • no food to eat • not feeling well • blizzards of dust • Wealth and resources • __ Storms happen often • Right now there is a dust __ • moving from one place to another • growing crops and raising livestock
Unit 6 Crossword 2023-02-27
Across
- Plains = nomadic hunters
- Age power = King Of France, England Holy Roman Emperor
- = place of refuge
- rich = trading, tribute, war
- Warfare = destructive
- astronomers = Days In The Year
- attack Incas = refused to become Christians
Down
- = Farming
- native people = clan
- = specialized workers
- Americans = Hunter Gatherers
- = Pueblo and Hopi
- = the coast
13 Clues: = Farming • = the coast • = place of refuge • = Pueblo and Hopi • native people = clan • = specialized workers • Warfare = destructive • Plains = nomadic hunters • Americans = Hunter Gatherers • rich = trading, tribute, war • astronomers = Days In The Year • attack Incas = refused to become Christians • Age power = King Of France, England Holy Roman Emperor
Paul Bunyan 2022-01-04
12 Clues: wild • not normal • to let melt • making known • things needed • cutting lumber • practice farming • part of the face • wearing away of the land • workers who cut down trees • straps used to hitch a horse • factory which logs are getting sawed
Axolotl in Peril 2025-09-05
12 Clues: Dna • young form • living things • island for farming • different language • to always look young • a type of salamander • things growing larger • to become formed again • Dna Sequence of organism • living more longer double life • an unborn organism that is developing
Valhiem Gazette Weekend Puzzler 2026-04-04
12 Clues: Losers • Lost vendor • Stamina stew • River lizard • Gabe’s monopoly • Shawman’s attack • Portal ingredient • Next biome’s crop • Metal beyond our skill • Clarice’s copper obsession • mountain raid without a base • Only has a 5% chance of spawning during the day, according to sav
The Colonial Era 2017-05-25
Across
- Wrote the Fundamental Orders of CT in 1639; first written constitution in colonial America
- Publisher who contributed to freedom of the press
- Founded PA for Quakers
- Colony that provided a religious refuge for Catholic people
- War that Britain and France fought due to fur trapping conflicts; Seven Years’ War
- First barrier colonists faced against westward expansion
- A type of govt in which the people elect representatives to make the laws for them
- Ended the French and Indian War (name of document, then year)
- First representative form of government in the colonies
- Document written in 1215 that established due process of law and trial by jury
- First permanent English settlement in colonial America
- A colony established by a group of settlers who were given a formal document allowing them to settle on the land
- Type of farming in the New England Colonies
- Colonial region that was mainly settled on for trade and profit; staple farming
Down
- Founded RI for the purpose of religious freedom
- Explorer who discovered the New World and claimed it for Spain
- Document written by Pilgrims/Puritans aboard the Mayflower, pledging to unite into a civil body politic
- A system of trading in which Africans were kidnapped from their homes, deported to America, and sold as slaves
- A colony in which the English monarch provided land to proprietors in exchange for yearly payment
- Economic system in which the mother country gets rich at the expense of her colonies by restricting trade
- Protected the basic civil rights of individuals; model for the US Bill of Rights
- Proclamation issued by King George III that banned colonists from settling west of the Appalachian Mountains (name of document, then year)
- Leader of the First Great Awakening
- The colonial region that relied on plantation farming, cash crops, and slavery
- Economic competition with little government control
- A colony that was under the direct control of the British crown
- Political cartoon drawn by Benjamin Franklin that urged the US colonies to unite
- Founded as a debtor colony and a buffer zone between the colonies and Spanish Florida
28 Clues: Founded PA for Quakers • Leader of the First Great Awakening • Type of farming in the New England Colonies • Founded RI for the purpose of religious freedom • Publisher who contributed to freedom of the press • Economic competition with little government control • First permanent English settlement in colonial America • ...
Improvement of Food resources 2024-12-26
Across
- The practice of cultivating soil, growing crops, and raising animals.
- The process of water movement through a plant and its evaporation from aerial parts.
- A structure with walls and roof made chiefly of transparent material, used for growing plants.
- Control: The regulation or management of a species defined as a pest.
- Substances added to soil to enhance the growth of plants.
- The artificial application of water to the soil to assist in the growing of crops.
- The process of using worms to decompose organic food waste into a nutrient-rich material.
- Pesticides derived from natural materials such as animals, plants, bacteria, and certain minerals.
- Farming: A method of farming that uses natural processes and materials.
- The amount of crop produced in a given area.
- Engineering: The direct manipulation of an organism's genes using biotechnology.
- The method of growing plants without soil, using mineral nutrient solutions in an aqueous solvent.
Down
- The cultivation of a single crop in a given area.
- The removal of unwanted plants from the crop field.
- The integration of trees and shrubs into agricultural landscapes.
- Offspring resulting from the cross-breeding of different varieties or species.
- Agriculture: Farming in sustainable ways based on an understanding of ecosystem services.
- The process by which green plants use sunlight to synthesize foods from carbon dioxide and water.
- Rotation: The practice of growing different types of crops in the same area in sequential seasons.
- The art or practice of garden cultivation and management.
- The cultivation of aquatic organisms such as fish and plants.
- The simultaneous cultivation of multiple crops in the same space.
- Chemicals used to kill pests that can damage crops.
- Organic matter used as fertilizer in agriculture.
- Decomposed organic material used as a soil amendment.
- Microorganisms that enhance the availability of nutrients to plants.
- The production of silk and the rearing of silkworms.
- Erosion: The displacement of the upper layer of soil, reducing its fertility.
- Fixation: The process of converting nitrogen gas into a form that plants can absorb and use.
- The maintenance of bee colonies for honey production.
30 Clues: The amount of crop produced in a given area. • The cultivation of a single crop in a given area. • Organic matter used as fertilizer in agriculture. • The removal of unwanted plants from the crop field. • Chemicals used to kill pests that can damage crops. • The production of silk and the rearing of silkworms. • Decomposed organic material used as a soil amendment. • ...
Unit 8 Asia Vocabulary 2025-04-01
Across
- Economy^An economic system where businesses make their own decisions based on supply and demand.
- process of cities growing as more people move into them.
- make a guess based on facts and clues.
- Shadow Effect^When mountains block rain, creating dry areas on one side.
- Industries^Jobs that provide services instead of goods, like teachers and doctors.
- Economy^An economy where the government controls all businesses and industries.
- who move from place to place instead of settling in one location.
- Child Policy^A policy that limited families to having only one child in China.
- Industries^Jobs that turn raw materials into products, like making cars or clothing.
- seasonal wind that brings heavy rain or dry weather.
- large landmass that is part of a continent but is separated in some way.
- Revolution^A period when new farming methods increased food production.
- of Fire^An area around the Pacific Ocean known for many earthquakes and volcanoes.
Down
- spread of goods, ideas, and culture around the world.
- companies move jobs to other countries to save money.
- Developed Countries^Countries that are becoming industrialized and improving their economies.
- religion that follows the teachings of Siddhartha Gautama.
- large mountain range that separates India and China.
- Partition^The event when India was divided into two countries, India and Pakistan.
- strict government where leaders have total control.
- religion from India that believes in many gods and reincarnation.
- farming^A farming method where land is cut into steps on hillsides
- Countries^Countries with strong economies, good healthcare, and high living standards.
- System^A system in which people are born into a social group and stay in it for life.
- acts meant to scare people or make a political statement.
- ancient Chinese belief system, which focuses on the importance of personal ethics and morality.
- Region^An area in South Asia known for its Sikh population.
- China Policy^A policy that says Taiwan is part of China.
- Nino^A time when warm ocean waters change weather patterns, causing storms or droughts.
29 Clues: make a guess based on facts and clues. • strict government where leaders have total control. • large mountain range that separates India and China. • seasonal wind that brings heavy rain or dry weather. • spread of goods, ideas, and culture around the world. • companies move jobs to other countries to save money. • ...
Fisheries Industry in Brunei 2025-08-04
Across
- Financial help given by the Fisheries Department to support fishers financially. Fishers are able to pay back on monthly basis
- Fish is a rich source of this nutrient
- Brunei's climate
- The Malay term for this fish is 'selunsong'
- Financial support provided by the government to reduce cost of equipment / capital for fishers
- Also known as 'pukat tunda', where large net is towed through the water to catch fish on a large scale
- Brunei's coastline is only 161 KM - described as relatively _________.
- Support service offered by the Fisheries Department to improve skills among fishers
- Fisheries Industry helps Brunei reduce reliance on oil and gas. What is this process called?
- Farming fish in ponds
- Fisheries Industry provides this opportunity to thousands of people (or potentially more) in Brunei
- Also known as fish farming; involves rearing fish from fry to market sized; normally using pond or in cages
- When Brunei can produce most/all of its own fish without reliance on import. What is this term called?
- A threat to fishing areas caused by harmful waste entering rivers or seas
Down
- A hazard that can damage marine life and reduce fishing areas
- A situation where too much fish has been caught than the allowed limit
- Brunei has 161 KM of this
- The main marine area where Brunei conducts most of its fishing
- An environmental issue where unintended fish species, often endangered, are caught during fishing
- This fishing area has four Zones
- ____ fishing - often small-scale, fish for personal consumption
- Fewer of these groups of population are joining the Fishing Industry today in Brunei
- Which fishing method type practiced by small-scale fishers?
- Makes up 85% of Brunei's aquaculture production
- Act of catching fish or other aquatic animals
- Freshwater fishing areas
- Farming fish in cages that is suspended in sea / rivers
- Limits on the amount of fish that can be caught
- Malay term for purse seiner
- ____ fishing - larger-scale, fish for profit
30 Clues: Brunei's climate • Farming fish in ponds • Freshwater fishing areas • Brunei has 161 KM of this • Malay term for purse seiner • This fishing area has four Zones • Fish is a rich source of this nutrient • The Malay term for this fish is 'selunsong' • ____ fishing - larger-scale, fish for profit • Act of catching fish or other aquatic animals • ...
Tobys Huge Crossword SRVHS 2025-04-25
Across
- The minimum number of people needed to support a business or service (6 IDK)
- An industry where the final product is heavier than the inputs (like soda bottles) (7 CC)
- The language chosen by a country for government and laws (3 IDK)
- Money sent home by migrants to support their families (6 VIT)
- When a culture completely blends into another and loses its original traits (3 CC)
- When companies divide production between countries, like designing in one and manufacturing in another (1 VIT)
- Scaring homeowners into selling by warning them that different racial groups are moving in (6 CC)
- When people move to a place because others from their community are already there (2 CC)
- Controlling another country, often through politics or military, without settling (4 CC)
- The idea that humans can adapt and make choices despite environmental limits (1 IDK)
- A place name that can reveal culture or history (1 IDK)
- Migration that happens in stages, not all at once (2 CC)
- Farming to feed your family, not for profit (5 CC)
- A system that ensures fair wages and treatment for producers in developing countries (7 IDK)
- The location of a place in relation to other places (1 CC)
- Denying loans to people in certain neighborhoods based on race (6 CC)
- An industry where the final product is lighter than the raw materials (like smelting metal) (7 CC)
- How causes of death shift from disease to chronic conditions as countries develop (2 IDK)
Down
- Farming large-scale crops or animals for sale and money (5 CC)
- A theory explaining where different types of farming happen based on distance from a market (5 VIT)
- Farming of fish, shellfish, or other aquatic life (5 IDK)
- Taxes on goods coming in or out of a country (7 IDK)
- A large, developed, and densely populated city space (2 VIT)
- Rules that control land use like residential, commercial, or industrial zones (6 IDK)
- A person fleeing danger and asking for protection in another country (2 IDK)
- Religions like Christianity that try to appeal to all people everywhere (3 VIT)
- Taking over another area and settling there (4 CC)
- A lifestyle of moving with animals to find fresh pasture (5 IDK)
- The physical characteristics of a location like landforms or climate (1 CC)
- A government where one person holds all the power (4 IDK)
- When a culture adopts traits from another but keeps its identity (3 CC)
- The outdated idea that the environment completely shapes how people live (7 VIT)
- A government where power is shared between national and local levels (4 VIT)
- A group of related languages from a common origin (3 IDK)
- A small area surrounded by a different cultural or political region (4 IDK)
35 Clues: Taking over another area and settling there (4 CC) • Farming to feed your family, not for profit (5 CC) • Taxes on goods coming in or out of a country (7 IDK) • A place name that can reveal culture or history (1 IDK) • Migration that happens in stages, not all at once (2 CC) • Farming of fish, shellfish, or other aquatic life (5 IDK) • ...
AP Human Puzzle #2 2015-04-15
Across
- Refugees seek out ______ when they arrive to their new home
- Billy couldn’t migrate to Spain from France b/c of the mountains, so he decided to migrate to Germany instead
- Someone who enters another country
- Sector that focuses on getting raw materials out of the Earth
- Commercial farms use a lot of ______ ____ because of the large amount of machinery that is used
- Terrible weather forces people in Louisiana to move up to the northern states
- ______ wheat is grown during the warmer seasons
- Job opportunities in the US brings immigrants from other countries
- Ricky thought it was best to voluntarily leave his country to find work
- Sector with the jobs such as bank teller and accountant
- Lily’s aunt lives in Texas, so Lily moved there to be closer to her family
- Sector focused on health, education, and government recreation
Down
- ___________ farming is more common in LDC’s because they are only there to feed the farmer and his family
- Josh plants corn in Iowa because he knows it is a ________.
- Kelly was given a government _______ because she grew the crop they wanted her to grow.
- _________ countries are taken advantage of by semi-periphery countries
- California and Wisconsin are the largest producers of this product in the US
- Jared moves to Colorado to get enough money to move to L.A. but finds his job in Colorado is much better than what he has available in L.A.
- Someone who leaves a country
- __________ farming is more common in MDC’s because of the size of the farms
- Amount you receive from your harvest of your crops
- Jeffery made a vow to eat food only produced 200 miles within his area, better known as, ________
- ______ wheat is grown during the colder seasons
- The US is considered ____ because it takes advantage of semi-periphery countries
- _______ farming is not as common because of the limited use of pesticides and the amount of labor needed to weed the field by hand.
25 Clues: Someone who leaves a country • Someone who enters another country • ______ wheat is grown during the warmer seasons • ______ wheat is grown during the colder seasons • Amount you receive from your harvest of your crops • Sector with the jobs such as bank teller and accountant • Refugees seek out ______ when they arrive to their new home • ...
CH 10 AGRICULTURE 2022-03-04
Across
- an area in a developed country where healthy food is difficult to obtain
- a form of subsistence agriculture in which people shift activity from one field to another; each field is used for crops for a relatively few years and left fallow fro a relatively long period
- the practice of rotating use of different fields from crop to crop each year to avoid exhausting the soil
- commercial agriculture characterized by the integration of different steps in the food-processing industry, usually through ownership by large corporations
- commercial gardening and fruit farming
- farming methods that preserve long-term productivity of land and minimize pollution, typically by rotating soil-restoring cro
- the time when human beings first domesticated plants and animals and no longer relied entirely on hunting and gathering
- a flooded field for growing rice
- rapid diffusion of new agricultural technology especially new high-yield seeds and fertilizers
- a from of subsistence agriculture based on herding domesticated animals
- the growing of fruits, vegetables, and flowers
- agriculture undertaken primarily to generate products for sale off the farm
Down
- degradation of land, especially in semiarid areas, primarily because of human actions such as excessive crop planting, animal grazing, and tree cutting (also known as semiarid land degradation)
- the area surrounding a city from where milk is supplied
- harvesting twice a year from the same field
- a form of subsistence agriculture in which farmers must expend a relatively large amount of effort to produce the maximum feasible yield from a parcel of land
- a system of planting crops on ridge tops in order to reduce farm production costs and promote greater soil conservation
- a large farm in tropical and subtropical climates that specializes in the production of one or two crops for sale
- a patch of land cleared for planting through slashing and burning
- agriculture designed primarily to provide food for direct consumption by the farmer and the famrmer's family
- the seasona migratio of livestock between mountains and lowland pastures
21 Clues: a flooded field for growing rice • commercial gardening and fruit farming • harvesting twice a year from the same field • the growing of fruits, vegetables, and flowers • the area surrounding a city from where milk is supplied • a patch of land cleared for planting through slashing and burning • a from of subsistence agriculture based on herding domesticated animals • ...
Ch 10 Study Guide 2022-03-10
Across
- when food is produced for sale.
- a type of agriculture that focuses on producing long-term crops and livestock while having minimal effects on the environment.
- an area that has limited access to affordable and nutritious food.
- the production of crops of some vegetables on an extensive scale in regions especially suited to their culture primarily for shipment to distant markets.
- the process by which fertile land becomes desert
- the emergence of new varieties of crops.
- planting several crops in the same area and in the same crop year so that the same land is used to generate more than one crop per year.
- leveled and bunded rice fields with inlet and outlet connecting irrigation and drainage.
- a region producing milk that may be supplied to the area of demand.
- a way of life of peoples who do not live continually in the same place but move cyclically or periodically.
- agriculture conducted on commercial principles.
Down
- the action or practice of moving livestock from one grazing ground to another in a seasonal cycle.
- form of farming in which nearly all of the crops or livestock raised are used to maintain the farmer and the farmer's family.
- an agricultural system in which plots of land are cultivated temporarily, then abandoned while post-disturbance fallow vegetation is allowed to freely grow while the cultivator moves on to another plot.
- transition from hunting and gathering to planting crops.
- the type of farming where the farmer cultivates a small plot of land using simple tools and more labor.
- an area of land cleared for cultivation by slashing and burning vegetation.
- the art or practice of garden cultivation and management.
- the practice of planting different crops sequentially on the same plot of land to improve soil health.
- a form of conservation tillage where the farmer builds ridges or raised beds.
- an agricultural estate, generally centered on a plantation house.
21 Clues: when food is produced for sale. • the emergence of new varieties of crops. • agriculture conducted on commercial principles. • the process by which fertile land becomes desert • transition from hunting and gathering to planting crops. • the art or practice of garden cultivation and management. • an agricultural estate, generally centered on a plantation house. • ...
CH 10 AGRICULTURE 2022-03-03
Across
- The growing of fruits, vegetables, and flowers.
- degradation of land
- desert an urban area in which it is difficult to buy affordable or good-quality fresh food.
- agriculture Agriculture designed primarily to provide food for direct consumption by the farmer and the farmer's family.
- cultivation A form of subsistence agriculture in which people shift activity from one field to another; each field is used for crops for a relatively few years and left fallow for a relatively long period.
- revolution The time when human beings first domesticated plants and animals and no longer relied entirely on hunting and gathering.
- commercial agriculture characterized by the integration of different steps in the food-processing industry, usually through ownership by large corporations.
- cropping Harvesting twice a year from the same field
- tillage A system of planting crops on ridge tops in order to reduce farm production costs and promote greater soil conservation.
Down
- agriculture Agriculture undertaken primarily to generate products for sale off the farm.
- agriculture Farming methods that preserve long term productivity of land and minimize pollution, typically by rotating soil-restoring crops with cash crops and reducing inputs of fertilizer and pesticides.
- nomadism A form of subsistence agriculture based on herding domesticated animals.
- A patch of land cleared for planting through slashing and burning.
- farming Commercial gardening and fruit farming, so named because truck was a Middle English word meaning “bartering" or "exchange of commodities”.
- The seasonal migration of livestock between mountains and lowland pastures.
- revolution Rapid diffusion of new agricultural technology especially new high-yield seeds and fertilizers.
- subsistence agriculture A form of subsistence agriculture in which farmers must expend a relatively large amount of effort to produce the maximum feasible yield from a parcel of land.
- A large farm in tropical and subtropical climates that specializes in the production of one or two crops for sale, usually to a more developed country.
- rotation The practice of rotating use of different fields from crop to crop each year to avoid exhausting the soil.
- A flooded field for growing rice.
- The area surrounding a city from which milk is supplied.
21 Clues: degradation of land • A flooded field for growing rice. • The growing of fruits, vegetables, and flowers. • cropping Harvesting twice a year from the same field • The area surrounding a city from which milk is supplied. • A patch of land cleared for planting through slashing and burning. • The seasonal migration of livestock between mountains and lowland pastures. • ...
Jonathan Z's Ch#14 2024-05-20
Across
- _____ Singer made an improved version of the cotton gin.
- Slaveholders feared that their slaves would rebel, so they made the ______ Code.
- _______ Morse made the telegraph, with his own code that is used to use the telegraph.
- To combat the issue with railroad safety, stronger ________ were built.
- With all of the textile mills being popular, ______ was in increased demand.
- ____ people were able to strike it rich with a lot of slaves, while others had less than 50.
- Due to the great weather in the south for farming, the _________ states had the most slaves.
- Because of the great weather here, the most common job in the South was ______.
- ____ percent of the 9 million opulation in the south were slaves.
- With the ___ caused by a potato disease, many Irish came to the U.S.
- With the new invention of ______ power, more possibilities came up such as the railroad.
Down
- To prevent slaves from escaping, people made it _____ for slaves to learn to read and write.
- Most workers in factories in the North were Irish were __________.
- Steam and clipper _____ were one of the main sources of transportation until railroads.
- ____ Deere invented the lightweight steel plow, which could be used by horses.
- The few people that struck it rich being slaveholders were called the ________.
- With the massive amount of cotton demanded and the cotton gin, many got __ from farming cotton.
- With the cotton gin being able to do the work of 50 people, slaveholders would be able to buy _____ times more slaves.
- _____ McCormick invented mechanical reapers, which sped up the process of farmig.
- Because of the rich slaveholders having power, many became leaders in _________.
- Even with the amount of slaves, over 200,000 blacks in the South were _____.
- Eli _______ invented a machine called the cotton gin, which could do the work of 50 men.
- When you are a slave, you have to hope that the master would treat you _______ instead of valuable property.
- With the South, ______ owned at least 15 slaves.
24 Clues: With the South, ______ owned at least 15 slaves. • _____ Singer made an improved version of the cotton gin. • ____ percent of the 9 million opulation in the south were slaves. • Most workers in factories in the North were Irish were __________. • With the ___ caused by a potato disease, many Irish came to the U.S. • ...
9GEO FOOD 2017-09-17
Across
- The location of a point on the earths surface that can be expressed by a grid reference such as longitude or latitude
- scarcity lack of access to enough safe water
- farming higher levels of input and output per unit of agricultural land area
- Being able to access enough safe food and water
- The mass of water vapour in the atmosphere
- Sustainability is the production of food, fiber, or other plant or animal products using farming techniques that protect the environment
Down
- Using food that you have in an appropriate way
- height of an object in the atmosphere above sea level
- Food that is available to you and there is enough of it
- are characterized as having grasses as the dominant vegetation
- Are produced by some types of plants
- Rain Rain that becomes more acidic than normal
- Fine liquid or solid particles in the atmosphere
13 Clues: Are produced by some types of plants • The mass of water vapour in the atmosphere • scarcity lack of access to enough safe water • Using food that you have in an appropriate way • Rain Rain that becomes more acidic than normal • Being able to access enough safe food and water • Fine liquid or solid particles in the atmosphere • ...
Ch 10 - Sodbusters 2022-03-16
Across
- An area of economic activity where people could buy or sell with each other
- Someone who moved to unbroken land to live and farm on it
- This crop changed the landscape of MN
- A style of farming that produces a variety of crops and livestock
- A style of farming that produced just enough food to feed one's own family
- This is the country talked about in the book
- To control or adjust something in order to change how it works
Down
- This helped move people and goods further and faster
- An Act that provided 160 acres of land to settlers who would live and farm on it
- An organization formed to help members buy and sell their products
- someone who buys and sells land, hoping to make a profit
- An organization of farmers that supported their best interest
- The last name of the man called "The Empire Builder"
13 Clues: This crop changed the landscape of MN • This is the country talked about in the book • This helped move people and goods further and faster • The last name of the man called "The Empire Builder" • someone who buys and sells land, hoping to make a profit • Someone who moved to unbroken land to live and farm on it • ...
Kallie GREECE VS. ROME 2022-05-05
Across
- Most girls would get ___ off by the age of 12 or 13.
- The most common grown crops in farming was wheat, barley, __, and grapes
- There were two kinds of education, there was formal or ___
- _____ were the most favorite toy by the children.
- Woman would stay at home and do __________ and cooking
- The Ancient Greeks mainly just ate ________
Down
- Greeks lived in buildings near the _____
- The Ancient Greeks either bought or made their _____
- Most men would work as soldiers or as town ___.
- Ancient Greeks lived in towns and ____
- Only wealthy boys went to ____, the girls would learn how to cook and clean at home.
- The children would go to school until the age of 18, then they would go into _____ school Farming in Ancient Greece was hard cause there was not good soil
- ____ were the most common pet in Ancient Greek society.
13 Clues: Ancient Greeks lived in towns and ____ • Greeks lived in buildings near the _____ • The Ancient Greeks mainly just ate ________ • Most men would work as soldiers or as town ___. • _____ were the most favorite toy by the children. • Most girls would get ___ off by the age of 12 or 13. • The Ancient Greeks either bought or made their _____ • ...
History Crossword Puzzle 2022-08-28
Across
- an official mission to speak to the ruler of a different country
- This man read the letter asking for help and declared a crusade or the holy war
- society that only relies on farming and farming Currency money system
- this man sailed around the tip of africa, known as the Cape of Good Hope
- In 1453, the Turks captured……
- holy war between European turks, christains and muslims
Down
- each Crusader had this symbol sewn onto their uniforms
- Instead of material Goods, this was a system where people traded goods for money
- referring to europe's middle ages
- a place in the Middle East that includes the city of Jerusalem and is thought to be special to members of the Christian, Jewish, and Islamic religions
- complete control or ownership of a industry or resource
- sponsored lots of of exploration missions throughout the 1400s
- A person who is native to the asain nation of Mongolia
13 Clues: In 1453, the Turks captured…… • referring to europe's middle ages • each Crusader had this symbol sewn onto their uniforms • A person who is native to the asain nation of Mongolia • complete control or ownership of a industry or resource • holy war between European turks, christains and muslims • sponsored lots of of exploration missions throughout the 1400s • ...
Chapter 19 crossword puzzle 2020-12-07
Across
- moving from place to place in a fixed pattern
- enterprise owned by and operated for the benefit of a certain group
- name given to early Great Plains farmers
- zone a geographic region in which the same standard time is used
- going across a continent
- drive a trip of several hundred miles on which ranchers led their cattle to railroads and distant markets
Down
- an appeal to the common people
- Grange a network of local farmers' groups
- to earn ownership of land by living on it
- an area of land set aside for use by a group
- farming a farming method that depends on plowing after every rain and trapping moisture in the soil in dry non-irrigated land
- money or goods given by a person or government to support a project that benefits the public
- a cowhand of Hispanic origin
13 Clues: going across a continent • a cowhand of Hispanic origin • an appeal to the common people • name given to early Great Plains farmers • Grange a network of local farmers' groups • to earn ownership of land by living on it • an area of land set aside for use by a group • moving from place to place in a fixed pattern • ...
SDG NO 2 2025-03-06
Across
- A key SDG 2 target: ensuring everyone has enough of this
- A farming method that protects natural resources and biodiversity
- A continent where food insecurity is a major issue, especially in the Sahel region
- The percentage of the world’s population suffering from malnutrition is called this
- A practice that reduces food waste by giving excess food to those in need
- A key staple food for many countries, especially in Asia
- A goal of SDG 2 is to end this worldwide
Down
- A mineral essential for healthy growth, found in leafy greens
- The process of growing crops and raising livestock
- A vitamin essential for vision and immune function, found in carrots
- The process of improving soil fertility using natural materials
- A major challenge in food security, caused by lack of rain
- A type of farming that does not use synthetic chemicals
13 Clues: A goal of SDG 2 is to end this worldwide • The process of growing crops and raising livestock • A type of farming that does not use synthetic chemicals • A key SDG 2 target: ensuring everyone has enough of this • A key staple food for many countries, especially in Asia • A major challenge in food security, caused by lack of rain • ...
agriculture frayer model 2025-03-17
Across
- large scale farming system maximizing food production
- science, art, practice of cultivating soil, crop production, raising livestock, etc
- program of agricultural changes that increased crop yields
- anything that helps carry pollen from a male to female part of a flower
- a way of controlling pests by prioritizing prevention
Down
- method of managing pests
- farming system relying on experimental knowledge and locally available resources
- the amount of a crop harvested per unit area of land
8 Clues: method of managing pests • the amount of a crop harvested per unit area of land • large scale farming system maximizing food production • a way of controlling pests by prioritizing prevention • program of agricultural changes that increased crop yields • anything that helps carry pollen from a male to female part of a flower • ...
LO: Spell words using the letter strings ough, ight, eigh and augh. 2025-03-05
12 Clues: Zero • A number • To scare • Badly behaved • Attempted to find • Arrogantly superior • Occurring in the mind • A female family member • Use to make a pizza base • Soldiers in WW2 did this • I looked _______ the keyhole. • A large farming implement with blades
agriculture cross wor 2022-02-28
Across
- agriculture- agriculture designed primarily to provide food for direct consumption by the farmer and the farmer’s family.
- a large farm in tropical and subtropical climates that specializes in one or two crops for sale, usually to a more developed country.
- cropping- harvesting twice a year from the same field.
- a patch of land cleared for planting through slashing and burning.
- agriculture- agriculture undertaken primarily to generate products and make sales.
- Subsistence ag- for of subsistence agriculture in which farmers must expend a relatively large amount of effort to produce the maximum feasible yield from a parcel of land.
- agriculture- farming methods that preserve long term productivity of land and minimize pollution, typically by rotating soil restoring crops with cash crops and reducing inputs of fertilizer and pesticides.
- revolution- the time when human beings first domesticated plants and animals and no longer relied on hunting and gathering.
- commercial agriculture characterized by the integration of different steps in the food processing industry, usually through ownership by large corporations.
Down
- degradation of land, especially in semiarid areas, primarily because of human actions such as excessive crop planting.
- the area surrounding a city in which milk is supplied.
- the seasonal migration of livestock between mountains and lowland pastures.
- rotation- the practice of rotating the use of different fields from crop to crop each year to avoid exhausting the soil.
- tillage- system of planting crops on ridge tops in order to reduce farm production costs and promote greater soil conservation.
- growth of fruits, vegetables, and flowers.
- cultivation- a form of subsistence agriculture in which people shift activity from one field to another; each field is used for crops for a relatively few years and left fallow for a relatively long period.
- desert- an urban area in which it is difficult to buy affordable or good fresh food.
- nomadism- a form of subsistence agriculture based on herding domesticated animals.
- a flooded field for growing rice.
- farming- commercial gardening and fruit farming so named truck because in middle English word meaning “bartering” or “exchange of commodities.”
- revolution- rapid diffusion of new agricultural technology, especially new high yield seeds and fertilizers.
21 Clues: a flooded field for growing rice. • growth of fruits, vegetables, and flowers. • the area surrounding a city in which milk is supplied. • cropping- harvesting twice a year from the same field. • a patch of land cleared for planting through slashing and burning. • the seasonal migration of livestock between mountains and lowland pastures. • ...
People and Cultures 2016-03-03
Across
- to make a permanent move to live in another place
- a group of people having cities and a developed writing system; often have a high level of development in art, science, and commerce
- farming
- the way of life of a society; includes things such as language, food, dress, customs, etc.
- an extra amount
- people who move from place to place for fresh grassland for their animals to graze
- people who moved around looking for animals to hunt and wild plants to gather
- the use of tools and skills to help fill needs
- a form of government in which one leader has full power over a country and its people
- a king or queen
- an economic system based on free enterprise, under which individuals may privately own property and freely engage in economic activity
- a person who moves from place to place without settling
- density the number people per square mile
- of civilization the places where civilizations first began: they existed in modern day Egypt, Iraq, Pakistan, and China
Down
- chemicals which provide nutrients to help plants grow
- government a government in which a single leader or a group of leaders decides how to run a country and the power of the government is more important than individual freedom
- farming the farming of food just for one's self and family
- monarchy a government that has a king or queen but also a constitution and a lawmaking group elected by the people
- country country which lacks the money, resources, and skilled workers needed for modern industries
- enterprise an economic system in which individuals and private businesses are free to organize and operate for profit with little interference from government
- an organized way of worshiping a spiritual being or thinking about life
- an economic system in which the government decides how resources will be used and how business will be run
- a fundamental or complete change in government in a short period of time
- government a government where leaders are chosen by the people in free elections
- chemicals used to eliminate pests
25 Clues: farming • an extra amount • a king or queen • chemicals used to eliminate pests • density the number people per square mile • the use of tools and skills to help fill needs • to make a permanent move to live in another place • chemicals which provide nutrients to help plants grow • a person who moves from place to place without settling • ...
Agriculture Careers 2023-07-26
Across
- They handle the quality control of food and agricultural products.
- This career involves the care and management of sheep.
- A person who harvests fruits and vegetables.
- They handle the transportation of agricultural products.
- A person who cultivates crops.
- They work with plants to improve yield and quality.
- This career involves agricultural research and experimentation.
- Someone who raises and cares for horses.
- They deal with the marketing and distribution of agricultural products.
- A professional who works on agricultural policy and advocacy.
- Someone who studies plant diseases and pests.
- They work on developing new plant varieties.
- They handle the processing and storage of agricultural products.
- A professional who specializes in dairy farming.
- They work with agricultural machinery maintenance.
- They manage and care for forests and woodlands.
- A person who deals with farm equipment sales.
- A professional who handles agricultural finances and investments.
Down
- A person who works with bees and beekeeping.
- They are involved in organic farming practices.
- They manage and maintain farmland and rural estates.
- A person who works with farm animals and their breeding.
- Someone who grows and sells flowers and ornamental plants.
- Someone who works with agricultural cooperative societies.
- A professional who deals with agricultural insurance and risk management.
- This career involves the science of soil management.
- This career involves beekeeping product sales.
- A person who deals with agricultural education and extension services.
- A career involving the cultivation of grapes and winemaking.
- Someone who designs and plans agricultural structures.
- job involves managing a greenhouse.
- Someone who specializes in tropical agriculture.
- This job involves agricultural journalism and reporting.
- This career involves breeding and raising poultry.
- They design and implement irrigation systems.
- A person who operates large machinery to till the land.
- A professional who manages livestock.
- Someone who studies and controls agricultural pests.
- This career focuses on fish farming and aquaculture.
- This job entails the inspection and grading of agricultural products.
40 Clues: A person who cultivates crops. • job involves managing a greenhouse. • A professional who manages livestock. • Someone who raises and cares for horses. • A person who works with bees and beekeeping. • A person who harvests fruits and vegetables. • They work on developing new plant varieties. • Someone who studies plant diseases and pests. • ...
Animal Cruelty 2025-01-15
Across
- Intentional harm caused to animals for no reason.
- Action of saving injured or neglected animals.
- TRADE, The illegal capture and trade of wild animals.
- SHOWS, This involves forcing animals to perform for human amusement.
- This is the illegal activity of hunting animals for profit.
Down
- Keeping animals in small, confined spaces without proper care.
- The practice of breeding animals for entertainment purposes.
- TESTING, The use of animals for testing products like cosmetics.
- FARMING, A type of farming known for its cruelty to animals.
- RIGHTS, Organizations work to protect animal rights.
10 Clues: Action of saving injured or neglected animals. • Intentional harm caused to animals for no reason. • RIGHTS, Organizations work to protect animal rights. • TRADE, The illegal capture and trade of wild animals. • This is the illegal activity of hunting animals for profit. • The practice of breeding animals for entertainment purposes. • ...
vocabulary unit 2 2026-02-21
Italian Immigration to North America 2024-02-14
Across
- The United States was experiencing rapid industrialization and ____ growth
- The construction and mining industries that many Italians were involved in in North America led to water ___
- The religion that grew upon the arrival of Italians to North America
- Italian-Americans developed a distinct ____ identity
- The economic state of many Italians in Sicily and Southern Italy, pushing them to move to North America
- Instances of anti-Italian sentiment sometimes led to ____
- Italians faced hostility and ____
- The industry that many Italians were involved in before moving to North America
Down
- Lack of land and ____ encouraged Italian immigration to North America
- Italians in North America became involved in local and national ___
- Negative portrayals of Italians in the media and popular culture reinforced ____
- Where the majority of the Italians landed in North America
- Italian _____ and poetry became more popular in North America
- Italian ___ became very popular in North America
- Technological changes in farming came with the creation of new ____
- The state of Italian politics that pushed the people to move to North America
16 Clues: Italians faced hostility and ____ • Italian ___ became very popular in North America • Italian-Americans developed a distinct ____ identity • Instances of anti-Italian sentiment sometimes led to ____ • Where the majority of the Italians landed in North America • Italian _____ and poetry became more popular in North America • ...
Jasmine Turner 2022-09-19
Across
- bone - animal bone or shell carved with written characters that was used to predict the future in Ancient China
- were also used for the first time.
- was developed in 4000-3000 BC
- was invented in 105 BC
- the farmers to clear and prepare land for farming, led to larger harvests which supported more soldiers
- is a great invention of ancient China 518-600 BC
- - a dustlike material that can form soil
- of Heaven - Zhou leaders claim they had the right to rule because heaven gave it to them
- - a ruling family that holds power for many years
Down
- Dynasty - First major rulers of the farming villages along the Huang River
- was invented during the Zhou dynasty, as well as the use of iron instead of bronze to make weapons and farm tools.
- - a symbol that represents a word or a group of words
- - wall to hold back water
- -military leaders seek power and fight among themselves
- farm tools were stronger and more effective leading to crop yield increasing
- - a picture that represents a word or idea
16 Clues: was invented in 105 BC • - wall to hold back water • was developed in 4000-3000 BC • were also used for the first time. • - a dustlike material that can form soil • - a picture that represents a word or idea • is a great invention of ancient China 518-600 BC • - a ruling family that holds power for many years • - a symbol that represents a word or a group of words • ...
Jasmine Turner 2022-09-19
Across
- bone - animal bone or shell carved with written characters that was used to predict the future in Ancient China
- were also used for the first time.
- was developed in 4000-3000 BC
- was invented in 105 BC
- the farmers to clear and prepare land for farming, led to larger harvests which supported more soldiers
- is a great invention of ancient China 518-600 BC
- - a dustlike material that can form soil
- of Heaven - Zhou leaders claim they had the right to rule because heaven gave it to them
- - a ruling family that holds power for many years
Down
- Dynasty - First major rulers of the farming villages along the Huang River
- was invented during the Zhou dynasty, as well as the use of iron instead of bronze to make weapons and farm tools.
- - a symbol that represents a word or a group of words
- - wall to hold back water
- -military leaders seek power and fight among themselves
- farm tools were stronger and more effective leading to crop yield increasing
- - a picture that represents a word or idea
16 Clues: was invented in 105 BC • - wall to hold back water • was developed in 4000-3000 BC • were also used for the first time. • - a dustlike material that can form soil • - a picture that represents a word or idea • is a great invention of ancient China 518-600 BC • - a ruling family that holds power for many years • - a symbol that represents a word or a group of words • ...
Non-Violent Revolutions and The Enlightenment 2022-10-28
Across
- earth-centered view of the solar system / universe
- A logical, systematic approach to the solution of a scientific problem
- relating to a city
- The series of events that led to the birth of modern science
- a forcible overthrow of a government or social order in favor of a new system.
- farming (raising plants AND animals)
- developing machine production of goods
Down
- the idea that the earth and the other planets orbit around the sun.
- the idea that all humans have the right to life, liberty, and property
- countryside
- the state of being poor
- the agreement people make with their government to follow rules so their rights and safety can be protected
- A period of rapid growth in the use of machines in manufacturing and production that began in the mid-1700s
- An association of workers, formed to bargain for better working conditions and higher pay.
- A time when new inventions such as the seed drill and the steel plow made farming easier and faster. The production of food rose dramatically.
- to change for the better
16 Clues: countryside • relating to a city • the state of being poor • to change for the better • farming (raising plants AND animals) • developing machine production of goods • earth-centered view of the solar system / universe • The series of events that led to the birth of modern science • the idea that the earth and the other planets orbit around the sun. • ...
Maya. Aztec and Inca 2025-06-12
Across
- Farming technique used by the Maya that involved cutting and burning the surrounding forest
- The Aztec capital city built on Lake Texcoco
- Floating gardens created by the Aztecs
- Farming method used by the Inca to grow crops along the mountainsides by making leveled shelves
- Writing system used by the Maya that involves pictorial symbols
- A key crop grown by all three civilizations also known as corn
- A system of knotted strings used by the INCA for record-keeping
- This number was a major development in Maya math, represented by a shell symbol
Down
- A tube crop that was a staple food of the Incas
- The civilization known for developing a complex calender system based on Mathematics and Astronomy
- This civilization was known for military strength and human sacrifices
- The leader and emperor of the Incas
- The Aztecs built massive ______ to honor their Gods
- This civilization built the city of Cuzco and ruled the Andes
- Major Mayan city known for its pyramids and observatory
- The Inca built thousands of miles of these connecting their mountainous empires
16 Clues: The leader and emperor of the Incas • Floating gardens created by the Aztecs • The Aztec capital city built on Lake Texcoco • A tube crop that was a staple food of the Incas • The Aztecs built massive ______ to honor their Gods • Major Mayan city known for its pyramids and observatory • This civilization built the city of Cuzco and ruled the Andes • ...
Maya. Aztec and Inca 2025-06-12
Across
- Farming technique used by the Maya that involved cutting and burning the surrounding forest
- The Aztec capital city built on Lake Texcoco
- Floating gardens created by the Aztecs
- Farming method used by the Inca to grow crops along the mountainsides by making leveled shelves
- Writing system used by the Maya that involves pictorial symbols
- A key crop grown by all three civilizations also known as corn
- A system of knotted strings used by the INCA for record-keeping
- This number was a major development in Maya math, represented by a shell symbol
Down
- A tube crop that was a staple food of the Incas
- The civilization known for developing a complex calender system based on Mathematics and Astronomy
- This civilization was known for military strength and human sacrifices
- The leader and emperor of the Incas
- The Aztecs built massive ______ to honor their Gods
- This civilization built the city of Cuzco and ruled the Andes
- Major Mayan city known for its pyramids and observatory
- The Inca built thousands of miles of these connecting their mountainous empires
16 Clues: The leader and emperor of the Incas • Floating gardens created by the Aztecs • The Aztec capital city built on Lake Texcoco • A tube crop that was a staple food of the Incas • The Aztecs built massive ______ to honor their Gods • Major Mayan city known for its pyramids and observatory • This civilization built the city of Cuzco and ruled the Andes • ...
Jaida’s crossword puzzle 2024-03-28
Across
- source pollution: Non-point source pollution refers to pollution that comes from multiple diffuse sources, such as runoff from agricultural fields, urban areas, and roads.
- Desertification is the process by which fertile land gradually becomes desert or barren due to factors like climate change, deforestation, overgrazing, and unsustainable land use practices.
- Irrigation is the artificial application of water to land for agricultural purposes.
- Overgrazing occurs when animals graze on vegetation for an extended period, leading to the depletion of plant cover and soil erosion.
- farming: Contour farming is a technique where crops are planted along the contours of the land, following the natural slope.
- Pesticides are chemicals used to control or eliminate pests, such as insects, weeds, and diseases that can damage crops.
- island: A heat island is when urban areas are significantly warmer than the surrounding rural areas due to human activities and the materials used in cities that absorb and retain heat.
- Terracing is a farming technique that involves creating a series of leveled steps on sloped land to prevent soil erosion, conserve water, and enable cultivation.
- agriculture: Sustainable agriculture is an approach to farming that aims to meet the needs of the present generation without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
- It refers to the basic structures and facilities needed for a society to function, like roads, buildings, and utilities.
- bloom: An algal bloom is a rapid and excessive growth of algae in bodies of water, such as lakes or oceans. This growth is often fueled by high nutrient levels, such as nitrogen and phosphorus, in the water.
Down
- Salinization is the accumulation of salts in the soil, often caused by improper irrigation practices, high evaporation rates, and poor drainage.
- agriculture: Organic agriculture is a farming system that relies on natural methods and avoids the use of synthetic fertilizers, pesticides, genetically modified organisms (GMOs), and irradiation.
- Wastewater is any water that has been used and contains various pollutants, such as from domestic, industrial, or agricultural sources. It typically includes water from sinks, toilets, showers, and industrial processes.
- tide: Red tide, also known as harmful algal bloom (HAB), is a specific type of algal bloom caused by the rapid growth of certain species of algae, typically dinoflagellates.
- Tilling refers to the mechanical manipulation of the soil to prepare it for planting, improve soil structure, and control weeds.
- pollution: Point-source pollution refers to pollution that originates from a single identifiable source, such as a factory or wastewater treatment plant.
- A pathogen is a microorganism, such as a bacterium, virus, or fungus, that can cause disease in plants, animals, or humans.
- A shelterbelt is a row of trees or shrubs planted to provide protection against wind, reduce soil erosion, and create a microclimate beneficial for crops or livestock.
- Intercropping is the practice of growing different crops together in the same field, which can help maximize land use, improve soil health, and reduce pests and diseases.
- eutrophication: Cultural eutrophication refers to the accelerated process of nutrient enrichment in bodies of water, such as lakes or rivers, due to human activities. Excessive nutrients, often from agricultural runoff or wastewater, can cause excessive plant and algal growth, leading to oxygen depletion and negative impacts on aquatic ecosystems.
- Sprawl is the unplanned and rapid expansion of urban areas into surrounding rural or undeveloped areas, characterized by low-density development and car-dependent lifestyles.
- degradation: Soil degradation is the decline in soil quality, fertility, and productivity, often caused by erosion, pollution, nutrient depletion, and loss of organic matter.
- rotation: Crop rotation is the practice of growing different crops in a specific sequence on the same piece of land over time.
- crop: A cover crop is a crop grown primarily to protect and improve the soil, rather than for harvest.
25 Clues: Irrigation is the artificial application of water to land for agricultural purposes. • crop: A cover crop is a crop grown primarily to protect and improve the soil, rather than for harvest. • Pesticides are chemicals used to control or eliminate pests, such as insects, weeds, and diseases that can damage crops. • ...
Human Geography Vocab Cross Word 2025-05-30
Across
- A residential area located on the outskirts of a city—hello, picket fences and HOA fees (7, CC)
- A region constantly caught in the crossfire of stronger political or cultural forces (4, IDK)
- A political unit with defined territory, government, and sovereignty—AKA a country (4, CC)
- A model showing how population growth shifts with development—critical for understanding global change (2, VIT)
- The visible imprint of human activity on the environment—it tells the story of who lived there and how (3, VIT)
- Farming to feed yourself and your family—profit is not the goal (5, CC)
- Big-business farming that includes production, processing, and distribution—farming meets corporate boardroom (5, IDK)
- A social construct often based on perceived biological traits—frequently confused with ethnicity (3, CC)
- Something that hinders migration—could be a mountain, border wall, or even your mom (2, IDK)
- Moving into a new place or country to live permanently (2, CC)
- The power of a state to govern itself without outside interference—basically, “don’t tell me what to do” at the country level (4, VIT)
- A capital city placed in a new or strategic location to spur development or assert control (4, IDK)
- The process used to study the arrangement of phenomena across Earth’s surface; it’s the backbone of geography itself (1, VIT)
- Measures the burden on working-age people from those too young or too old to work (2, IDK)
- Poorer, less developed nations often dependent on core countries for economic support (6, CC)
- Explains how services are distributed in a region and why cities of different sizes exist where they do (7, VIT)
- Leaving one’s home country to settle elsewhere (2, CC)
- The spread of advanced agricultural methods that boosted food production and saved lives—though not without side effects (5, VIT)
- The uncontrolled expansion of cities into surrounding areas—more roads, more traffic, more everything (7, IDK)
Down
- An industry where the final product weighs less than the inputs—like copper refining (6, VIT)
- Technology makes the world feel smaller by reducing the time it takes for things to move (1, IDK)
- An area where governments create trade-friendly zones to attract businesses—hello, tax breaks (6, IDK)
- Describes a location in relation to other places—how “well-connected” it is (1, CC)
- Wealthy, developed nations that control global trade and finance (6, CC)
- A community beyond the suburbs—think more rural, but still tied to the metro area (7, CC)
- The further you get from something, the less relevant it becomes—think grandma’s cookies vs. mass-produced ones (1, IDK)
- The blending of cultural elements to form something entirely new—fusion food, but for everything (3, IDK)
- A cultural identity based on shared heritage, language, and traditions (3, CC)
- A business that isn’t tied to resources or markets—it can set up shop anywhere (6, IDK)
- Farming that requires heavy labor on small plots—think rice paddies, not tractors (5, IDK)
- A mini downtown with offices and shopping, usually located outside traditional urban cores (7, IDK)
- Describes the physical characteristics of a location—climate, water sources, elevation, etc. (1, CC)
- A group of people with a common culture and sense of unity—doesn’t always have a country (4, CC)
- When a group adopts parts of another culture, usually while keeping their original identity (3, IDK)
- Farming to sell crops and make money—profit is the whole point (5, CC)
35 Clues: Leaving one’s home country to settle elsewhere (2, CC) • Moving into a new place or country to live permanently (2, CC) • Farming to sell crops and make money—profit is the whole point (5, CC) • Farming to feed yourself and your family—profit is not the goal (5, CC) • Wealthy, developed nations that control global trade and finance (6, CC) • ...
How did Industry change Indiana 2022-02-17
Across
- a natural resource in Indiana that is used in making steel
- The amount of stuff produced in a period of time
- the industry having to do with space flight
- To make goods
- gasses naturally found in the atmosphere and used for energy
- A group of businesses that make or sell similar items
Down
- a way of saving food in jars for a long period of time
- A rock that is used in many buildings and in the production of steel
- the region from New York to the midwest that was once dominated by manufacturing
- having to do with the making or selling of medicine
- Being able to do a task without wasting time and energy
- Farming, it includes farming and harvesting crops and raising animals
- A natural resource in Indiana that is used in making steel A hard and tough metal
13 Clues: To make goods • the industry having to do with space flight • The amount of stuff produced in a period of time • having to do with the making or selling of medicine • A group of businesses that make or sell similar items • a way of saving food in jars for a long period of time • Being able to do a task without wasting time and energy • ...
Deforestation 2026-01-27
Across
- Which human activity is the main cause of deforestation worldwide?
- of rainfall. What happens to rainfall patterns when large forest areas are destroyed?
- What term describes the protection and careful management of forests?
- What process increases when forests are removed, causing land degradation?
- What is the term for the large-scale cutting down of forests?
- What natural resource is commonly extracted from forests?
- rainforest. Which biome is most affected by deforestation?
- storage. What role do trees play in the carbon cycle?
Down
- dioxide. Which gas increases in the atmosphere due to deforestation?
- Which layer of the Earth is affected when tree roots no longer hold soil in place?
- farming. What farming practice involves clearing forests to grow crops or raise livestock?
- What do we call the variety of plant and animal life lost due to deforestation?
- change. Which global climate phenomenon is worsened by deforestation?
- habitat. What type of habitat is most directly destroyed by deforestation?
14 Clues: storage. What role do trees play in the carbon cycle? • What natural resource is commonly extracted from forests? • rainforest. Which biome is most affected by deforestation? • What is the term for the large-scale cutting down of forests? • Which human activity is the main cause of deforestation worldwide? • ...
Puzzle #6 2022-09-23
12 Clues: Without joy • Authoritarian • Large and bulky • Great, fantastic • Having butterflies • One type of farming • Distressed, worried • An empty space within • Word with ringer or Sea • Worried about being involved • Embarrassed, feeling like a fool • Thing that is used for making something
Chapter 19 crossword puzzle 2020-12-07
Across
- enterprise owned by and operated for the benefit of a certain group
- going across a continent
- an area of land set aside for use by a group
- drive a trip of several hundred miles on which ranchers led their cattle to railroads and distant markets
- zone a geographic region in which the same standard time is used
- a cowhand of Hispanic origin
Down
- an appeal to the common people
- money or goods given by a person or government to support a project that benefits the public
- moving from place to place in a fixed pattern
- name given to early Great Plains farmers
- farming a farming method that depends on plowing after every rain and trapping moisture in the soil in dry non-irrigated land
- Grange a network of local farmers' groups
- to earn ownership of land by living on it
13 Clues: going across a continent • a cowhand of Hispanic origin • an appeal to the common people • name given to early Great Plains farmers • Grange a network of local farmers' groups • to earn ownership of land by living on it • an area of land set aside for use by a group • moving from place to place in a fixed pattern • ...
U.S. History Ch. 2 2021-09-20
Across
- to absorb a group into the culture of another population
- Spanish-speaking neighborhoods in a town or city
- range vast areas of grassland owned by the federal government
- farm a large, highly profitable wheat farm
- Committee a group of ordinary citizens formed by local law enforcement officers whose goal is to find criminals and bring them to justice
- farming a way of farming dry land in which seeds are planted deep in the ground where there is some moisture
Down
- a name given to Great Plains farmers
- mining a method of mining by which water is sprayed at a very high pressure against a hill or mountain
- a huge ranch
- a piece of U.S. public land acquired by filing a record and living on and cultivating it
- a plot of land assigned to an individual or a family for cultivation
- moving from place to place
- money paid by contract at regular intervals
13 Clues: a huge ranch • moving from place to place • a name given to Great Plains farmers • farm a large, highly profitable wheat farm • money paid by contract at regular intervals • Spanish-speaking neighborhoods in a town or city • to absorb a group into the culture of another population • range vast areas of grassland owned by the federal government • ...
Communities Review 2026-01-08
Across
- To travel regularly from home to work or school
- Working together to reach a common goal
- A group of people living in the same area or sharing common interests
- Something a person is expected to do to help others or the community
- The number of people living in a place.
- A community located near a city with fewer people and more space than an urban area
- A small area within a community where people live near each other
Down
- Unpaid work done to help others or improve a community
- The practice of farming, including growing crops and raising animals
- A member of a community or country with rights and responsibilities
- A more crowded community with many people living in a small area, such as a city.
- A person who helps without being paid
- A community with fewer people living over a large area, often focused on farming
13 Clues: A person who helps without being paid • Working together to reach a common goal • The number of people living in a place. • To travel regularly from home to work or school • Unpaid work done to help others or improve a community • A small area within a community where people live near each other • A member of a community or country with rights and responsibilities • ...
Magazine Edition 8 2025-02-20
Across
- The practice of raising fish and plants together in a symbiotic environment
- The practice of growing different crops in the same area in sequential seasons to improve soil health
- The process of restoring degraded land to productivity
- June 18 is celebrated as
- A method of conserving water by delivering it directly to plant roots
- A crop grown to protect and enrich the soil, often plowed under before planting
Down
- The process of turning and breaking up soil to prepare it for planting
- A farming method that avoids synthetic chemicals and relies on natural processes
- The practice of rotating livestock across pastures to prevent overgrazing
- A farming approach that mimics natural ecosystems to create sustainable food production
- The practice of planting trees alongside crops to improve biodiversity and soil quality
- A system of growing crops without soil, using mineral nutrient solutions in water
- A natural fertilizer made from decomposed organic matter
13 Clues: June 18 is celebrated as • The process of restoring degraded land to productivity • A natural fertilizer made from decomposed organic matter • A method of conserving water by delivering it directly to plant roots • The process of turning and breaking up soil to prepare it for planting • The practice of rotating livestock across pastures to prevent overgrazing • ...
Medieval Civilizations of the Americas 2023-09-27
Across
- the crop that allowed for the building of cities in the Americas
- the Aztec feudal social system similar to Hindu caste or European feudalism
- the Inca practiced ______ farming in the high altitudes of the Andes
- the native name for the Aztec peoples of Mexico
- the mountain range dominated by the Inca
- capital of the Aztec Empire
- the man-made islands of the Aztec, used for building and farming
- once thought to be the capital of the Mississippian peoples
Down
- all conquered peoples of the Aztec paid _____ to them
- the cult of _____ was common among the Mississippian and Meso-American peoples
- the Inca built thousands of miles of _____ to connect its empire
- the tuber crop that supported the Inca peoples of the Andes
- both the Aztec and the Inca were conquered by the _______
- system of "labor tax", forced labor within Inca empire
- the Anasazi and Desert SW people were often called _____ people due to the constructions they built
- permanent serf class working for the Inca or nobility of the Inca people
16 Clues: capital of the Aztec Empire • the mountain range dominated by the Inca • the native name for the Aztec peoples of Mexico • all conquered peoples of the Aztec paid _____ to them • system of "labor tax", forced labor within Inca empire • both the Aztec and the Inca were conquered by the _______ • the tuber crop that supported the Inca peoples of the Andes • ...
World Cultures and Geography Chapter 3 Section 1 Vocabulary 2024-02-22
Across
- A system of several mountain ranges that often run parallel to one another
- When mountains prevent rain clouds from reaching the other side, this creates a rain...
- Using resources in a responsible way that preserves them for future people
- A narrow strip of land with sea on either side, forming a link between two larger land masses
- A barrier that controls the flow of water
- Exposed underground pools of water, most commonly found on the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico
- There are 50 states in the USA, but only 48 of them are...
- A type of agriculture that produces crops to sell
- A long period of time with very little rain and dry conditions
Down
- A climate that does not have extreme heat or extreme cold
- A type of farming where you grow just enough food for yourself and your family
- Farming
- Large masses of ice and packed snow
- A narrow strip of land that extends out into a body of water
- Layers of rock beneath the earth that contain water
- Sending goods to other countries
16 Clues: Farming • Sending goods to other countries • Large masses of ice and packed snow • A barrier that controls the flow of water • A type of agriculture that produces crops to sell • Layers of rock beneath the earth that contain water • A climate that does not have extreme heat or extreme cold • There are 50 states in the USA, but only 48 of them are... • ...
Human Geography Vocab Cross Word 2025-05-30
Across
- A residential area located on the outskirts of a city—hello, picket fences and HOA fees (7, CC)
- A region constantly caught in the crossfire of stronger political or cultural forces (4, IDK)
- A political unit with defined territory, government, and sovereignty—AKA a country (4, CC)
- A model showing how population growth shifts with development—critical for understanding global change (2, VIT)
- The visible imprint of human activity on the environment—it tells the story of who lived there and how (3, VIT)
- Farming to feed yourself and your family—profit is not the goal (5, CC)
- Big-business farming that includes production, processing, and distribution—farming meets corporate boardroom (5, IDK)
- A social construct often based on perceived biological traits—frequently confused with ethnicity (3, CC)
- Something that hinders migration—could be a mountain, border wall, or even your mom (2, IDK)
- Moving into a new place or country to live permanently (2, CC)
- The power of a state to govern itself without outside interference—basically, “don’t tell me what to do” at the country level (4, VIT)
- A capital city placed in a new or strategic location to spur development or assert control (4, IDK)
- The process used to study the arrangement of phenomena across Earth’s surface; it’s the backbone of geography itself (1, VIT)
- Measures the burden on working-age people from those too young or too old to work (2, IDK)
- Poorer, less developed nations often dependent on core countries for economic support (6, CC)
- Explains how services are distributed in a region and why cities of different sizes exist where they do (7, VIT)
- Leaving one’s home country to settle elsewhere (2, CC)
- The spread of advanced agricultural methods that boosted food production and saved lives—though not without side effects (5, VIT)
- The uncontrolled expansion of cities into surrounding areas—more roads, more traffic, more everything (7, IDK)
Down
- An industry where the final product weighs less than the inputs—like copper refining (6, VIT)
- Technology makes the world feel smaller by reducing the time it takes for things to move (1, IDK)
- An area where governments create trade-friendly zones to attract businesses—hello, tax breaks (6, IDK)
- Describes a location in relation to other places—how “well-connected” it is (1, CC)
- Wealthy, developed nations that control global trade and finance (6, CC)
- A community beyond the suburbs—think more rural, but still tied to the metro area (7, CC)
- The further you get from something, the less relevant it becomes—think grandma’s cookies vs. mass-produced ones (1, IDK)
- The blending of cultural elements to form something entirely new—fusion food, but for everything (3, IDK)
- A cultural identity based on shared heritage, language, and traditions (3, CC)
- A business that isn’t tied to resources or markets—it can set up shop anywhere (6, IDK)
- Farming that requires heavy labor on small plots—think rice paddies, not tractors (5, IDK)
- A mini downtown with offices and shopping, usually located outside traditional urban cores (7, IDK)
- Describes the physical characteristics of a location—climate, water sources, elevation, etc. (1, CC)
- A group of people with a common culture and sense of unity—doesn’t always have a country (4, CC)
- When a group adopts parts of another culture, usually while keeping their original identity (3, IDK)
- Farming to sell crops and make money—profit is the whole point (5, CC)
35 Clues: Leaving one’s home country to settle elsewhere (2, CC) • Moving into a new place or country to live permanently (2, CC) • Farming to sell crops and make money—profit is the whole point (5, CC) • Farming to feed yourself and your family—profit is not the goal (5, CC) • Wealthy, developed nations that control global trade and finance (6, CC) • ...
Human Geography Vocab Cross Word 2025-05-30
Across
- A residential area located on the outskirts of a city—hello, picket fences and HOA fees (7, CC)
- A region constantly caught in the crossfire of stronger political or cultural forces (4, IDK)
- A political unit with defined territory, government, and sovereignty—AKA a country (4, CC)
- A model showing how population growth shifts with development—critical for understanding global change (2, VIT)
- The visible imprint of human activity on the environment—it tells the story of who lived there and how (3, VIT)
- Farming to feed yourself and your family—profit is not the goal (5, CC)
- Big-business farming that includes production, processing, and distribution—farming meets corporate boardroom (5, IDK)
- A social construct often based on perceived biological traits—frequently confused with ethnicity (3, CC)
- Something that hinders migration—could be a mountain, border wall, or even your mom (2, IDK)
- Moving into a new place or country to live permanently (2, CC)
- The power of a state to govern itself without outside interference—basically, “don’t tell me what to do” at the country level (4, VIT)
- A capital city placed in a new or strategic location to spur development or assert control (4, IDK)
- The process used to study the arrangement of phenomena across Earth’s surface; it’s the backbone of geography itself (1, VIT)
- Measures the burden on working-age people from those too young or too old to work (2, IDK)
- Poorer, less developed nations often dependent on core countries for economic support (6, CC)
- Explains how services are distributed in a region and why cities of different sizes exist where they do (7, VIT)
- Leaving one’s home country to settle elsewhere (2, CC)
- The spread of advanced agricultural methods that boosted food production and saved lives—though not without side effects (5, VIT)
- The uncontrolled expansion of cities into surrounding areas—more roads, more traffic, more everything (7, IDK)
Down
- An industry where the final product weighs less than the inputs—like copper refining (6, VIT)
- Technology makes the world feel smaller by reducing the time it takes for things to move (1, IDK)
- An area where governments create trade-friendly zones to attract businesses—hello, tax breaks (6, IDK)
- Describes a location in relation to other places—how “well-connected” it is (1, CC)
- Wealthy, developed nations that control global trade and finance (6, CC)
- A community beyond the suburbs—think more rural, but still tied to the metro area (7, CC)
- The further you get from something, the less relevant it becomes—think grandma’s cookies vs. mass-produced ones (1, IDK)
- The blending of cultural elements to form something entirely new—fusion food, but for everything (3, IDK)
- A cultural identity based on shared heritage, language, and traditions (3, CC)
- A business that isn’t tied to resources or markets—it can set up shop anywhere (6, IDK)
- Farming that requires heavy labor on small plots—think rice paddies, not tractors (5, IDK)
- A mini downtown with offices and shopping, usually located outside traditional urban cores (7, IDK)
- Describes the physical characteristics of a location—climate, water sources, elevation, etc. (1, CC)
- A group of people with a common culture and sense of unity—doesn’t always have a country (4, CC)
- When a group adopts parts of another culture, usually while keeping their original identity (3, IDK)
- Farming to sell crops and make money—profit is the whole point (5, CC)
35 Clues: Leaving one’s home country to settle elsewhere (2, CC) • Moving into a new place or country to live permanently (2, CC) • Farming to sell crops and make money—profit is the whole point (5, CC) • Farming to feed yourself and your family—profit is not the goal (5, CC) • Wealthy, developed nations that control global trade and finance (6, CC) • ...
Unit 5: Agriculture & Rural Land-Use Patterns & Processes 2025-07-17
Across
- process by which soil is contaminated by chemicals
- dating back 10,000 years, it achieved plant domestication and animal domestication
- shows that various land users are prepared and able to pay for access to the market- further from the CBD, the lower the cost
- movement of people who prefer to eat foods which are grown relatively close to the places of sale and preparation
- improved methods of cultivation, harvesting, and storage of food that started in the Middle Ages and benefitted from the Industrial Revolution
- type of agriculture requiring expenditure of much labor and capital on a piece of land to increase its productivity
- seasonal migration of domesticated livestock, usually fixed territory between highlands and lowlands
- a seasonal periodic movement of pastoralists and their livestock between highland and lowland pastures
- a patch of land cleared for planting thorough slashing and burning
- the cultivation of aquatic organisms (as fish or shellfish) especially for food
- activities involved in the creation of a product: design, productions of raw materials, manufacturing and assembly, distribution
- means any technological application that uses biological systems, living organisms, or derivatives thereof, to make or modify products or processes for specific use
- clearing of forests to make the land available for other uses
- cost advantages gained by an increased level of production
- agriculture takes the form of roof-top, balcony, backyard gardening, as well as vacant lots and parks in urban areas
- highly, mechanized, large-scale farming, usually under corporate ownership
- type of agricultural process using farming methods that are profitable, environmentally sound, and good for communities
- foods that have increased in value due to alterations in production, size, shape, appearance, location, and/or convenience
- small scale food production (fruits/veggies) for sale at local markets
- type of agriculture with dry-summer climates that produces certain fruits, vegetables, and grains- grapes, olives, figs, barley
- specialized crops not typically not essential to human survival
- process by which the amount of salt increases in the soil
- model that explains what economic activities are located where and why, illustrates relationship between land and transportation cost
- highly dependent on one or more export commodities
- animals kept for some utilitarian purpose whose breeding is controlled by humans and whose survival is dependent on humans; differ genetically and behaviorally from wild animals
Down
- commercial gardening and fruit farming, so named because the word was a Middle English word meaning bartering or the exchange of commodities
- the state of being without reliable access to a sufficient quantity of affordable, nutritious foods
- growing one crop in a farm system at a given time
- the production of crops for sale
- rectangular survey system used by the U.S. federal government to divide land into grid-like pattern
- divided land into narrow parcels stretching back from rivers, roads, or, canals giving each house equal access to water
- a type of settlement form where people live relatively distant from each other
- survey of irregularly shaped tracts of land, natural features such as streams, hills, and trees
- geographic area where large grocery stores are scarce or missing and residents have limited access to fresh, nutritious foods
- process by which fertile land becomes desert as a result of human activity
- facilitated the global diffusion of plants, animals, diseases, human population, and ideas
- organisms whose genes have been modified to increase things such as control over it, predictability, and efficiency
- individuals who pledge support to a farm operation so that the growers and consumers provide mutual support
- a relatively dense settlement form
- cash crops (cotton, coffee, sugar, tea) grown on large estates, usually for export
- type of agriculture requiring use of little labor and capital to increase agricultural productivity
- farming to supply the minimum food and materials necessary to survive.
- cultivation of crops in tropical forest clearings in which forest vegetation has been removed by cutting and burning
- the practice of rotating the use of different fields from crop to crop each year, to avoid exhausting the soil
- trade between companies in MDC's and LDC's in which fair prices are paid to producers
- rapid diffusion of new agricultural technology, especially new high-yield seeds and fertilizer
- approach to farming and ranching that avoids the use of herbicides, pesticides, growth hormones, and other similar synthetic inputs
- flat steps are created on the side of hills to create more land for farming
48 Clues: the production of crops for sale • a relatively dense settlement form • growing one crop in a farm system at a given time • process by which soil is contaminated by chemicals • highly dependent on one or more export commodities • process by which the amount of salt increases in the soil • cost advantages gained by an increased level of production • ...
Resources Crossword 2024-02-16
Across
- Catching too many fish from the ocean or other bodies of water, which can harm the fish population and ecosystem
- A thick, dark liquid found underground that we use to make fuel for cars and other machines
- A reddish-brown metal used in wiring, plumbing, and electronics
- Energy generated from sunlight, often captured by solar panels
- The process of supplying water to land to help crops grow, often using channels, pipes, or ditches
- The top layer of the Earth's surface where plants grow, made up of minerals, organic matter, air, and water
- The layer of gases surrounding Earth that protects life and regulates temperature
- fuels Fuels like coal, oil, and natural gas formed from the remains of ancient plants and animals
- A black rock used as a source of energy, formed from compressed plant matter over millions of years
- The layer of Earth's atmosphere above the troposphere, where the ozone layer is located
- The amount of water used by a person, community, or business, including both direct and indirect use
- Digging into the Earth to find valuable minerals like gold, silver, or diamonds
- The process by which fertile land becomes desert due to factors like climate change or human activity
- Something that can be replaced or grown again naturally, like trees or sunlight
Down
- Growing plants or raising animals for food or other useful products
- The lowest layer of Earth's atmosphere, where weather occurs and humans live
- Changing the type of crop grown in a field each season to keep the soil healthy
- Natural substances found in the Earth, such as quartz, diamond, or salt, that have specific chemical compositions and crystal structures
- Farming done on a large scale to sell products for profit
- Energy generated by flowing water, often captured by dams and turbines
- The outermost layer of Earth's atmosphere, extending into space
- The movement of something, like water in a river or air in the wind
- Something that cannot be replaced once it's used up, like oil or coal
- Farming without using synthetic fertilizers or pesticides, focusing on natural methods to grow crops
- Farming done mainly to provide food for a family or community, with little left over to sell
- Energy generated by the movement of the wind, often captured by wind turbines
- A large natural or artificial lake used to store water for human use, usually created by a dam
- The long-term pattern of weather in a particular area, including temperature, humidity, and precipitation
- Doing something in a way that doesn't harm the environment and can continue for a long time
- An underground layer of rock or sediment that holds water, which can be accessed by wells
- Animals like cows, chickens, or pigs that are raised on farms for food or resources like leather
31 Clues: Farming done on a large scale to sell products for profit • Energy generated from sunlight, often captured by solar panels • The outermost layer of Earth's atmosphere, extending into space • A reddish-brown metal used in wiring, plumbing, and electronics • Growing plants or raising animals for food or other useful products • ...
