forestry Crossword Puzzles
Air Pollution 2022-01-13
Across
- a source of air pollution before modern times
- the ability to dissolve in water vapor to form sulfuric acid and interact with the particulate matter and gases in the air to form other products(primary Pollution)
- comes from burning fuels in vehicles, power plants, and industrial boilers (a primary and secondary pollutant)
- colorless, odorless gas, 56% of US emissions comes from motor vehicles (a primary pollutant)
- one way to keep the air pollution from reaching dangerous levels
- regulates air emissions from stationary and mobile sources
- machines used in cement factories and coal-burning power plants to remove dust particles from smokestacks
- pollutant that is put directly into the atmosphere by human or natural activity
- an example of a secondary pollutant created near the earth's surface
Down
- a device that cleans exhaust gases of polltants before they can exit the vehicles tail pipe
- example of a primary pollutant
- Air pollution Formed when fossil fuels, which contain sulfur, are burned
- fine and course particles that enter the air as primary pollutants from construction, agriculture, forestry, fires, vehicle use, and industrial processes
- has no emission from tailpipes or gasoline (an example is the electric car)
- fraction of air pollution that comes from gas burned by vehicles
- the contamination of the atmosphere by wastes from sources such as industrial burning and automobile exhausts
- pollutant that forms in the atmosphere by chemical reactions with primary air pollutants, natural components in the air, or both
- Vehicles and industry are major sources of air pollution in these areas (opposite of rural)
- carbon-containing chemicals used in and emitted by vehicle engines and a wide variety of solvents and industrial processes; creates smog, and causes cancer
- when warm air traps cooler air near the earth's surface and cause ground-level ozone
20 Clues: example of a primary pollutant • a source of air pollution before modern times • regulates air emissions from stationary and mobile sources • fraction of air pollution that comes from gas burned by vehicles • one way to keep the air pollution from reaching dangerous levels • an example of a secondary pollutant created near the earth's surface • ...
Colonization Vocabulary 2019-09-09
Across
- – society (people living together in a community) or its organizations
- – a person serving a sentence in a jail or prison
- - refusal to accept authority (whoever is in charge).
- – crops that are produced (grown) that are used in foods such as bread
- – the earth’s surface (dirt) FERTILE SOIL – necessary for producing cash crops
- – something you refuse to allow
- – buying and selling goods and services
- a store owner or seller - A person who trades goods
- – the practice of farming
- – person who is in charge of making the slaves work
- – a safe place
- – to allow something you don’t necessarily agree with to happen
- – what is being sold or traded
- – to work
- – to make richer, wealthier
Down
- – the weather in a location averaged over a long period of time
- – a formal decision, law
- - the ceremonies and prayers of a religion
- – large farm where cash crops are worked by slaves
- – a group of people that settle far from home, but keep ties with their homeland (mother country)
- – a person that owes money (in England they put people who didn’t pay their debts into prison)
- – paper with writing that has information
- (as in the Pilgrims who were Separatists) – to be apart
- – a geographic region that grows the grains made for bread making. The Middle Colonies.
- – two or more things that are very different from one another
- – cut and prepare forest timber (wood) for sale
- (as in purifying the Church of England) – to make it clean
- (farming) - make one's living by growing crops or keeping livestock
- activity – production (making) and distribution (supplying and selling) goods and services (doing work for someone) Example: Earning a living
- crop – a crop grown by a farmer to be sold for money rather than for personal use.
- (forestry) - a large area of trees
31 Clues: – to work • – a safe place • – a formal decision, law • – the practice of farming • – to make richer, wealthier • – what is being sold or traded • – something you refuse to allow • (forestry) - a large area of trees • – buying and selling goods and services • – paper with writing that has information • - the ceremonies and prayers of a religion • ...
Southeast Asia 2020-10-26
Across
- Producers cooperatives whos unpaid members lost their own land and joined brigades of other workers assigned specific tasks.
- Planning mechanism created to achieve such economic development.
- Largest volume or rate of use that will not impair its ability to be renewed or to maintain the same future productivity.
- Introduction of a foreign element.
- Wandering, but controlled movement of livestock.
- Results that were in the VonThunen model.
- Private firms.
- Those that add value to materials by changing their form or combining them into more useful commodities.
- Goods and services are created for the use of the producers and their kinship groups.
- Producers or their agents disposed of goods and services through government agencies that controlled both supply and price.
- Government enterprises operated by paid employees of the state.
- Involves large areas of land and minimal labor input per hectare.
- Removing nonrenewable metallic and nonmetallic metals. Mining and quarying.
- Farmers producing for off-farm sales who apply large amounts of capital engage in this.
Down
- A theory proposed by the German location economist Alfred Weber.
- Large wheat farms and livestock ranching.
- Farmers hack down the natural vegetation, burn cuttings, and then plant crops.
- Accrue in the form of savings from shared transport facilities.
- Those that harvest or extract something from the earth.
- Consist of those business and labor specializations that provide services to the primary and secondary sectors.
- Cultivation of small land holdings through the expenditure of great amounts of labor per acre.
- Composed entirely of services rendered by white collar professionals.
- Study of how people earn their living, how livelihood systems vary by area.
- Based on harvesting and the natural bounty of renewable resources. Forestry and fishing.
- Tells us that areas tend to specialize in the production of those items for which they have the greatest relative advantage over other areas.
- refers to the clustering of productive activities and people for mutual advantage.
26 Clues: Private firms. • Introduction of a foreign element. • Large wheat farms and livestock ranching. • Results that were in the VonThunen model. • Wandering, but controlled movement of livestock. • Those that harvest or extract something from the earth. • Accrue in the form of savings from shared transport facilities. • ...
Jobs 2020-09-23
Across
- information about local features such as shopping, dining, nightlife, and recreational destinations.
- quality of oil in storage tanks before and after delivery, using calibrated steel tape and conversion.
- the release of personal effects to authorized persons, and facilitate the disposition of unclaimed corpses and personal effects.
- patient call signals, signal lights, bells, or intercom systems to determine patients' needs.
- premium rates required and cash reserves and liabilities necessary to ensure payment of future benefits.
- Advise clients concerning business transactions, claim liability, advisability of prosecuting or defending lawsuits, or legal rights and obligations.
- Cut, assemble, fit, and attach metal-framed glass enclosures for showers, bathtubs, display cases, skylights, solariums, and other structures.
- costume fittings, photography sessions, and makeup calls associated with dance performances.
- Studies chemistry of living processes, such as cell development, breathing and digestion, and living energy changes, such as growth, aging, and death.
- taxability and value of properties, using methods such as field inspection, structural measurement, calculation, sales analysis, market trend studies, and income and expense analysis.
- original musical form or writes within the circumscribed musical form, such as sonata, symphony, or opera.
Down
- animals to detect and determine the nature of diseases or injuries.
- contract compliance and results of forestry activities to assure adherence to government regulations
- and organize the acquisition, storage, and exhibition of collections and related materials, including the selection of exhibition themes and designs.
- and appraise historical documents and archival materials
- Collect and analyze data to detect deficient controls, duplicated effort, extravagance, fraud, or non-compliance with laws, regulations, and management policies.
- torch and rod along joint of workpieces to heat to brazing temperature, melt braze alloy, and bond workpieces together.
- and retain unauthorized firearms from persons entering the courtroom.
- corporate fundraising programs, such as employer gift-matching.
- auditions and casting calls in order to audition for roles.
20 Clues: and appraise historical documents and archival materials • auditions and casting calls in order to audition for roles. • corporate fundraising programs, such as employer gift-matching. • animals to detect and determine the nature of diseases or injuries. • and retain unauthorized firearms from persons entering the courtroom. • ...
United States Geography Crossword 2021-12-06
Across
- major industry found in Oregon and Washington
- how many regions does the U.S. have
- the northeast is the most densely ______ region
- major industry in California
- one of the two main languages spoke in U.S
- major city in the midwest
- the south has become more of this
- one of the main industries in the northeast
- the northeast shares a border with this country
- plain along east coast near sea level
- this part of American culture has great influence
- raising this is a major industry in midwest
- U.S. ranks this in size in the world
- major industry found in Alaska
- mountain range in the east
- U.S. has this type of Democracy
- largest mountain in U.S.
- what is the fastest growing region
- land between Appalachian and Rockies
- one of the major cities in the south
- largest and most important river
- region that is mostly a megalopolis
Down
- one of the major crops grown in the south
- region that is the most productive in farming
- Midwest farmers use this to move farm goods
- largest region in the U.S.
- U.S. has this many branches of Government
- region that has long snowy winters
- there are this many great lakes
- ethnic group concentrated in the southwest
- the northeast are financial and ______ centers
- major industry in the midwest
- major resource produced along Gulf Coast
- most major western cities are along this coast
- ethnic group concentrated in California
- the northeast grew rapidly because of these
- one of the major cities of the west
- large cities that have grown together
- this industry is very important in the south
- major crop grown in midwest
- famous university found in the northeast
- Mountains in the West
- ethnic group found living in the West
43 Clues: Mountains in the West • largest mountain in U.S. • major city in the midwest • largest region in the U.S. • mountain range in the east • major crop grown in midwest • major industry in California • major industry in the midwest • major industry found in Alaska • there are this many great lakes • U.S. has this type of Democracy • largest and most important river • ...
Indian Horse 2016-06-12
Across
- Where was the scout from?
- What did Saul see for the first time?
- How many week after Saul joined did they go and play the town team?
- The place Saul goes to after he is visited by his deceased family.
- What replaced everything Saul knew?
- The man who found Saul passed out drunk on a table at a restaurant.
- Who changes the Moose to play against them?
- where is the place Saul ended up the next time he passed out drunk?
- What did Saul do to make all that disappear?
- What did Saul use as a hockey puck when practicing in secret?
- What was Saul considered when he made the team?
- The place where Saul had to go to.
- How old was Saul when he left the reserve?
Down
- The team who ends up winning against the challenging team.
- Who visited Saul when he made a fire one night by the New Dawn Centre?
- What hard working job did Fred Kelly give Saul when he returned from hockey?
- Where was the place Saul was taken to when the found him?
- Who does Saul return to after he goes to the residential school?
- Which reserve does Saul and Fred Kelly go to?
- The children were scared of diseases, deaths and.
- By the end of the winter saul was an essential part of what team?
- What is the place where Benjamin escaped from?
- The reason Saul was kicked off the town team.
- Who does Saul meet when he returns to the residential team?
- The reason why the children were so happy they cried.
- The name of Saul's Grandfather?
- What did Saul do after they played the town team?
- What does Saul play for the last time?
- What did Father Leboutilier introduce Saul to?
- What Saul did when he couldn't take the racism or name calling anymore.
- The name of Fred Kelly's youngest son.
31 Clues: Where was the scout from? • The name of Saul's Grandfather? • The place where Saul had to go to. • What replaced everything Saul knew? • What did Saul see for the first time? • What does Saul play for the last time? • The name of Fred Kelly's youngest son. • How old was Saul when he left the reserve? • Who changes the Moose to play against them? • ...
Indian Horse 2016-06-13
Across
- The name of Saul's Grandfather?
- What did Saul do after they played the town team?
- What does Saul play for the last time?
- Where was the scout from?
- The place Saul goes to after he is visited by his deceased family.
- The children were scared of diseases, deaths and.
- The reason Saul was kicked off the town team.
- How old was Saul when he left the reserve?
- Where was the place Saul was taken to when the found him?
- By the end of the winter saul was an essential part of what team?
- What did Saul see for the first time?
- The place where Saul had to go to.
- Who does Saul meet when he returns to the residential team?
- The team who ends up winning against the challenging team.
- What did Father Leboutilier introduce Saul to?
- The name of Fred Kelly's youngest son.
Down
- What did Saul use as a hockey puck when practicing in secret?
- Who visited Saul when he made a fire one night by the New Dawn Centre?
- What is the place where Benjamin escaped from?
- What did Saul do to make all that disappear?
- How many week after Saul joined did they go and play the town team?
- Who changes the Moose to play against them?
- What replaced everything Saul knew?
- Which reserve does Saul and Fred Kelly go to?
- where is the place Saul ended up the next time he passed out drunk?
- Who does Saul return to after he goes to the residential school?
- What hard working job did Fred Kelly give Saul when he returned from hockey?
- What was Saul considered when he made the team?
- What Saul did when he couldn't take the racism or name calling anymore.
- The reason why the children were so happy they cried.
- The man who found Saul passed out drunk on a table at a restaurant.
31 Clues: Where was the scout from? • The name of Saul's Grandfather? • The place where Saul had to go to. • What replaced everything Saul knew? • What did Saul see for the first time? • What does Saul play for the last time? • The name of Fred Kelly's youngest son. • How old was Saul when he left the reserve? • Who changes the Moose to play against them? • ...
The Great Depression 2022-12-09
Across
- What corporation bought mortgages of homeowners who were behind in their payments?
- This was the event that happened due to severe drought, high winds, and lack of rainfall
- Opponents thought that the New Deal gave the federal government too much _____ over the states
- The government practice of spending borrowed money rather than raising taxes to boost the economy
- This agency offered unemployed men from 18 to 25 years old the opportunity to work under the direction of the forestry service planting trees, fighting forest fires, and building reservoirs
- This is what you called the people who marched to that capital for their early bonus
- A long period of rising stock prices
- The process whereby a neutal party hears from two opposing sides and makes a decision that both must accept
- Radio broadcast made by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to Americans
- A fixed sum paid regularly to a person following retirement from work
- A method of boycotting work by sitting down at work and refusing to leave the establishment
- An agent who negotiates an exchange between a buyer and a seller
Down
- System of government in which one person holds total power
- A monetary system in which the value of currency is defined in terms of gold
- A demand by a broker that investors pay back loans made for stocks purchased on margin
- To take possession of a property because of defaults on payments
- A system for buying and selling stocks in corporations
- A role of the government to work out conflicts among competing interest groups\
- Persistent and heavy demands by a bank's depositors, creditors, or customers to withdraw money
- A homeless and usually penniless wanderer
- This act required companies that sold stocks and bonds to provide complete and truthful information to investors
21 Clues: A long period of rising stock prices • A homeless and usually penniless wanderer • A system for buying and selling stocks in corporations • System of government in which one person holds total power • To take possession of a property because of defaults on payments • An agent who negotiates an exchange between a buyer and a seller • ...
Chapter 5 glossary 2021-08-25
Across
- - the process of mating one breed of plant or animal with another breed of plant or animal
- Species that are very close to extinction and small numbers remain
- - native vegetation that remains unchanged when surrounding areas have been changed by activities such as grazing and forestry
- - Scientists who study interactions between
- - a part of the stem, root or leaf that is able to grow into a new plant
- - a term used to describe all the conditions that affect a plant or animal in its habitat
- - the place where al life exists; consists of earth and its atmosphere
- - living factors in the environment
- - a method of controlling unwanted pests by using natural predators or diseases
- - individuals that are exactly the same each other
Down
- - a consumer that only eats other animals
- - an ecosystem that is diverse and is able to provide for the need of the organism living there for a long period of time
- - species that is experiencing a rapid population decline and is in danger of becoming extinct if the drop in numbers continues
- - an animal that only eats plants
- - an animal that eats both plants and animals
- - depending on each other for survival
- - A system formed by organisms interacting with each other and with their non living surroundings in a balanced way.
- - term that is used to describe a species that has no been seen in the wild for 50 years, and which the last known individual has died
- - non living factors in the environment
- - an interaction between two organisms in which one of them benefits and the other one is not affected
- - an interaction between two organisms in which both the organisms benefit from the relationship and none is harmed
- - the flow of energy between organism to organism in a series of feeding relationships
- things and their environment
23 Clues: things and their environment • - living factors in the environment • - an animal that only eats plants • - non living factors in the environment • - depending on each other for survival • - a consumer that only eats other animals • - Scientists who study interactions between • ...
chapter 5 crossword 2021-08-23
Across
- A method of controlling unwanted pests by using a natural predator or disease.
- Species that is experiencing a rapid population decline and is in danger of becoming extinct if the drop in numbers continues.
- An ecosystem that is diverse and able to provide for the needs of the organisms living there over a long period of time
- Regular burning to reduce the amount of fuel available for a fire
- An interaction in which one type of organism (the parasite)lives on or in another type of organism (the host);the host is usually harmed or even killed.
- The place where an organism lives.
- Area along the banks of rivers and streams that is flooded when water levels are high.
- The process of mating one breed of plant or animal with another breed of that plant or animal (e.g. cattle).
- The flow of energy from organism to organism in a series of feeding relationships
- A number of food chains combined
- Organisms that get the energy they need by breaking down dead matter and waste products.
- Species that are close to extinction and very small numbers remain.
Down
- An interaction between two organisms in which one of them benefits but the other one is not
- An organism able to manufacture its own food; plants are producer organisms
- get the energy and nutrients they need; animals are consumer organisms.
- native vegetation that remains unchanged when surrounding areas have been changed by activities such as grazing or forestry.
- An interaction between organisms in which both the organisms benefit from the relationship and neither is harmed.
- Species that has low numbers, often spread out over a large area; the population is not decreasing.
- Characteristics that help an organism to survive in its environment.
- Organisms that must eat other organisms
- Raised bank built to prevent water reaching buildings.
21 Clues: A number of food chains combined • The place where an organism lives. • Organisms that must eat other organisms • Raised bank built to prevent water reaching buildings. • Regular burning to reduce the amount of fuel available for a fire • Species that are close to extinction and very small numbers remain. • ...
(Not) The New York Times Crossword 2022-11-05
Across
- He once walked out of here with a broken leg, but hey, he got out of carrying the canoe (abbr.)
- Most-admired architect
- Favorite magazine
- Favorite Saturday morning activity with homies
- Current size of 4th grandchild
- Where he met Pat in a seedy bar and asked her to dance
- Lucy's country of origin
- Rarely reads this
- Younger brother and "black sheep" of the family
- He’s one of these; only 2% of people are
- Mascot at his undergrad school
- Peruvian desert where he slept under the stars with hydrogen canisters
- His shameless "step goal" (abbr.)
- Undergraduate major at Syracuse
- Younger sister, by 3 minutes
- Buddy he's known since Syracuse
- Must-have car feature
- Go-to radio sta.
- His first MN job was Research Fellow at this UofM school
- Years of marriage in June
- He taught here for many yrs.
- His baby
- Illinois childhood residence he loved
- East Bay school where his sister, Chris, is a Business History prof.
- Ohio city of birth
- His sailboat
Down
- He'll have a self-driving one by the time he needs it
- Pounds at birth (or pitchers he & Pat could down in a night of dancing)
- His first job was in this Woolworths department
- One and only granddaughter
- Not his first love, but hopefully his last
- His mom was an accomplished one
- Star attraction at Woolworth's
- Where he swung to Queen Ida, Shangoya, and Mary Jane Alm
- Firstborn son
- Favorite comic possum
- Company he started
- He rarely misses this important Monday morning "meeting"
- Preferred brew (abbr.)
- First dog
- Curly-haired grandson
- First grandchild
- His long-time paramour
- Color of his dad's Fiat Spider
- First car model (a Pontiac)
- Italian high school buddy
46 Clues: His baby • First dog • His sailboat • Firstborn son • First grandchild • Go-to radio sta. • Favorite magazine • Rarely reads this • Company he started • Ohio city of birth • Favorite comic possum • Must-have car feature • Curly-haired grandson • Most-admired architect • Preferred brew (abbr.) • His long-time paramour • Lucy's country of origin • Years of marriage in June • Italian high school buddy • ...
The Primary Sector 2024-01-16
Across
- Holdings also vary in shape: regular or irregular
- Agriculture depends on many factors, including both physical and ___________ elements
- Closed fields, also known as _______________, are plots of land separated by fences, walls or hedges, etc.
- In traditional societies, farmers use very ______________ tools, while developed ones use advanced technology, such as machinery, selection of seeds, etc.
- managing forests in order to obtain natural products (such as wood), rubber, and resins.
- the breeding of animals to obtain products for human use, such as food and raw materials for industry (milk, meat, eggs, etc.).
- the cultivation of land to obtain different kind of plants in order to provide food for people and animals.
- The main goal of commercial agriculture is to obtain maximum _____________.
- Holdings vary in size: small, medium, or large
- countries that have a larger part of the population employed in the primary sector
- A ______________ consists of one or more plots of land
Down
- Fertilizers contaminate the soil and the water in aquifers.This contamination can affect our food and health.
- landscapes that have open plots of land with no boundaries between them.
- Tasks are completed in less time and at a reduced cost, machines are used.
- Deforestation can involve _______________ of forest land to farms, ranches, or urban use
- the extraction of minerals and other geological materials from the Earth. It can also be considered part of the secondary sector, because it provides essential raw materials for industry and construction.
- Usually, only one product is grown on the farm
- also known as forest clearance is the removal of a forest or stand of trees from land that is then converted to non-forest use
- the practice of catching fish and other marine species for food or as raw materials for industry.
- The increasing use of machinery has led to a decline in the number of jobs in rural areas. Many younger people have left to live in cities.
20 Clues: Usually, only one product is grown on the farm • Holdings vary in size: small, medium, or large • Holdings also vary in shape: regular or irregular • A ______________ consists of one or more plots of land • landscapes that have open plots of land with no boundaries between them. • Tasks are completed in less time and at a reduced cost, machines are used. • ...
College Majors 2025-09-24
Across
- The process of learning and teaching.
- Designing and building technology or structures.
- Is the study of matter, energy, and how they interact.
- Is the study of living organisms.
- Lenguages spoken in countries other than your own.
- Is Written works like stories, poems, and novels.
- The practice of growing crops and raising animals for food and other products.
- Is the study of governments and political systems.
- The study of numbers, and shapes.
- Is the art of taking and creating photos.
- Is the study of human movement.
- Is organized sound created to be heard and enjoyed.
- The study of stars, planets, and space.
- Is the study of society, social relationships, and how groups influence behavior.
- Is the study of food and how it affects health.
- The creation of movies or motion pictures.
Down
- The system for enforcing laws and punishing crimes.
- Managing money & investments.
- The study of humans and their culture.
- The study of the English language, including grammar, reading, writing, speaking, and literature written in English.
- Is the managing and care of forests.
- Is recording and reporting financial transactions.
- The study of substances and their reactions.
- The study of laws and the legal system.
- The study of ideas about existence, knowledge, and values.
- Is helping people improve movement and recover from injuries.
- The study of ancient objects and ruins.
- Creative expression through various forms.
- Is the study of the mind, Behavior, and mental process.
- Is the story of past events.
- The rhythmic movement of the body to music.
- Is the activity of buying and selling goods and services.
- The study of how people use resources to produce and consume goods.
- The profession or practice of caring for the sick, injured, or elderly, especially in a hospital or clinical setting.
34 Clues: Is the story of past events. • Managing money & investments. • Is the study of human movement. • Is the study of living organisms. • The study of numbers, and shapes. • Is the managing and care of forests. • The process of learning and teaching. • The study of humans and their culture. • The study of laws and the legal system. • The study of ancient objects and ruins. • ...
Geography :D 2022-03-20
Across
- Characterised by ___ transport, tall buildings for offices and housing.
- _____means leaving one country to move to another
- built-up area with a high population density and infrastructure of the built environment
- Schools in urban areas are usually __, less likely to experience staff shortages
- job oppurtunits in rural areas are _____ and less diverse
- Natural increase: difference in ____ and death rate
- Land is needed to build ______ such as roads,airports and hospitals
- is an area modified by humans for recreational purposes and includes settlements and economic activities
- countryside is a geographic area that is located outside towns and cities
- a human____is a community in which people live
- the demand for water is rising constantly. A large portion of urban dwellers without access to water and sanitation also live in slums
- _____ population growth,urbanisation and economics development lead to growing pressure on water resources in urban areas.
- area that hasn't been altered by people
Down
- A desirable quality of a place a person wants to go to would be good ______
- the concentration of individuals within a species in a specific geographic locale
- Cosmopolitan population is the ______ of migrants from different parts of the world to live,study or work
- Natural increase= birth rate - ____
- human______is the movement of people from one place to another with intentions of settling, permanently or temporarily, at a new location.
- cities have a ____ population size compared to rural areas due to natural increases and rural-urban migration
- ____means moving into a new country
- An undesirable quality of a place a person wants to leave would be shortage of ______assistance
- a ____________soceity with many people from diverse cultural backgrounds
- Rural-urban migration:______ of people from rural areas to a city to live and work.
- the increase in the proportion people living in cities
- People who live on farms and in villages usually carrry out activities like fishing and ___
- land is ___ and therefore expensive
26 Clues: Natural increase= birth rate - ____ • ____means moving into a new country • land is ___ and therefore expensive • area that hasn't been altered by people • a human____is a community in which people live • _____means leaving one country to move to another • Natural increase: difference in ____ and death rate • the increase in the proportion people living in cities • ...
Unit 4 Vocab 2022-07-08
Across
- New Deal program that hired writers, artists, and actors; this was significant in relieving unemployment.
- New Deal program that provided some security for the elderly and unemployed workers, this was important because it provides some insurance for current workers.
- New Deal program that gave unemployed men aged 18-25 a job to work with the national forestry service, this was important for the economy to move, people needed jobs to have money to spend.
Down
- New Deal program that paid farmers not to raise certain crops, this was significant in preventing a surplus of food.
- New Deal program that was created to regulate the stock market and prevent fraud, this was historically important to prevent future economic depressions.
5 Clues: New Deal program that hired writers, artists, and actors; this was significant in relieving unemployment. • New Deal program that paid farmers not to raise certain crops, this was significant in preventing a surplus of food. • ...
12th Ed. Chapter 10 Guided Reading & Vocab Rubenstein Part 1 2023-04-09
Across
- An indicator constructed by the UN to measure the level of development for a country through a combination of income, education, and life expectancy.
- The tertiary sector involves the provision of goods and services. They do this in exchange for payment, such as retailing, banking, law, education, and government. It involves a lot of interaction with people.
- The secondary sector includes manufacturers that process, transform, and assemble raw materials. They then turn it into useful products. There are also industries that fabricate manufactured goods into finished consumer goods.
- The primary sector includes activities that directly extract materials from Earth. This is mainly through agriculture. However, sometimes it can be by mining, fishing, and forestry.
- A country that is at a relatively early stage in the process of development.
Down
- Development is the process of improving the conditions of people through diffusion of knowledge and technology.
- A country that has progressed relatively faralong a continuum of development.
- The value of the total output of goods and services produced in a country in a year, not accounting for money that leaves and enters the country.
- The value of a particular product compared to the amount of labor needed to make it.
9 Clues: A country that is at a relatively early stage in the process of development. • A country that has progressed relatively faralong a continuum of development. • The value of a particular product compared to the amount of labor needed to make it. • Development is the process of improving the conditions of people through diffusion of knowledge and technology. • ...
Smokey Bear Association 25th Anniversary 2020-01-21
Across
- SBA logo artist
- Smokey artist
- SBA member owned catalog
- Smokey's raccoon friend
- Smokey awarded to VanMeter
- 1st HFTCA Assist. chairman
- First HFTCA president
- Only you can prevent (new)
- SBA editor in 2006
- SBA member to win all 3 Smokeys
- 1st word in Smokey's motto
- A of Smokey's ABC's
- The Bell's dog
- Number of Rudy's Smokey awards
- Site of the 4th HFTCA con
- Smokey's birthday in 1994
- Original name of the SBA
- Produced Smokey dolls
- Voice of Smokey
- Water container
- Located in Capitan
- CA parade Smokey has been in
- Smokey's 20252
- SBA 2000 convention state
- National Zoo city
- Wrote Smokey Bear 20252
- Giant Smokey state
- Smokey in the Rockies convention
- Smokey's hometown
- Produced the first Smokey teddy bear
Down
- SBA convention in NV
- Another word for shovel
- Smokey Golden book artist
- Game commissioner's daughter
- Smokey's doc
- VanMeter's fire rank
- What Smokey wears
- 3 term SBA president
- Owns a fire tower museum
- China co. made Smokey figures
- Month of the first SBA newsletter
- Current SBA president
- First SBA convention city
- Only you can prevent
- Smokey Says artist
- TV show that won a Smokey in 1968
- Ray that cared for Smokey
- Only other country with a giant Smokey
- Parade day with Smokey balloon
- Puts out a fire
- Took Smokey to D.C.
- State fair with a 14' Smokey
- Founder of the SBA
- Children rangers
- NC Forestry minted these
- Rudy's design for HFTCA
- Put the pants on Smokey
- "Fictional" Smokey artist/writer
- Month of Capitan fire
- Coldest Smokey sign siting
- Cartoonist for Smokey comic books
- Writer of Smokey comic books
- "Thanks for..."
- Site of 1998 mid-west get-together
- Wendelin's proper name
- Silver Smokey basketball team
- 1st HFTCA secretary
67 Clues: Smokey's doc • Smokey artist • The Bell's dog • Smokey's 20252 • SBA logo artist • Puts out a fire • Voice of Smokey • Water container • "Thanks for..." • Children rangers • What Smokey wears • National Zoo city • Smokey's hometown • SBA editor in 2006 • Smokey Says artist • Founder of the SBA • Located in Capitan • Giant Smokey state • A of Smokey's ABC's • Took Smokey to D.C. • 1st HFTCA secretary • ...
Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources 2021-03-22
Across
- researchers who are planning experiments or they analyze data for trends and underlysing relationships
- engineer,applies basic science and engineering principles as they relate to agriculture production
- that works in vineyard, pruning, trellising, canopy management^irrigation plus many more activities
- people study the natural environment and enjoy sharing what they learn with other people
- person who practices forestry, the science, art, and profession of managing forests
- person studies micrroorganisms and giant trees - all plant life
- incoming flowers, designs floral arrangements, works with customers and delivers flowers
- people study climate change, climate variability and the effects of climate on the biosphere
- a diverse array of aquatic plants and animals in controlled or semi-congrolled settings
- scientist who specialises in plant life
- with interactions among plants, soils and the environment
- biologist who studies genetics, the science of genes, heredity, and variation of organisms
Down
- the relationship between the environment and actions that affect it
- they explore the chemical events that cause biological phenomena in living organisms
- with the prevention and spread of serious diseases in plants and animals
- people work with roundworms
- nano-sized particles to solve particular problems
- treat and help prevent disease and disabilities in animals
- scientist who researches the distribution, circulation, and physical properties of the earth's underground and surface waters
- expert in garden cultivation and management.
- effects of potentially harmful chemicals on people, animals and the environment
- the structure of viruses
- biological processes and may use that knowledge to diagnose or treat a disease, develop a drug or improve a process
- scientist,care for lawns, golf courses, park sites, athletic field or grounds around a corporate headquarters
24 Clues: the structure of viruses • people work with roundworms • scientist who specialises in plant life • expert in garden cultivation and management. • nano-sized particles to solve particular problems • with interactions among plants, soils and the environment • treat and help prevent disease and disabilities in animals • ...
Agriculture Term to Know 2016-01-19
Across
- the art science and practice of studying and managing forest and plantaions
- a factory like farm devoted to either livestock fattening or dairying all feed is imported
- the cultivation of aquatic organisms especially for food
- crops in tropical forest clearings in which the forest vegetation
- a commerical type of agriculture that produces fattened cattle and hogs for meat
- use of little labor and capital to increase agriculture productivity
- hunting by gathering hooking or trapping animals that breath water
- the continual movement of livestock in search of forage for animals
- the killing of wild game and the harvesting of wild plants to make food
- changes made to the environment
- technological organization that also uses biological systems
- highly mechanizes, large scale farming usually under corporate
- large scale farming and ranching operations that employ vast land bases
- the unique way in which each culture uses its particular physical environment
- system of agricultural organization whereas farm laborers are not compensated wages
- characteristic of farmers or their way of life
- 1000 years ago it achieved plant domestication and animal domestication
- expenditure of much labor and capital on a piece of land to increase its productivity
Down
- the practice of rotating use of different fields from crop to crop each year to avoid tiring the soil
- the feeding relationships between species in a biotic community
- a second crop is planted after the first has been harvested
- crops like flowers vegetables and fruits
- farming to supply the minimum food and materials necessary to survive
- agricultural or more properly an animal husbandry enterprise
- the period of each year when crops can be grown
- animals kept for some utilitarian purpose whose breeding by humans
- the recent introduction of high yeild hybrid crops and chemical fertilizers and pesticides
- the cultivation of domesticated crops and the raising of domesticated animals
28 Clues: changes made to the environment • crops like flowers vegetables and fruits • characteristic of farmers or their way of life • the period of each year when crops can be grown • the cultivation of aquatic organisms especially for food • a second crop is planted after the first has been harvested • agricultural or more properly an animal husbandry enterprise • ...
Indian Horse 2016-06-12
Across
- Who visited Saul when he made a fire one night by the New Dawn Centre?
- The place where Saul had to go to.
- What hard working job did Fred Kelly give Saul when he returned from hockey?
- The place Saul goes to after he is visited by his deceased family.
- What is the place where Benjamin escaped from?
- What was Saul considered when he made the team?
- What did Saul do to make all that disappear?
- where is the place Saul ended up the next time he passed out drunk?
- What replaced everything Saul knew?
- Who does Saul meet when he returns to the residential team?
- Who changes the Moose to play against them?
- Which reserve does Saul and Fred Kelly go to?
- How old was Saul when he left the reserve?
- Who does Saul return to after he goes to the residential school?
- What did Saul use as a hockey puck when practicing in secret?
- Where was the place Saul was taken to when the found him?
Down
- The team who ends up winning against the challenging team.
- What did Saul see for the first time?
- The man who found Saul passed out drunk on a table at a restaurant.
- The name of Fred Kelly's youngest son.
- The reason Saul was kicked off the town team.
- The name of Saul's Grandfather?
- Where was the scout from?
- What did Saul do after they played the town team?
- What does Saul play for the last time?
- The reason why the children were so happy they cried.
- What did Father Leboutilier introduce Saul to?
- The children were scared of diseases, deaths and.
- How many week after Saul joined did they go and play the town team?
- What Saul did when he couldn't take the racism or name calling anymore.
- By the end of the winter saul was an essential part of what team?
31 Clues: Where was the scout from? • The name of Saul's Grandfather? • The place where Saul had to go to. • What replaced everything Saul knew? • What did Saul see for the first time? • The name of Fred Kelly's youngest son. • What does Saul play for the last time? • How old was Saul when he left the reserve? • Who changes the Moose to play against them? • ...
Unit 3 Vocab Practice 2024-01-09
Across
- an industry that converts raw materials such as farming or mining products into products for sale. “The manufacturing industry”
- People older than 64
- how the population is spread out across a given area
- the number of live births per thousand people per year.
- the difference between the birth and death rates and the change in numbers due to migration in a population.
- people younger than 15
- a measure of working age population supporting the non-working-age population
- the change in the size of a population
- the difference between the birth rates and death rates in a population
- industry such as mining, agriculture, fishing, or forestry that involves harvesting raw materials
- the ratio of young dependents (people younger than 15) to the working age (people aged 15 to 64)
- the number of infant deaths for every 1000 live births of children under the age of one
- the number of deaths per thousand people per year.
- to move into an area or region to settle down and live
Down
- the number of children per 1000 live births that die under the age of five in a population in a year
- the annual population change in an area. Equation: Overall Population change = (Birth Rate – Death Rate) + Net Migration
- the ratio of old retired people (people over the age of 64) to working age (people aged 15 to 64)
- a policy that promotes human reproduction
- a population with a percentage of old people
- a portion of the population that is not economically active or producing income.
- to leave one community or area to settle in another area
- a policy that discourages human reproduction
- people aged 15 to 64
- the difference between the number of people entering a country (immigration) and the number of people leaving a country (emigration).
24 Clues: People older than 64 • people aged 15 to 64 • people younger than 15 • the change in the size of a population • a policy that promotes human reproduction • a population with a percentage of old people • a policy that discourages human reproduction • the number of deaths per thousand people per year. • how the population is spread out across a given area • ...
Timber Industry Crossword Puzzle 2025-10-14
Across
- a power saw with a continuous, toothed metal blade stretched between two or more wheels
- timber or logs especially when dressed for use
- a portable, handheld power tool that uses a rotating chain with sharp teeth to cut and process wood
- a portable power tool with a rotating, toothed metal blade used for making straight cuts in wood
- critical section of uncut wood that controls the direction
- logging machine that carries logs from the forest to a roadside landing
- facility or machine where raw logs are processed into lumber
- a specialized forestry machine that delimbs and cuts felled trees into specified log lengths
- vehicle used to pull cut trees from their felling location to a central collection point, a landing
- a machine used to shave a rough-sawn board to a precise, uniform thickness
- heavy-duty vehicles essential for transporting logs and processed timber from forests to sawmills
Down
- elf-propelled machine used in modern logging to fell, delimb, and buck trees into desired lengths
- powerful logging machine that uses a system of cables, drums, and a tower to pull logs
- a person or a piece of heavy equipment responsible for moving logs or processed lumber
- softwoods like pine, fir, and spruce for construction, and hardwoods like oak, walnut, and maple for furniture and specialty items
- sawmill machine with multiple circular saws used to trim the rough, uneven edges from boards to make them straight and parallel
- a tool or device used for splitting logs, prevents a chainsaw from getting pinched
- selecting trees, cutting them down, and transporting them to a mill, where they are processed into lumber
- a large, temperature-controlled oven used to quickly and efficiently dry wood to a specific moisture content
- a cut made into the top or bottom edge of a wood member.
20 Clues: timber or logs especially when dressed for use • a cut made into the top or bottom edge of a wood member. • critical section of uncut wood that controls the direction • facility or machine where raw logs are processed into lumber • logging machine that carries logs from the forest to a roadside landing • ...
iCEV Animals in Society & Animals in Research 2025-10-05
Across
- A U.S. federal executive department whose responsibilities include governing policies of farming, agriculture, forestry and food.
- Mercy for Animals and PETA are examples of animal ________ groups.
- The animal used most often in research, contains 90% of the same genes as humans.
- The _________ Species Act protects animals and their habitats from extinction, enforced by the US Fish & Wildlife Service.
- The division of the USDA that administers licenses and registrations to research facilities.
- Developed the first rabies vaccine & invented the process of pasteurization.
- The committee required by the Animal Welfare Act to oversee & evaluate the institution's animal care and use.
- Created the Theory of Evolution and supported testing of animals for advancements in physiology & medicine.
- Prevents the clotting of blood, discovered after testing on cats.
- Type of animals that depend on humans for food and shelter.
- The science of chemical substances and their effects on living organisms.
Down
- The animal that surgical procedures were first studied on.
- Type of animal that can breed on their own but have undergone physiological or behavioral changes due to captivity.
- The act that prohibits the illegal trade of any fish or wild animals taken, possessed, transported or sold in violation of any other US law.
- Animal used for work, recreation and companionship, NOT a production animal.
- Organizations like the ASPCA and animal control agencies support animal ________.
- Used mice to produce the first transgenic mammal which lead to a more advanced understanding of cancer, neurological and connective tissue diseases and developmental abnormalities.
- Studied the physiology of digestion, metabolism and contributed to discovery of homeostasis, known as the “Prince of vivisection.”
- First to evaluate conditioned responses in dogs leading to the study of behaviorism.
- The Pet Purchase Protection law is also known as the Pet _____ Law.
- Wrote against animal experimentation with his book Animal Liberation. Suggested primates were capable of human emotions.
- "Father of biology," first to divide organisms into categories.
22 Clues: The animal that surgical procedures were first studied on. • Type of animals that depend on humans for food and shelter. • "Father of biology," first to divide organisms into categories. • Prevents the clotting of blood, discovered after testing on cats. • Mercy for Animals and PETA are examples of animal ________ groups. • ...
Topic B Crossword: Confederation and the Maritime colonies 2016-04-05
Across
- Age A name given to the years in between 1840 and 1870, also known as the age of wind, wood, and sail.
- North America had the ______ largest shipping fleet of which 70% was built by the Maritimes behind Britain, Norway, and the United States.
- A Maritime colony that had an economy supported by fishing and farming. It had no bridges to the mainland and was the smallest both in size and in population. Joined Confederation in 1873.
- All of the Maritimes were located on the ____ coast of Canada in the Atlantic ocean.
Down
- This Maritime colony had no good farming land, and exported fish to Britain in addition to hunting seals. It was isolated from the other colonies and was closer to Britain than the rest. Joined Confederation in 1949.
- Even though the _________ were afraid of unfair control, they received language rights and control over their own education.
- A Maritime colony famous for it's wood sailing ships, and had an industry of forestry and fishing. Voted to support union.
- With an industry based on fishing, 10% of this Maritime colony's land was good for farming. It did trade with the Caribbean and voted to support union.
- Fish, lumber and grain.
- Britain offered the Maritimes a _______ for supporting union, which helped convince them that Confederation was a good choice.
10 Clues: Fish, lumber and grain. • All of the Maritimes were located on the ____ coast of Canada in the Atlantic ocean. • Age A name given to the years in between 1840 and 1870, also known as the age of wind, wood, and sail. • A Maritime colony famous for it's wood sailing ships, and had an industry of forestry and fishing. Voted to support union. • ...
A&E team crossword 2025-12-08
Across
- T in VKT
- Country with highest EV share of new car sales
- Where insects and politicians live
- The I in EITE businesses
- Sector name used in the GHG inventory that covers forestry
- Reduction or prevention of emissions
- Earth's frozen water
- Craft beer brewery on Tory St
- Type of carbon stored in oceans
- Measure of how much a greenhouse gas warms the Earth compared to CO₂
- Country with the highest per capita emissions
- Excess units in the ETS that pose risk to meeting budgets
- What can’t you do with Wellington on a good day
- The P in IPCC
- Team member who is apparently too busy to provide a crossword clue about themselves
- The second word in the famous Wellington cafe set to close in January 2026
- Acronym for new tool installed by NZ Steel to replace coal-fired kilns
- Type of land the Government hopes to plant trees on
- Primary agency responsible for managing the NZ ETS
- What day does Gillian generally work in the office
- Point of no return
- Rachael's favourite card game
- Most common Wellington wind
- Acronym for a technoly used to capture CO2
- Oxford dictionary word of the year
- Country with the closest per capita emissions to New Zealand
- Country with most wind turbines
- Wellington's local cricket team
- Measure of aggregate economic activity
- Self-Governing territory that is reported in the NZ GHG inventory
- Term for total units in private accounts in the ETS
- Light reflected from a surface
- Bird of the year 2025
- Largest hydro power station in NZ
- Debris left after storms in forests
- Name of our building when built in 1984
- Inai Tonu Nei
- Delivered every second year
- What does Wellington’s ‘naked-man’ sculpture find in the wind
- Bay in Wellington known for being ‘clothing-optional’
- Oldest pub in Wellington
- A type of equity threatened by not taking actions to address climate change now
- Person on the poster on Anita's bookshelf (visible in Teams meetings) (clue: relates to physics)
- Chris' first job
Down
- Insurance for insurers
- To delay making a decision
- Ocean effect of CO₂ absorption, reducing pH
- Emissions pathway to achieve targets
- Most iconic fountain in the Southern Hemisphere (arguably)
- Action to reduce risk from the ETS carbon price rollercoaster
- Current official name of the ‘Cake tin’ stadium
- Overseas university Anita attended
- NZ’s fourth highest form of electricity production
- Chris' favourite word, meaning easily angered or annoyed
- The second C in the CCR price control
- The E in CGE modelling
- Wellington suburb most vulnerable to sea level rise
- The name of the CGE model used by the Commission
- Vanessa's bachelor's degree
- The A in A&E team
- Geoff's e-bike make - more than squared
- Bay in Wellington known for surfing
- Sector projected to have second lowest gross emissions in 2050
- Name of the theatre hosting the premiere of Avatar 3 this Saturday
- The direct economic benefits from improved health outcomes
- Vanessa’s name in the world outside of work
- Someone who refuses to accept climate science
- C in CRF GHG inventory tables
- The F in HFCs
- What could you go to see at Red Rocks/Pariwhero
- When emissions reduction in one country is offset or increased in another country
- Organic renewable energy source
- Wellington’s tallest mountain
- A methodology used for forestry in the NZ ETS
- Host country for COP in 2026
- Important Commission value
- An ambiguity or omission in regulation that allows people to avoid an obligation
- Failure to respond despite existential threat of climate catastrophe
- Suburb of Vanessa’s new house
- Location of NZ’s aluminum smelter
- Rachael’s new dog’s name
- Wellington suburb with the most wind turbines
- First insurance company in NZ to introduce risk-based pricing
- Climate Change Minister when Inaia tonu nei was delivered
- Capture and store carbon
- Shape of Wellington’s new sculpture in Waitangi Park
- Agency responsible for climate research and monitoring
- Climate change minister when the ETS was introduced in 2008
88 Clues: T in VKT • The P in IPCC • The F in HFCs • Inai Tonu Nei • Chris' first job • The A in A&E team • Point of no return • Earth's frozen water • Bird of the year 2025 • Insurance for insurers • The E in CGE modelling • The I in EITE businesses • Rachael’s new dog’s name • Capture and store carbon • Oldest pub in Wellington • To delay making a decision • Important Commission value • ...
Specialized Areas in Agriculture 2021-10-04
Across
- (also phytopathology) this is the scientific study of diseases in plants caused by pathogens (infectious organisms) and environmental conditions (physiological factors.
- this is the branch of science concerned with the formation, nature, ecology, and classification of soil.
- this is the branch of economics dealing with the distribution, management and production of land.
- this is the art or practice of garden cultivation and management. Horticulture is the branch of agriculture that deals with the art, science, technology, and business of growing plants. It includes the cultivation of medicinal plants, fruits, vegetables, nuts, seeds, herbs, sprouts, mushrooms, algae, flowers, seaweeds and non-food crops such as grass and ornamental trees and plants.
- this can be defined as the science and practise of plant managing, and caring for forest. It involves using conserving and repairing forest for human and environmental benefits
- is a branch of food science that deals with the production processes that make foods.
- this is the area of engineering concerned with the design, construction and improvement of farming equipment and machinery.
Down
- this is the application of scientific research and knowledge of agricultural practices through farmer education.
- this is the science and technology of producing and using plants for food, fuel, fibre,and land reclamation.
- this is the scientific study of insects, a branch of zoology.
10 Clues: this is the scientific study of insects, a branch of zoology. • is a branch of food science that deals with the production processes that make foods. • this is the branch of economics dealing with the distribution, management and production of land. • this is the branch of science concerned with the formation, nature, ecology, and classification of soil. • ...
Human Impact 2020-11-12
Across
- demand the amount of food required to feed a population. Food demand increases as populations increase
- supply the amount of food that is available to the population.
- farming for the raising of livestock (particularly cattle)
- the process or industry of obtaining coal or other minerals from a mine.
- The use of Earth's renewable and nonrenewable natural resources in ways that do not constrain resource use in the future.
- acidification refers to a decrease in the pH of the ocean over an extended period of time, caused primarily by uptake of carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere
- A form of oxygen that has three oxygen atoms in each molecule; when not in the stratosphere, it is an unstable toxic gas with a pungent odor and powerful oxidizing properties
- cultivation of a single crop in a given area.
- reduction in the number or quantity of something
Down
- urban air pollution composed of a mixture of smoke and fog produced from industrial pollutants and burning fuels
- the process of removing salt from seawater
- the capture of wild fish and other seafood living in the waters
- the process by which fertile land becomes desert, typically as a result of drought, deforestation, or inappropriate agriculture.
- the practice of growing, breeding, and caring for plants and animals that are used for food, clothing, housing, transportation, and other purposes
- The science of planting and caring for forests and the management of growing timber
- Organisms that have been genetically altered to improve their usefulness
- an increase in the ratio or density of people living in urban areas rather than in rural areas
- ecosystem refers to the biosphere, or all the spaces on earth occupied by living organisms
- treatment the process of removing contaminants from wastewater to make it safe enough to release into the environment
- an undesirable in the natural environment that is caused by the introduction of substances that are harmful to living to organisms or by excessive wastes, heat, noise, or radiation
20 Clues: the process of removing salt from seawater • cultivation of a single crop in a given area. • reduction in the number or quantity of something • farming for the raising of livestock (particularly cattle) • supply the amount of food that is available to the population. • the capture of wild fish and other seafood living in the waters • ...
Chapter 1: The Strategic Role of HRM 2023-01-03
Across
- The principles of conduct governing an individual or group – the principles people use to decide what their conduct should be
- ______ goals are aimed at ensuring all employees have equal access to opportunities to succeed and grow in the org
- The HR __________ includes measures of the impact of HR on organizational outcomes, translating strategy into a set of performance measures
- A digital _______ presents the manager with graphs and charts showing a picture of how the company is doing o all HR metrics
- Management of people/employees in an organization
- Planning, Organizing, Staffing, Leading & _____ are the five functions of the management process
- Actively supporting people from marginalized groups by using one’s power or privilege to amplify unheard voices and advocate for oppressed people
Down
- The knowledge, education, training, skills and expertise of an organizations workforce
- A _______ plan is the company’s overall plan for how it will match its internal strengths and weaknesses with its external opportunities and threats to maintain a competitive advantage
- ________ HRM is making decisions based on data, facts, analytics, scientific rigour, critical evaluation, and critically-evaluated research/case studies
- Contracting with outside vendors to handle specified business functions
- The sector that includes public administration, personal and business services, finance, trade, public utilities and transportation/communications
- The sector that includes manufacturing and construction
- In what type of team would HR provide specialized support in day-to-day HR activities?
- On what type of team would HR generalists be assigned to functional departments such as sales and production?
- Summarizes how each department’s performance contributes to achieving the company’s overall strategic goals
- ________ Responsibility is the balancing organizational commitments to investors, employees, customers, other businesses, and the communities in which the firm operates
- The sector that includes agriculture, fishing & trapping, forestry and mining
- An environment or organizational climate where individuals feel respected, accepted, supported and valued
19 Clues: Management of people/employees in an organization • The sector that includes manufacturing and construction • Contracting with outside vendors to handle specified business functions • The sector that includes agriculture, fishing & trapping, forestry and mining • The knowledge, education, training, skills and expertise of an organizations workforce • ...
RSIDE_Bio3.2_RitaKim_Science10honours 2013-05-06
Across
- Resource use (which is known as the ways we obtain and use materials such as wood, after, gas, oil and minerals)
- The practice in which forests are logged or cleared for human use and never replanted
- The division of habitats into smaller, isolated fragments. These isolated pockets of ecosystems affect plant pollination, seed dispersal, wildlife movement, and plant and animal reproduction.
- The use or extraction of a resource until it is depleted. This can result in extinction.
- The development of cities, building and roads as they enlarge and expand into natural ecosystems.
- The ways we use the land around us for urban development, agriculture, industry, mining, and forestry
- The dying out of a species.
- Occurs when water and wind erosion removes topsoil from bare land. Topsoil is the upper layer of soil, which is made mostly of humus (decomposed organic matter), minerals, water, and air. It causes erosion because few plants are left to hold the soil in place.
- To plant new trees and plants after deforestation to restore the original ecosystems as best as possible
Down
- The introduction of chemicals, toxins, wastes, or micro-organisms into the environment in concentrations that are harmful to living things
- The process or industry of obtaining coal or other minerals from a mine
- Ecological information, passed down from generation to generation, that reflects human experience with nature gained over centuries
- Occurs when soil particles are squeezed together and the air spaces between the particles are reduced.
- The ability of an ecosystem to sustain ecological processes. These processes are important to biological diversity and ensure the continuation of the ecosystem over time.
- The destruction of habitats, which usually results from human activities. When habitats are destroyed, they can no longer support the original species that lived there
15 Clues: The dying out of a species. • The process or industry of obtaining coal or other minerals from a mine • The practice in which forests are logged or cleared for human use and never replanted • The use or extraction of a resource until it is depleted. This can result in extinction. • ...
Ag-D'Lon Ornelas 2016-01-19
Across
- landscape the cultural landscape of agricultural areas
- the feeding relationships between spieces in a biotic family.
- deliberatly planted and tended by humans that is genetically distinct from its wild anscestors as a result of selectictive breeding.
- the cultivation of rice on a paddy, or small flooded field enclosed by mud dikes, practiced in the hummid areas of the far east.
- the cultivation of domesticated crops and the raising domesticated animals
- large scale farming ussually under corperate ownership
- the art,science, and practice of studying and managing forests and plantations, and related natural resources
- type of agriculture that produce flattening cattle and hogs for meat
- the cultivation of aquatic organisms ( as fish or shellfish) especially for food
Down
- in american commercial grain agriculture a farm on which no one lives; planting and harvesting is done by hired migratory crews
- the killing of wild game and the harvesting of wild plants to provide to food in traditional culture.
- a factory farm devoted to either livestock flattening or dairying; all feed is imported and no crops are grown on the farm.
- commercial gardening and fruit farming, so named because the word was a middle english word meaning bartering or the exchange of commodities.
- johannheinrich german scholar farmer who developed the core periphery model in the nineteenth century (economic determinism). in his model he proposed an "isolated state" that had no trade connections with the outside world; possessed only 1 market,locally centrally in the state; and had uniform soil, climate, and level terrain throughout. he created this model to study the influence of distance from market and the concurrent transport costs on the type and intensity of agriculture.
- characteristic of farmers or their way of life.
15 Clues: characteristic of farmers or their way of life. • landscape the cultural landscape of agricultural areas • large scale farming ussually under corperate ownership • the feeding relationships between spieces in a biotic family. • type of agriculture that produce flattening cattle and hogs for meat • ...
Agriculture Terms to Know 2016-01-28
Across
- a factory like farm devoted to either livestock fattening or dairying; all feed is important and no crops are grown on the farm
- the feeding relationships between species in a biotech community
- farming to supply the minimum food and materials necessary to survive
- the art, science, and practice of studying and managing forests and plantations, and related natural resources
- characteristic of farmers of their way of life
- the cultivation of domesticated crops and the raising of domesticated animals
- means any technological application that uses biological systems, living organisms, or derivatives therefor, to make or modify products or processes for specific use
- in america commercial grain agriculture,a farm which no one lives; planting and harvesting is done by hired migratory crews
Down
- a commercial type of agriculture the produces fattened cattle and hogs for meat
- the cultivation of aquatic organisms (as fish or shellfish) especially for food
- the activity of hunting for fish by hooking, trapping, or gathering animals not classifiable as insects which breathe in water or pass their lives in water. By extension, the term fishing is applied to pursuing other aquatic such as various types of shellfish, squid, octopus, turtles, frogs, and some edible marine invertebrates
- the killing of wild game and the harvesting of wild plants to provide food in traditional cultures
- a system of monoculture for producing export crops requiring relatively large amounts of land and capital; originally dependent on slave labor
- highly mechanized, large-scale farming, usually under corporate ownership
- commercial gardening and fruit farming, so named because the word was a Middle English word meaning bartering or the exchange of commodities
15 Clues: characteristic of farmers of their way of life • the feeding relationships between species in a biotech community • farming to supply the minimum food and materials necessary to survive • highly mechanized, large-scale farming, usually under corporate ownership • the cultivation of domesticated crops and the raising of domesticated animals • ...
Rside_BiologyCh.3.2_Celina 2013-05-06
Across
- The destruction of habitats, which usually results from human activities. When habitats are destroyed, they can no longer support the original species that lived there
- The practice in which forests are logged or cleared for human use and never replanted
- Resource use (which is known as the ways we obtain and use materials such as wood, after, gas, oil and minerals)
- The use or extraction of a resource until it is depleted. This can result in extinction.
- The introduction of chemicals, toxins, wastes, or micro-organisms into the environment in concentrations that are harmful to living things
- The process or industry of obtaining coal or other minerals from a mine
- Occurs when water and wind erosion removes topsoil from bare land. Topsoil is the upper layer of soil, which is made mostly of humus (decomposed organic matter), minerals, water, and air. It causes erosion because few plants are left to hold the soil in place.
- The dying out of a species.
- To plant new trees and plants after deforestation to restore the original ecosystems as best as possible
- The ways we use the land around us for urban development, agriculture, industry, mining, and forestry
Down
- The division of habitats into smaller, isolated fragments. These isolated pockets of ecosystems affect plant pollination, seed dispersal, wildlife movement, and plant and animal reproduction.
- Ecological information, passed down from generation to generation, that reflects human experience with nature gained over centuries
- The ability of an ecosystem to sustain ecological processes. These processes are important to biological diversity and ensure the continuation of the ecosystem over time.
- The development of cities, building and roads as they enlarge and expand into natural ecosystems.
- Occurs when soil particles are squeezed together and the air spaces between the particles are reduced.
15 Clues: The dying out of a species. • The process or industry of obtaining coal or other minerals from a mine • The practice in which forests are logged or cleared for human use and never replanted • The use or extraction of a resource until it is depleted. This can result in extinction. • ...
RSide_3.3Bio_ritaK_science10honours 2013-05-08
Across
- The ability of an ecosystem to sustain ecological processes. These processes are important to biological diversity and ensure the continuation of the ecosystem over time.
- Occurs when water and wind erosion removes topsoil from bare land. Topsoil is the upper layer of soil, which is made mostly of humus (decomposed organic matter), minerals, water, and air. It causes erosion because few plants are left to hold the soil in place.
- The destruction of habitats, which usually results from human activities. When habitats are destroyed, they can no longer support the original species that lived there
- Ecological information, passed down from generation to generation, that reflects human experience with nature gained over centuries
- Occurs when soil particles are squeezed together and the air spaces between the particles are reduced.
- To plant new trees and plants after deforestation to restore the original ecosystems as best as possible
- The practice in which forests are logged or cleared for human use and never replanted
Down
- The division of habitats into smaller, isolated fragments. These isolated pockets of ecosystems affect plant pollination, seed dispersal, wildlife movement, and plant and animal reproduction.
- The development of cities, building and roads as they enlarge and expand into natural ecosystems.
- Resource use (which is known as the ways we obtain and use materials such as wood, after, gas, oil and minerals)
- The use or extraction of a resource until it is depleted. This can result in extinction.
- The ways we use the land around us for urban development, agriculture, industry, mining, and forestry
- The introduction of chemicals, toxins, wastes, or micro-organisms into the environment in concentrations that are harmful to living things
- The dying out of a species.
- The process or industry of obtaining coal or other minerals from a mine
15 Clues: The dying out of a species. • The process or industry of obtaining coal or other minerals from a mine • The practice in which forests are logged or cleared for human use and never replanted • The use or extraction of a resource until it is depleted. This can result in extinction. • ...
Sarawak Forestry Corporation 2022-07-07
Canadian Industries 2012-11-21
Across
- Is the farming of aquatic organisms such as fish, crustaceans, molluscs and aquatic plants.
- Is a naturally occurring substance that is solid and stable at room temperature, representable by a chemical formula, usually abiogenic, and has an ordered atomic structure.
- Is an entity engaged in raising or harvesting fish.
- Is the science, technology and business involved in intensive plant cultivation for human use.
- Is the science, art, and craft of creating, managing, using, conserving, and repairing forests and associated resources in a sustainable manner to meet desired goals, needs, and values for human benefit.
- Is any organic or inorganic material of natural or synthetic origin (other than liming materials) that is added to a soil to supply one or more plant nutrients essential to the growth of plants.
- Is typically used in reference to trees or shrubs that lose their leaves seasonally.
Down
- consists of the economic systems of a country or other area; the labor, capital, and land resources; and the manufacturing, production, trade, distribution, and consumption of goods and services of that area.
- are substances or mixture of substances intended for preventing, destroying, repelling or mitigating any pest.
- Is the cultivation of animals, plants, fungi, and other life forms for food, fiber, biofuel and other products used to sustain life.
- Is the extraction of valuable minerals or other geological materials from the earth, from an orebody, lode, vein, (coal) seam or reef.
- Are pesticides used to kill unwanted plants.
- Is a production facility composed of a group of chemical engineering unit processes and unit operations refining certain materials or converting raw material into products of value.
- Is typically used in reference to trees or shrubs that don't kose their leaves seasonally.
- Is the production of an economic good or service within an economy.
15 Clues: Are pesticides used to kill unwanted plants. • Is an entity engaged in raising or harvesting fish. • Is the production of an economic good or service within an economy. • Is typically used in reference to trees or shrubs that lose their leaves seasonally. • Is typically used in reference to trees or shrubs that don't kose their leaves seasonally. • ...
Business Management (1.1 & 1.2 - review) 2021-06-03
Across
- This is the final stage of an economy sector, where businesses provide services to other businesses and consumers, such as banking, insurance, gas and electricity.
- A sector that includes all organisations owned by individuals or groups of individuals.
- is essential for survival, while a want makes your life more enjoyable.
- Anything that comes naturally from the planet. This covers plants grown on land (crops, wood from trees) as well as resources that are extracted from underground (oil and gas) and from the sea (fish).
- The process where a business focuses on a particular industry or segment of a market.
- A sector that are often created by governments in order to provide public services. For example, national governments provide protection through the army and the navy.
- This is the sector in an economy or the first stage of an economy, where natural resources are extracted from the land or sea. Activities include forestry, fishing, mining and agriculture.
Down
- This is when there is a mix of privately-owned and government-owned (public) businesses.
- The manpower needed to produce products and services.
- The people who come up with business ideas and take risks when putting the other factors of production together. They are known as entrepreneurs.
- it is equal to the Selling price less costs of materials/components.
- In this sector, the raw materials extracted from the primary sector are combined in the production process to make the finished goods through manufacturing, refining and construction.
- The financial investment, machines and equipment required to produce products and services.
13 Clues: The manpower needed to produce products and services. • it is equal to the Selling price less costs of materials/components. • is essential for survival, while a want makes your life more enjoyable. • The process where a business focuses on a particular industry or segment of a market. • ...
lets us build your mind into the agriculture forestry! 2021-03-25
Across
- eaten raw with hot pepper or peppered
- its a fruit that has a bright pink and sweet pulp
- born on a thick stem
- its edible used in keleguens
- green mature fruit is edible when ripe
Down
- wide and has the form of an artichoke
- mature fruit is eaten raw or pickled.
- broad leaf herblike plant
- four-winged with a wavy margin
- used for housing construction
- tall perennial grass with finely toothed leaves
11 Clues: born on a thick stem • broad leaf herblike plant • its edible used in keleguens • used for housing construction • four-winged with a wavy margin • wide and has the form of an artichoke • mature fruit is eaten raw or pickled. • eaten raw with hot pepper or peppered • green mature fruit is edible when ripe • tall perennial grass with finely toothed leaves • ...
Agriculture - Your name 2016-01-20
Unit 5 Vocabulary 2023-04-20
Across
- the increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe.
- Part of the economy which includes industries that offer services to other businesses and consumers. Examples include: delivery companies, movie theaters, fast food stores, and dry cleaners.
- Part of the economy that makes direct use of natural resources. Including: agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining, and other local industries
- an index designed by the United Nations to measure the basic contentment of people living in a particular country. The HDI measures the three basic dimensions of human development: health, education, and income.
- The North American Free Trade Agreement is an agreement to make trade between Canada, the United States, and Mexico easier
- A factory which takes raw materials, then manufactures items to be sold in other countries
- the economic and social concept that people in developing countries who produce crops and other goods need to be fairly compensated.
- an economic policy in which a nation does not try to limit imports or exports by enacting tariffs or subsidies
Down
- Part of the economy including manufacturing activities; transforming raw materials into goods.
- an economic system in which business owners decide what to produce, as well as how to produce and distribute it.
- an economic system in which the government controls the means of production, such as land, labor, and machinery.
- the underlying foundation or framework of a system, organization, or location. Includes: railroads, bridges, water systems, telecommunications.
- the total cash value of all the goods produced and services provided within a nation during a period of time, usually a year.
13 Clues: the increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe. • A factory which takes raw materials, then manufactures items to be sold in other countries • Part of the economy including manufacturing activities; transforming raw materials into goods. • ...
Clue Quest: Uniting Global Talent 2025-08-21
Across
- Boasting over 90 parks and gardens, this 'dear green place' was the first in its country to be declared a UNESCO City of Music.
- Home to over 10,000 urban foxes, this capital city features the world's oldest subway system and the second largest library globally.
- Known as the "Garden City", this city enjoys a climate often described as “eternal spring” and was the first in its nation to get electricity.
- Named for its flat landscape, this city hosts an annual hot air balloon festival and is recognized as a "Tree City USA" for its dedication to urban forestry.
Down
- Home to Liberty State Park and Ellis Island, this city was a filming location for the HBO television show "The Sopranos."
- This capital city is home to one of the largest public universities in the United States and is the birthplace of “Goosebumps” author R.L. Stine.
- Originally founded as New Sweden, this city is renowned for being the headquarters of more than half of all Fortune 500 companies.
- With 7 miles of beautiful beaches, this seaside town is home to the first public beach hut, built in 1909.
- Home to the Ferris Wheel, brownies, and Sue the T-Rex, this city was used as inspiration for Batman's Gotham City.
9 Clues: With 7 miles of beautiful beaches, this seaside town is home to the first public beach hut, built in 1909. • Home to the Ferris Wheel, brownies, and Sue the T-Rex, this city was used as inspiration for Batman's Gotham City. • Home to Liberty State Park and Ellis Island, this city was a filming location for the HBO television show "The Sopranos." • ...
canada resources 2016-04-27
Across
- a large area of land covered with trees or other woody vegetation
- Heat from the Sun causes water on Earth (in oceans, lakes etc) to evaporate (turn from liquid into gas) and rise into the sky.
- is the cultivation of animals, plants and fungi for food, fiber, biofuel, medicinal and other products used to sustain and enhance human life.
- Water falls from the sky in the form of rain, snow, hail, or sleet
- is a comprehensive multi-disciplinary of rural Canada, covering over 2.5 million square kilometers of land and water.
- Comes from gymnosperm trees which usually have needles and cones.
- Comes from angiosperm trees that are not monocots; trees are usually broad-leaved.
Down
- is a permanently protected area of green space, farmland, forests, wetlands, and watersheds, located in Southern Ontario, Canada.
- the science and craft of creating, managing, using, conserving, and repairing forests and associated resources to meet desired goals, needs, and values for human benefits
- an area of land that is devoted primarily to agricultural processes with the primary objective of producing food and other crops; it is the basic facility in food production.
- As water vapor in the clouds cools down it becomes water again
- In a process similar to sweating, plants lose water which is absorbed into the atmosphere much like evaporation.
- activity of trying to catch fish.
- is the process of business expansion by increased output, customer base expansion, or new product development, as opposed to mergers and acquisitions, which is inorganic growth.
- an ethic that embodies the responsible planning and management of resources.
- Oceans and lakes collect water that has fallen. Water evaporates into the sky again and the cycle continues.
- is an SI accepted metric system unit of area equal to 100 ares (10,000 m2) and primarily used in the measurement of land.
17 Clues: activity of trying to catch fish. • As water vapor in the clouds cools down it becomes water again • a large area of land covered with trees or other woody vegetation • Comes from gymnosperm trees which usually have needles and cones. • Water falls from the sky in the form of rain, snow, hail, or sleet • ...
lets us build your mind into the agriculture forestry! 2021-03-25
Across
- lettuce broad leaf herblike plant
- born on a thick stem
- green mature fruit is edible when ripe
- eaten raw with hotpepper or peppered
- wide and has the form of of an artichoke
Down
- its edible used in keleguens
- four-winged with wavy margin
- used for housing construction
- tall perennial grass with finely toothed leaves
- mature fruit is eaten raw or pickled.
- its a fruit that has bright pink and sweet pulp
11 Clues: born on a thick stem • its edible used in keleguens • four-winged with wavy margin • used for housing construction • lettuce broad leaf herblike plant • eaten raw with hotpepper or peppered • mature fruit is eaten raw or pickled. • green mature fruit is edible when ripe • wide and has the form of of an artichoke • tall perennial grass with finely toothed leaves • ...
Agriculture terms to know 2016-01-31
Across
- characteristic of farmers or their way of life
- a commercial type of agriculture that produces fattened cattle and hogs for meat
- expenditure of much labor and capital on a piece of land to increase its productivity
- the cultural landscape of agricultural areas
- farm commercial gardening and fruit farming, so named because the word was a middle english word meaning bartering or the exchange of commodities
- a second crop is planted after the first has been harvested
- the art, science, and practice of studying and managing forests and plantations, and related natural resources
- term used to describe large scale farming and ranching operations that employ vast land bases, large mechanized equipment, factory-type labor forces, and the lastest technology
Down
- the practice of rotating use different fields from crop to crop each year
- the cultivation of domesticated crops and the raising of domesticated animals
- regards a system of agricultural organization whereas farm laborers are not compensated via wages
- changes made to the environment, the use of pesticides to grow crops and the effects it has on the soil and environment
- in american commercial grain agriculture, a farm on which no one lives, planting and harvesting is done by hired migratory crews
- means any technological application that uses biological systems, living organisms, or derivatives thereof, to make or modify products or process for specific use
- the recent introduction of high-yield hybrid crops and chemical fertilizers and pesticides into traditional Asian agricultural systems, most notably paddy rice farming
- the cultivation of aquatic organisms (as shellfish or fish) especially for food
- the killing of wild game and the harvesting of wild plants to provide food in traditional cultures
- a factory like a farm devoted to either livestock fattening or dairying, all feed is imported and no crops are grown on the farm
- use of little labor and capital to increase agricultural productivity
- the feeding relationships between a species in biotic community
- highly mechanized, large-scale farming, usually under corporate ownership
21 Clues: the cultural landscape of agricultural areas • characteristic of farmers or their way of life • a second crop is planted after the first has been harvested • the feeding relationships between a species in biotic community • use of little labor and capital to increase agricultural productivity • ...
Lesson 12 The Amazonian Rainforest 2023-03-21
Across
- the variety of plants and animals living in one area. The term can also mean the great variety of all living things on Earth.
- to cut down all the trees in an area
- an area that has been set aside for a specific purpose
- travel for pleasure rather than business or necessity; also, the business of organizing such travel
- a vegetation zone of mainly tall trees that remain green all year; also refers to the type of vegetation in this zone
- the natural environment in which a plant or animal lives
- a community of all the living things in an area and the environment in which they live
- disagreement over how to use a particular area of land
- a substance that provides nourishment, such as one of the elements in soil that make it fertile
- removing or clearing away the trees from a forest.
- the planting, growing, and harvesting of trees
- the middle layer of a forest, consisting of shrubs and trees
- the bottom layer or ground of the forest
- the process by which carbon and oxygen cycle among plants, people and animals, and the environment
- any action that relates to the making, buying, and selling of goods and services
- natives of an area who have been conquered or dominated by others who came later
Down
- a person who works to protect the natural world
- a broadleaf evergreen forest found in wet and hot regions near the equator
- the replanting of trees in a formerly forested area by people or by nature
- using resources in ways that meet the needs of people today without hurting the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. This means finding ways to use land for farming or ranching.
- a form of tourism that brings people to unique ecosystems while trying to avoid damage to these special places
- found or living in an area that is not close to cities
- the thick layer of overlapping tree branches that make up the top layer of a forest
- the pattern of weather over a long period of time
24 Clues: to cut down all the trees in an area • the bottom layer or ground of the forest • the planting, growing, and harvesting of trees • a person who works to protect the natural world • the pattern of weather over a long period of time • removing or clearing away the trees from a forest. • an area that has been set aside for a specific purpose • ...
Physical Geo Recap 2023-11-02
Across
- An industry that takes place in the Canadian Shield; must have trees
- (2) A lowland region with lots of farming and oil drilling
- A common hobby in the Canadian Shield because there are lots of lakes
- The growing of crops; best suited for lowland regions
- Natural disasters that could see lava spewing out violently
- The liquid rock the exists under the tectonic plates
- (2) The series of processes that change rock from one form to another
- Plates rubbing together may form these natural disasters
- This disaster forms over the ocean & pummels the land with rain and violent winds
- Name of the supercontinent that existed 225 million years ago
- A disaster formed when hot and cold air mix & violently swirl
- Molten rock; sometimes known as ‘lava’
- The process of breaking down rock into smaller pieces
- (2) Landform region with forests, lakes, rivers, and exposed bedrock
- The outermost layer of the Earth; where all human life exists
- A highland landform region full of icy, snow- and glacier-covered mountains
- Western _________; a highland region with sharp mountains, lakes, and trees
- Rock that is formed from layers of compressed sediment over long periods of time
- These exists in sedimentary rock; courtesy of ancient creatures and plants
Down
- Tectonic plates pushing into each other and ‘crumpling’ up may form these
- Rock that is often the oldest and the newest; fire rock
- Disasters occurring in dry forests or grassland areas; made worse by high winds
- Disasters which normally occur near rivers and low lying areas
- This disaster would occur on the side of a mountain
- (2) Theory proposed by Alfred Wegener; deals with plate tectonics
- The centre of the Earth; a solid, super heated ball
- A highland region with old, rounded mountains
- The carrying away of sediment by wind, water, and glaciers
- (2) ___________ St. Lawrence Lowland; landform region with many large cities
- Rock that has been changed with heat and pressure
- Last name of the German geographer who proposed continental drift
- Disaster created when earthquakes occur on the ocean floor
32 Clues: Molten rock; sometimes known as ‘lava’ • A highland region with old, rounded mountains • Rock that has been changed with heat and pressure • This disaster would occur on the side of a mountain • The centre of the Earth; a solid, super heated ball • The liquid rock the exists under the tectonic plates • The growing of crops; best suited for lowland regions • ...
UNIT 1 2022-01-20
Across
- crop grown for its fiber, like cotton and flax
- edible part of an herbaceous plant
- place where plants, shrubs, and trees are grown either for transplanting
- cultivation of plants for their flowers
- The act of buying and selling in a market or The total of activities involved in the transfer of goods from the producer to consumer
- product of the soil
- bring crops to a point at which they will command a price
- family of plants, including many valuable food and forage species, with the aid of symbiotic bacteria, they can convert nitrogen from the air to build up nitrogen in the soil.
- organism distinguished from the animals in that it takes nutrients entirely in liquid solution
- amount of water, hail, sleet, snow, or other moisture received from clouds
- the matured ovary of a flower and its contents
- pertaining to or having the properties of a medicine
- geographically-defined zone in which a specific category of plant life is capable of growing as defined by temperature
- the science of plants
- embryo of a plant
- important genus of trees extensively cultivated in tropical and subtropical areas for its fruits
- effort directed toward increased knowledge of natural phenomena and the environment and toward the solution of problems in all fields of science
Down
- group or association of plants
- sciences, arts, and business practices of crating, conserving, and managing natural resources on lands designated as forests
- solid, liquid, or gas fuel derived from recently dead biological material
- planting, tending, harvesting, and improving of plants
- grove of fruit or nut trees
- convert an agricultural commodity into a marketable form
- cultivation of woody plants
- science of agriculture that relates to the cultivation of gardens or orchards
- beautify terrain as with plantings of trees, shrubs, and flowering herbs, as well as with ornamental features
- composite or generally prevailing weather conditions of a region
- Anything, which when taken into the body, nourishes the tissues and supplies body heat
- specialization of agriculture concerned with field–crop production and soil management
- pertaining to a sense of beauty
30 Clues: embryo of a plant • product of the soil • the science of plants • grove of fruit or nut trees • cultivation of woody plants • group or association of plants • pertaining to a sense of beauty • edible part of an herbaceous plant • cultivation of plants for their flowers • crop grown for its fiber, like cotton and flax • the matured ovary of a flower and its contents • ...
A 2022-01-20
Across
- crop grown for its fiber, like cotton and flax
- edible part of an herbaceous plant
- place where plants, shrubs, and trees are grown either for transplanting
- cultivation of plants for their flowers
- The act of buying and selling in a market or The total of activities involved in the transfer of goods from the producer to consumer
- product of the soil
- bring crops to a point at which they will command a price
- family of plants, including many valuable food and forage species, with the aid of symbiotic bacteria, they can convert nitrogen from the air to build up nitrogen in the soil.
- organism distinguished from the animals in that it takes nutrients entirely in liquid solution
- amount of water, hail, sleet, snow, or other moisture received from clouds
- the matured ovary of a flower and its contents
- pertaining to or having the properties of a medicine
- geographically-defined zone in which a specific category of plant life is capable of growing as defined by temperature
- the science of plants
- embryo of a plant
- important genus of trees extensively cultivated in tropical and subtropical areas for its fruits
- effort directed toward increased knowledge of natural phenomena and the environment and toward the solution of problems in all fields of science
Down
- group or association of plants
- sciences, arts, and business practices of crating, conserving, and managing natural resources on lands designated as forests
- solid, liquid, or gas fuel derived from recently dead biological material
- planting, tending, harvesting, and improving of plants
- grove of fruit or nut trees
- convert an agricultural commodity into a marketable form
- cultivation of woody plants
- science of agriculture that relates to the cultivation of gardens or orchards
- beautify terrain as with plantings of trees, shrubs, and flowering herbs, as well as with ornamental features
- composite or generally prevailing weather conditions of a region
- Anything, which when taken into the body, nourishes the tissues and supplies body heat
- specialization of agriculture concerned with field–crop production and soil management
- pertaining to a sense of beauty
30 Clues: embryo of a plant • product of the soil • the science of plants • grove of fruit or nut trees • cultivation of woody plants • group or association of plants • pertaining to a sense of beauty • edible part of an herbaceous plant • cultivation of plants for their flowers • crop grown for its fiber, like cotton and flax • the matured ovary of a flower and its contents • ...
Science Vocabulary / Chapter 11 2022-01-27
Across
- the killing of animals illegally (326)
- the layer of soil where plants can grow (325)
- Cincinnati's football team
- the Rams' quarterback
- ___-aged stands result from the regrowth of trees that were cut at different times (333)
- the wood that is used for buildings and furniture 327)
- an __-growth forest is one that has never been logged (harvested) (335)
- the abbreviation for maximum sustainable yield (328)
- the nickname for the NBA Detroit team
- __-aged stands result from the regrowth of trees that were mostly cut at the same time (333)
- the nickname for the NBA champion in 2021
- the managing of harvesting so items of nature are not depleted (324)
- soil, fresh water, and wild animals are examples of __ sources (324)
- a tree approach where small numbers of mature seed-producing trees are left standing (334)
- the clearing of a forest to build houses (like in an area north of Denver) (335)
Down
- a type of cutting of trees where all the trees in an area are cut at once (334)
- the burning of forests in a controlled way (341)
- forests cover about what percentage of the land's area (330)
- an approach where small numbers of mature trees are left standing to provide shelter for seedlings (334)
- the manager of the Rockies
- a system where only some of the trees in a forest are cut at once (334)
- the leading scorer for the Iowa basketball Hawkeyes
- the coach of the Kansas City Chiefs
- __ based management is to harvest resources in ways that minimize impact on the environment (328)
- the management of forests (330)
- ___ use meaning that the forests can be used for recreation, wildlife habitat, or mining (338)
- a type of burning where snags are removed after a natural disturbance (342)
- the best receiver for the Kansas City Chiefs
- the kind of management that involves scientifically testing different management approaches (328)
- plantations of large scale plantings of trees (340)
30 Clues: the Rams' quarterback • the manager of the Rockies • Cincinnati's football team • the management of forests (330) • the coach of the Kansas City Chiefs • the nickname for the NBA Detroit team • the killing of animals illegally (326) • the nickname for the NBA champion in 2021 • the best receiver for the Kansas City Chiefs • the layer of soil where plants can grow (325) • ...
Lesson 12 Vocabulary Crossword 2024-02-12
Across
- the variety of plants and animals living in one area
- using resources in ways that meet the needs of people today without hurting the ability of future generations to meet their own needs
- a substance that provides nourishment, such as one of the elements in soil that make it fertile
- a form of tourism that brings people to unique ecosystems while trying to avoid damage to these special places
- to cut down all of the trees in an area
- the bottom layer, or ground, of a forest
- any action that relates to the making, buying, and selling of goods and services
- a vegetation zone of mainly tall trees that remain green all year; also refers to the type of vegetation in this zone
- travel for pleasure rather than business or necessity; also, the business of organizing such travel
- the process by which carbon and oxygen cycle among plants, people and animals, and the environment
- natives of an area who have been conquered or dominated by others who came later
Down
- the pattern of weather over a long period
- a broadleaf evergreen forest found in wet and hot regions near the equator
- the middle layer of a forest, consisting of shrubs and trees
- the thick layer of overlapping tree branches that make up the top layer of a forest
- disagreement over how to use a particular area of land
- the natural environment in which a plant or animal lives
- removing or clearing away the trees from a forest. Deforestation is often done to clear land for farming or ranching
- an area that has been set aside for a specific purpose
- the replanting of trees in a formerly forested area by people or by nature
- the planting, growing, and harvesting of trees
- a person who works to protect the natural world
- found in or living in areas that are not close to cities
- a community of all the living things in an area and the environment in which they live
24 Clues: to cut down all of the trees in an area • the bottom layer, or ground, of a forest • the pattern of weather over a long period • the planting, growing, and harvesting of trees • a person who works to protect the natural world • the variety of plants and animals living in one area • disagreement over how to use a particular area of land • ...
Share the Shade Crossword 2024-10-23
Across
- Part of the tree that transports sugars throughout the tree
- Animal that helps plants reproduce
- Pear tree that is notoriously smelly and brittle
- A tree that produces an inedible fruit full of sticky latex
- Coniferous tree that is the most common tree in the world
- The upper layer of a forest, formed by mature tree crowns
- A dusty substance that trees produce and makes people sneeze
- One of the most common families of coniferous trees in North Texas
- The most common tree in North America, found on the Canadian flag
- Plants that are indigenous to an area and require less maintenance
- Crepe_________
- Plants from a similar ecosystem that are easier to grow
- Part of the tree that takes in water and nutrients from the soil
- State tree of Texas
- A way to determine the age of a tree
- Layer of material put on top of soil to protect plants and conserve water
- How plants get energy from the sun
Down
- The science of managing woodlands
- Component of fertilizer; needs to be fixed for plants to use
- What plants crave (also in your sports drink).
- Tree with heart-shaped leaves and pink flowers
- Some species of this family of trees 'weep'; others are found in the desert
- Facility where timber is processed and stored. There was a prominent one in downtown McKinney back in the day
- The family of plants that includes all flowering plants
- The process of water evaporating from a plant's leaves
- Part of the tree that takes in sunlight
- Trees that shed their leaves in autumn
- Evergreen trees with pine needles and cones
- A specimen of this tree is the most massive known single organism in the world
- Part of the tree that transports water and nutrients from the roots to the stem and leaves
- Swamp tree with prominent knees
- Tree that produces acorns
- Type of prairie ecosystem native to Texas
- Professional who cares for and manages trees
- Liquid that carries water and nutrients though a tree
35 Clues: Crepe_________ • State tree of Texas • Tree that produces acorns • Swamp tree with prominent knees • The science of managing woodlands • Animal that helps plants reproduce • How plants get energy from the sun • A way to determine the age of a tree • Trees that shed their leaves in autumn • Part of the tree that takes in sunlight • Type of prairie ecosystem native to Texas • ...
Learning Bahasa Indonesia is fun | Puzzle by Isabel O'Malley 2023-01-31
Across
- Response to “Terimakasih”
- Coffee alternative
- “My name is…”
- “What’s your name?”
- Walking, or “street” times two
- “See you later”
- Good
- “Selamat ____” 4pm - 7 pm
- Rain
- Legong, for example
- “I’m sorry!”
- When you don’t understand
- “Selemat ____” before 11 am
- You
- Expect this ingredient in all drinks
- Spa offering
- “Know”, or a soybean product
- Typical response to “Apa Kabar”
- Must-know for vegetarians
- Best way to weave through traffic
- Affirmative
- Fruit drink, sounds the same in English
- “Where is…”
- Sea
- “Selamat ____” 11 am - 4 pm
- “Where’s the toilet”
- Relaxing at the beach, rhymes
- House
- Noodles
- Common source of livelihood on coast
- “What’s that?”
- “Bon apetít!”
- Person, sounds like a fruit
- Hot
- “Nice to meet you”
- “I’m tired”
- Gamelan, for example
- Not this, but…
- “You got this!”
Down
- “Elephant King”
- “Where are you from?”
- If you know one phrase, it should be this
- Price inquiry
- Not here, but…
- Greeting on Dec 31st
- “Can I take a photo?”
- Forest person?
- Milk
- “I’m shy”, or how to politely decline a photo request
- “Excuse me”
- “Selamat ____” after 7 pm
- Cooked in palm oil, for example
- Not that, but…
- “Mixed rice”
- Negative
- “I don’t know”
- Meat that’s often served satay style
- Star, or beer
- “I feel sick”
- Bedtime action
- “How are you?”
- “Selling balloons”
- The largest cellular service provider in Indonesia
- “Perfect fit”
- Balinese Hindu place of worship, also found in every Balinese family home
- Subak crop, or head of the Center for International Forestry Research
- Foreigner
- “Where are you going?”
- Arabica or Robusta are two types
- Indonesian currency
- Muslim place of worship
- Drinking water
- “I am from”
- Not there, but…
- Friend
- “Careful!”
- Bad
- Delicious
78 Clues: You • Sea • Hot • Bad • Milk • Good • Rain • House • Friend • Noodles • Negative • Foreigner • Delicious • “Careful!” • “Excuse me” • Affirmative • “Where is…” • “I am from” • “I’m tired” • “Mixed rice” • “I’m sorry!” • Spa offering • Price inquiry • “My name is…” • Star, or beer • “I feel sick” • “Perfect fit” • “Bon apetít!” • Not here, but… • Forest person? • Not that, but… • “I don’t know” • Bedtime action • “How are you?” • “What’s that?” • ...
Unit 3 - Energy: Save today. Survive tomorrow. 2024-03-27
Across
- an artificial reservoir or tank for storing water usually underground
- ______ gas. A mixture of hydrocarbon gases that occurs with petroleum deposits; used as a fuel and in manufacturing organic compounds
- any factor that can change in an experiment
- the strength of a push or pull one body exerts on another
- a declaration of outcome made in advance based upon observations
- energy obtained from hot magma beneath the Earth's surface
- controlled use or systematic protection of natural resources
- ______ energy: The energy of moving electrons
- useable power that has the capacity for doing work
- an artificial channel for water; especially one for carrying a large quantity of flowing water
- information collected
- contamination of air, soil, or water by the discharge of harmful substances
- of or relating to production of electricity by waterpower
- petroleum derivative used for fuel
- to form a conclusion from your observation
- the science of cultivation, maintaining, and developing forests
- a structured test of a hypothesis
- method a way of thinking about nature that involves the use of certain skills to solve problems in an orderly manner
Down
- what was learned during the experiment; explaining how the results either supported or rejected your hypothesis
- anything living
- a listing of the steps of a project or experiment
- ____ energy: The energy stored in the bonds between atoms in molecules
- to bring into existence
- using your senses to identify a something
- pertaining to water
- solid form of fossilized plants, consisting of amorphous carbon used as fuel
- what happens in the experiment; data collected during the experiment collected usually written in sentence form
- all the water of the Earth (usually referring to the oceans)
- an engine whose central driving shaft is fitted with a series of blades spun around by the pressure of a fluid
- an educated guess as to the outcome of an experiment; a good hypothesis has a supporting reason
- enduring for a limited time only
- a place where something is kept in store; especially an artificial or natural lake where water is collected as a water supply
- a change of position
33 Clues: anything living • pertaining to water • a change of position • information collected • to bring into existence • enduring for a limited time only • a structured test of a hypothesis • petroleum derivative used for fuel • using your senses to identify a something • to form a conclusion from your observation • any factor that can change in an experiment • ...
SMHS Horticulture Vocabulary 1 2020-09-04
Across
- The edible part of an herbaceous plant.
- Any leafy plant material, usually clover, fine-stemmed grasses and sedges, alfalfa, and other legumes,
- Cultivation of woody plants, particularly those used for decoration and shade.
- of vegetables, fruits, flowers, and ornamental shrubs and trees.
- To cut, reap, pick, or gather any crop or product of value, as grain, fruit, or vegetables.
- Any group or association of plants; the sum of vegetable life; plants in general.
- The specialization of agriculture concerned with the theory and practice of field–crop production and soil management. The scientific management of land.
- Broadly defined as solid, liquid, or gas fuel derived from recently dead biological material.
- The embryo of a plant; also kernels of corn, wheat, etc., which botanically are seed like fruits as they include the ovary wall.
- – The cultivation of plants for their flowers.
- – Botanically, the matured ovary of a flower and its contents including any external part that is an integral portion of it.
- The cultivation of plants for their flowers.
- Any place where plants, shrubs, and trees are grown either for transplanting or as grafting stocks
Down
- The forming, sorting, apportioning, grouping, or dividing of objects into classes to form an ordered arrangement of items having a defined range of characteristics.
- Botanically, the matured ovary of a flower and its contents including any external part that is an integral portion of it.
- The science of agriculture that relates to the cultivation of gardens or orchards, including the
- To beautify terrain as with plantings of trees, shrubs, and flowering herbs; with ornamental
- – (1)The seed of the cereal crops. (2) Commercially, or as listed on boards of trade, buckwheat, soybeans, and flaxseed, in addition to the cereals.
- A family of plants, including many valuable food and forage species, such as peas, beans, soybeans, peanuts, clovers, alfalfas, sweet clovers, lespedezas, vetches, and kudzu. With the aid of symbiotic bacteria, they can convert nitrogen from the air to build up nitrogen in the soil.
- has been cut and dried principally for livestock feeding.
- The sciences, arts, and business practices of crating, conserving, and managing natural resources on lands designated as forests.
- An element or compound in a soil that is essential for the growth of a plant.
- such as terraces, rock gardens, bog gardens, pools, walks, and drives.
23 Clues: The edible part of an herbaceous plant. • The cultivation of plants for their flowers. • – The cultivation of plants for their flowers. • has been cut and dried principally for livestock feeding. • of vegetables, fruits, flowers, and ornamental shrubs and trees. • such as terraces, rock gardens, bog gardens, pools, walks, and drives. • ...
ch. 12 vocab 2018-12-05
Across
- gambling or game of chance
- all of the activities involved in the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services
- a person from Latin America (central and south America, where Latin-based languages-Spanish and Portuguese-are spoken)
- fuels that are derived from various types of plants
- the manufacturing sector of our economy, which processes raw materials into finished goods and products for use by other business, for export, or for sale to domestic consumers gambling or games of chance.
- designated place: a densely populated area that is not within an incorporated place
- the service industry, which provides a wide variety of services to other businesses and consumer
- products that are consumed in the short run and include food-related products, clothing, textile products, and chemicals and allied products
- a municipality with fewer than 2,000 but more than 300 inhabitants
- products that can be used for longer than three years, such as furniture and fixtures, motor vehicles and equipment, and electronic equipment
- income of approximately $11,000 for an individual and $22,000 for a family of four
- resources that can be reused like aluminum cans, paper products and lead from car batteries
- part of the service industry that includes consumer-related services such as education, government, health/medicine, household services, and tourism and recreation
- part of the service industry that includes insurance, trade, legal services, banking, advertising, wholesaling, retailing, consulting, information generation, real estate transactions, and the collection, generation, storage, retrieval, and processing of computerized information
Down
- the first sector of our economy, which involves the development of natural resources or raw materials and includes agriculture, forestry, and mining
- a political subdivision within the state of Mississippi; can be city, town, or village
- resources like coal, oil, and gas that cannot be replaced one they are consumed
- refers to a group of people with a common racial, national, linguistic, and cultural heritage
- sale in foreign country
- resources that naturally renew themselves-like plants, trees, and animals
- communities that surround cities but are outside city limits
- a municipality with more that 2,000 inhabitants
22 Clues: sale in foreign country • gambling or game of chance • a municipality with more that 2,000 inhabitants • fuels that are derived from various types of plants • communities that surround cities but are outside city limits • a municipality with fewer than 2,000 but more than 300 inhabitants • resources that naturally renew themselves-like plants, trees, and animals • ...
A Spatial Way of Thinking 2025-06-14
Across
- power electricity that is generated from the power of moving water
- fuel any fuel, such as petroleum, coal, and natural gas, that is made from the remains of prehistoric plants and animals
- a graph that shows the average temperature and precipitation in a place over a year
- the height of the land above sea level
- the planting, growing, and harvesting of trees
- resource a useful material that is found in nature, such as water, wood, coal, or oil
- moisture that falls from the sky as rain, snow, sleet, or hail
- continental a climate or climate zone with warm, rainy summers and cool, snowy winters
- activity any action that relates to the making, buying, and selling of goods and services
- use the ways in which people use a particular area of Earth's surface; for example, for farming, development, or preservation.
- any natural feature of Earth’s surface that has a distinct shape. Landforms include major features such as continents, plains, plateaus, and mountain ranges. They also include minor features such as hills, valleys, canyons, and dunes.
- the pattern of weather over a long period of time
Down
- density the average number of people who live in a unit of area, such as a square mile. Population density measures how crowded an area is.
- zone a large area of Earth with a certain mix of plants and trees that are adapted to similar conditions
- rainfall to support much plant life; also a vegetation zone
- a large inlet of the sea that cuts deeply into the land
- a raised area of land, such as a hill or mountain, with a flat top
- a large farm, especially in a hot area
- all the plants and trees in an area
- dry or lacking rainfall; also a climate or climate zone that is hot and dry all year with very little rain
- an area defined by one or more natural or cultural characteristics that set it apart from other areas
- feature any natural characteristic of Earth’s surface, such as landforms and bodies of water
- map a map that shows a particular theme, or topic
- zone a large area of Earth with a particular pattern of weather
24 Clues: all the plants and trees in an area • a large farm, especially in a hot area • the height of the land above sea level • the planting, growing, and harvesting of trees • map a map that shows a particular theme, or topic • the pattern of weather over a long period of time • a large inlet of the sea that cuts deeply into the land • ...
Headed for College Puzzler 2025-07-12
Across
- Location of the university known for its Great Books curriculum and absence of majors
- Mellon Offers 5-year BS/MS tracks in CS and other tech fields
- Offers “Design Your Degree” and d.school.
- San Diego Home of Scripps Institution of Oceanography
- Mascot is the Black Squirrel.
- Partners with New England Conservatory for a dual degree in liberal arts + music
- Only Ivy without a law school.
- Offers a 5-year dual degree with Juilliard
- Longtime president of Bard College, renowned for arts advocacy and youth orchestra leadership
- Philosopher and former president of Princeton, later became U.S. president
- Vermont College Partners with Duke for a 3–2 dual degree in Forestry and Environmental Management
- Known for its Jan Plan.
- Atlanta HBC offering Dual Degree Engineering Program (DDEP) with schools like Georgia Tech
- Economist and former Harvard president known for controversial remarks in 2005
- McKenna Offers Econ + CS major.
- First female president of an Ivy League university (Brown, 1997)
- Former U.S. Secretary of State who graduated from Wellesley College in 1969
- Quaker-founded college offering Peace and Conflict Studies
Down
- City home to the oldest continuously operating university in the U.S.
- Harbor Location of College of the Atlantic, which partners with Columbia for 3+2 Engineering
- Columbia partners with this and Trinity College Dublin for its Dual BA program
- South Carolina college with the fountain-jumping thesis tradition
- Students can combine degrees in Foreign Service and Business
- MIT tradition of placing objects like police cars on the Great Dome
- Shares Robertson Scholars Program with UNC.
- Dual-degree program at Penn combining Wharton and College of Arts & Sciences
- Yale alumnus who became a late-night television host in 1993
- Santa Cruz Mascot is the Banana Slug
- NYU, Hult, and American University have campuses there.
- Offers a B.A. and B.M. via College + Conservatory Dual Degree Program
- Civil rights leader who served as president of Morehouse College
- MIT alum and astronaut who was the second person to walk on the moon
- Offers a Narrative Medicine major
- Offers full-ride QuestBridge Match scholarships.
- Known for mattress sledding videos during Maine winters
35 Clues: Known for its Jan Plan. • Mascot is the Black Squirrel. • Only Ivy without a law school. • McKenna Offers Econ + CS major. • Offers a Narrative Medicine major • Santa Cruz Mascot is the Banana Slug • Offers “Design Your Degree” and d.school. • Offers a 5-year dual degree with Juilliard • Shares Robertson Scholars Program with UNC. • ...
Energy & Atmosphere and Materials & Resources 2019-08-01
Across
- lighting ____ density. The installed lighting power per unit area.
- ____ of liquid fuel. (unit)
- from the manufacturing waste stream (preconsumer waste) or the consumer waste stream (postconsumer waste) and used to make new materials. For LEED, recycled content is typically expressed as a percentage of the total material volume or weight.
- ____ of natural gas. (unit)
- recycled ____. The percentage of material in a product that is
- ____ wood. Wood that has been issued a certificate from an independent organization with developed standards of good forest management. This certificate verifies that wood products come from responsibly managed forests.
- ____ energy. Electricity from photovoltaic cells that convert the energy in sunlight into electricity.
- performance relative to ____. A comparison of a building system’s performance with a baseline that is equivalent to minimal compliance with an applicable energy code, such as ASHRAE Standard 90 or California’s Title 24.
- ____ forestry. Management of forest resources to meet the long-term forest product needs of humans while maintaining the biodiversity of forested landscapes. The primary goal is to restore, enhance, and sustain a full range of forest values, including economic, social, and ecological considerations.
- ____ material. Construction items recovered from existing buildings or construction sites and reused.
- ____ hours of electricity. (unit)
Down
- sustained-____ forestry. Management of a forest to produce in perpetuity a high-level annual or regular periodic output, through a balance between increment and cutting. (Society of American Foresters)
- salvaged materials include structural beams and posts, flooring, doors, cabinetry, brick, and decorative items.
- A device that removes heat from a liquid, typically as part of a refrigeration system used to cool and dehumidify buildings.
- The amount of building materials returned to active use (in the same or a related capacity as their original use), expressed as a percentage of the total materials cost of a building. The salvaged materials are incorporated into the new building, thereby extending the lifetime of materials that would otherwise be discarded.
- renewable energy ____. A tradable commodity representing proof that a unit of electricity was generated from a renewable energy resource. RECs are sold separately from the electricity itself and thus allow the purchase of green power by a user of conventionally generated electricity.
- ____-consumer recycled content. The percentage of material in a product that was consumer waste. The recycled material was generated by household, commercial, industrial, or institutional end users and can no longer be used for its intended purpose. This includes returns of materials from the distribution chain. Examples include construction and demolition debris, materials collected through recycling programs, discarded products (such as furniture, cabinetry, and decking), and landscaping waste (such as leaves, grass clippings, and tree trimmings).
- performance relative to ____. A comparison of a building system’s performance with a standard, such as ENERGY STAR Portfolio Manager.
- ____ thermal unit. The amount of heat required to raise the temperature of one pound of liquid water from 60° to 61° Fahrenheit. This standard measure of energy is used to describe the energy content of fuels and compare energy use.
- regional/locally ____ materials. Also known as regional materials, the amount of a building’s materials that are extracted, processed, and manufactured close to a project site, expressed as a percentage of the total materials cost. For LEED, regional materials originate within 500 miles of the project site.
- waste ____. The amount of waste disposed of other than through incineration or in landfills, expressed in tons. Examples of waste diversion include reuse and recycling.
- energy use ____. Energy consumption divided by the number of square feet in a building, often expressed as British thermal units (Btus) per square foot or as kilowatt-hours of electricity per square foot per year (kWh/sf/yr).
- ____ fluorescent lamp. A small fluorescent lamp, used as a more efficient alternative to incandescent lighting
- ____-consumer recycled content. The percentage of material in a product that was recycled from manufacturing waste. Preconsumer content was formerly knownas postindustrial content. Examples include planer shavings, sawdust, bagasse, walnut shells, culls, trimmed materials, overissue publications, and obsolete inventories. Excluded are rework, regrind, or scrap materials capable of being reclaimed within the same process that generated them.
- ____ renewable materials and products. The amount of a building’s agricultural products (fiber or animal) that are quickly grown or raised and can be harvested in a sustainable fashion, expressed as a percentage of the total materials cost. For LEED, rapidly renewable materials take 10 years or less to grow or raise.
25 Clues: ____ of liquid fuel. (unit) • ____ of natural gas. (unit) • ____ hours of electricity. (unit) • recycled ____. The percentage of material in a product that is • lighting ____ density. The installed lighting power per unit area. • ____ material. Construction items recovered from existing buildings or construction sites and reused. • ...
Intro to Wildlife and Fisheries Exam 4 Review 2022-12-08
Across
- (Abbreviation) This organization's mission is to build the next generation of conservation leads and inspire lifelong stewardship of the environment and communities by engaging young people in hands-on service to the land. They offer internships and corps positions for students.
- (Abbreviation) This act requires environmental impact statements for all projects receiving federal funds that affect the quality of human life
- This WVU department provides students with resources to aid in their job search
- This DNA is not found in the nucleus of the cell and is passed down through the maternal line
- Another name for the Migratory Bird Hunting Stamp Act. Under this act, hunters in the United States pursuing waterfowl (and some other migratory birds) must purchase a Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp. Funds from this stamp are used to preserve wetlands and other habitats.
- Economic activity primarily associated with non-consumptive use of natural resources
- Genetic technology can be used to aid in wildlife crime investigations. What is this field of study called?
- The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Geological Survey, and U.S. Forest Service are all examples of ____________ agencies
Down
- Early North American conservationists were divided into two camps: utilitarians and ________________.
- Aldo Leopold's first textbook on wildlife management
- This organization's mission is to educate, inspire, and assist individuals and organizations to conserve wildlife and other natural resources and to protect the environment
- Also Leopold describes this as "a fountain of energy flowing through a circuit of soils, plants, and animals."
- This organization was formed by George Bird Grinnell and Theodore Roosevelt to preserve the American frontier (the West) as well as the self-reliance and pioneer skills associated with it
- A philosophy based on the belief that other individual animals have rights equal to those of humans
- The only option for students to study conservation in the early 1900's
- A formal document that a job applicants creates to list their past experience and qualifications for a position
16 Clues: Aldo Leopold's first textbook on wildlife management • The only option for students to study conservation in the early 1900's • This WVU department provides students with resources to aid in their job search • Economic activity primarily associated with non-consumptive use of natural resources • ...
environment 2017-05-25
Across
- Man who favored the preservation of scenic wilderness areas and led the “Back to Nature” movement. Also founded the Sierra Club in 1862.
- Man who was a utilitarian conservationist and the Chief of Forestry
- The ____ Act was a piece of legislation enacted in 1902 that funded irrigation projects from the proceeds of the sale of federal lands in the West.
- He was a President of the United States who was sympathetic to the conservationist movement and enacted changes.
- Idea that called for preserving scenic nature.
- The O’____ Dam of the Tuolumne River in Hetch Hetchy Valley that preservationists were fiercely opposed to building. It was proposed in 1909 and became a reservoir in 1913.
- Book written by Rachel Carson that uncovered the negative effects of pesticides
Down
- The National ____ Service was established in 1916 by Woodrow Wilson and is a federal agency that manages resources including timber, wildlife, recreation, range and water.
- The Wildlife Habit ____ Act protects 3.4 million acres of upland and wetlands, or one third of all wildlife habit in the agricultural region, in its natural state
- The ____ Act was signed by Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964 to recognize wilderness as an area where the ecosystem is untouched by humans and that “man himself is a visitor who does not remain.”
- Idea that called for federal supervision of resources and preservation for future generations, and resources were meant to be used through management.
- The National ___ Service was a federal agency established in 1916. Protects and manages national parks, monuments, and reservations that had been set aside for natural, scenic, and historic values and leave them unimpaired for future generations.
- The Inland _____ Commission was established in 1907 and studied the relation of rivers, soil, forest, waterpower development, and water transportation.
13 Clues: Idea that called for preserving scenic nature. • Man who was a utilitarian conservationist and the Chief of Forestry • Book written by Rachel Carson that uncovered the negative effects of pesticides • He was a President of the United States who was sympathetic to the conservationist movement and enacted changes. • ...
Midterm Exploratory Business Review 2020-01-22
Across
- Resource/goods produced and used to make other goods and services.
- Planning/help you weigh all of the factors and options to make an informed decision
- Shadowing and Internships.
- increase awareness, create interest, generate sales or create brand loyalty
- name/a name given by the maker to a product or range of products, especially a trademark.
- federal agency of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, one of the United States federal executive dep
- Questions TO You, Question From You, Follow Up, Closing
- you can buy for yourself or someone else.
- Letter, Education/Experience/Skills/Awards, References.
- Resource/the resources used from earth to make the product or the service. (nature)
- consumer product having no brand name or registered trademark.
- you want to achieve in your life.
Down
- Shopping/comparing the price of what your buying with something else
- to protect consumers and ensure a strong competitive market by enforcing consumer protection and antitrust laws.
- born skill
- that you pay money to have a professional provider for you.
- Cost/If you choose to do one thing over another, you might lose out on what the other choice may have led to.
- private, nonprofit organization whose self-described mission is to focus on advancing marketplace trust
- for developing and executing federal laws related to farming, forestry, rural economic development, and food.
- Price/cost per pound.
- a person would like but is not needed.
- Outlook/Job Growth, Employment Numbers, Wage.
- Buying/buying something without planning on buying it in advanced
- Store/extended opening hours in an accessible location.
- Store/sells goods at a less than normal retail price.
- requirement in order to survive.
- Path/Self Assessment, Career Research, Education and Experience.
- Resource/department of a business or organization that deals with the hiring, administration, and training of personnel. (people)
- Assessment/Analyzing yourself and first step in career planning
- Store/Retail business that focuses on a specific product category.
30 Clues: born skill • Price/cost per pound. • Shadowing and Internships. • requirement in order to survive. • you want to achieve in your life. • a person would like but is not needed. • you can buy for yourself or someone else. • Outlook/Job Growth, Employment Numbers, Wage. • Store/sells goods at a less than normal retail price. • ...
X 2020-07-10
Across
- (adj) causing little or no damage to the environment and therefor able to continue for a long time
- (n) rainwater that falls impermeable surfaces and can be collected for watering
- (n) distinct ecosystem that is flooded by water - either permanently or seasonally
- (n) the process of land degradation (for instance through over-farming or tree removal) such that it becomes dry and infertile
- (n) another word for a bush
- (n) a wild plant that grow unwanted in your planting bed (as a verb: to undertake their removal)
- (n) the process of removing salt from seawater
- (n) small rounded stones used in drainage or as a finish for paths
- (n) a specific area of ground – for building or a habitat
- (n) a place at the centre of activity – often use to describe a transport node
- (n) something that is intended to make life more pleasant or comfortable or convenient for the people – for instance a park/ a public transit system
- (n) the (arguably) inborn affinity/ love human beings have for other forms of life
- (adj) connected with the countryside - opposite of urban
- (adj) synonym: rare or in short supply
- (n) the science or practice of planting and taking care of trees and forests
Down
- (adj) the quality of a material that does not allow water to go through it
- (n) uniformity: the quality of consisting of parts or people that are similar to each other or are of the same type
- (adj) describes a landscape that is unable to produce plants or fruits: synonym infertile
- (n) the process of making land that is underwater or in poor condition suitable for building or farming
- (n) the practice of supplying land with water so that crops and plants will grow
- (n uncountable) the leaves of a plant or tree: greenery, foliage
- (n) synonym: relaxation/ leisure/ free-time pursuits
- (n) the process by which people leave the countryside to live in cities
- (adj) peoples or plants belonging to a very specific place: synonym: native
- (adj) the quality of a material that does not allow water to go through it
- (n) a layer of rock/ sand/ earth that contains water or allows water to pass through it
26 Clues: (n) another word for a bush • (adj) synonym: rare or in short supply • (n) the process of removing salt from seawater • (n) synonym: relaxation/ leisure/ free-time pursuits • (adj) connected with the countryside - opposite of urban • (n) a specific area of ground – for building or a habitat • (n uncountable) the leaves of a plant or tree: greenery, foliage • ...
Work it Out! FFA Competitive Events 2020-08-07
Across
- in which competitive event do participants research the pros and cons of an agricultural issue and present to a panel of judges?
- in which competitive event do participants identify plant materials, disorders, and equipment?
- in which competitive event do participants learn practical skills in marketing?
- in which competitive event do participants identify weeds, seeds, and crops?
- which competitive event deals with agricultural finances?
- which competitive event do participants work to develop, practice and demonstrate skills needed for seeking employment in the agriculture industry?
- in which competitive event do pariticpants demonstrate the ability to effectively run a business meeting?
- in which competitive event do participants pot or propagate nursery stock?
- in which competitive event do participants identify equine equipment?
Down
- in which competitive event do participants identify various cuts of meat?
- in which competitive event do participants work collaboratively to effectively communicate and advocate for agriculture?
- in which competitive event do participants learn about production priorities through the evaluation and selection of beef cattle, swine, sheep and meat goats?
- in which competitive event do participants evaluate poultry and poultry products within the industry?
- in which competitive event do participants work to respond to a scenario involving soils, water, ecosystems and waste management?
- in which competitive event do participants present a prepared 6-8 minute presentation?
- in which competitive event do participants develop the ability to express themselves on a given subject without having prepared or rehearsed the content in advance?
- in which competitive event do participants demonstrate skills based on environmental and natural resource systems, technology, and agricultural machinery equipment?
- in which competitive event do participants identify different types of cheese?
- in which competitive event do participants demonstrate the ability to evaluate, select, and manage a modern herd of dairy cattle?
- in which competitive event do participants identify trees and disorders?
- this competitive event is only open to 7th, 8th and 9th graders.
- in which competitive event do participants identify food products based on aroma?
- in which competitive event do participants create sales strategies?
23 Clues: which competitive event deals with agricultural finances? • this competitive event is only open to 7th, 8th and 9th graders. • in which competitive event do participants create sales strategies? • in which competitive event do participants identify equine equipment? • in which competitive event do participants identify trees and disorders? • ...
Lesson 2 5.4 2021-08-25
Across
- is not decreasing.
- the chemical in plants that traps energy from the Sun and gives plants their green colour
- a consumer that eats only other animals
- by using a natural predator or disease
- a new plant
- factors: living factors in the environment
- habitat
- the last known
- extinction and very small numbers remain
- ecosystem: an ecosystem that is diverse and able to provide for the needs of the organisms living
- part of the stem, root or leaf that is able to grow
- organisms that have the same food source and live in the
- raised bank built to prevent water reaching buildings
- occur
- the term used to describe differenttypes of living things
- species: species that are close
- reduction burning: regular burning to reduce the amount of fuel available for a fire
- species: species that is experiencing a rapid population decline and is in danger of becoming extinct if the drop in numbers.
- control: a method of controlling unwanted
Down
- vegetation: native vegetation that remains unchanged when surrounding areas have been changed by activities such as grazing or forestry.
- plain: area along the banks of rivers and streams that is flooded when water levels are
- has died
- organisms
- breaking down dead matter and waste products
- an interaction between two organisms in which one of them benefits but the other one is not affected
- the place where all life exists; consists of Earth and its atmosphere
- characteristics that help an organism to survive in its environment
- a scientist who studies
- term used to describe a species that has not been seen in the wild for over 50 years, and of
- species: species that has low numbers, often spread out over a large area; the
- over a long period of time
- growing of plants
- organisms that must eat other organisms to get the energy and nutrients they need; animals are
- organisms that get the energy they need
- factors: non-living factors in the environment
- season: times of the year when fires are most likely
36 Clues: occur • habitat • has died • organisms • a new plant • the last known • growing of plants • is not decreasing. • a scientist who studies • over a long period of time • species: species that are close • by using a natural predator or disease • a consumer that eats only other animals • organisms that get the energy they need • extinction and very small numbers remain • ...
Lesson 2 5.4 2021-08-25
Across
- organisms that get the energy they need
- plain: area along the banks of rivers and streams that is flooded when water levels are
- by using a natural predator or disease
- reduction burning: regular burning to reduce the amount of fuel available for a fire
- species: species that is experiencing a rapid population decline and is in danger of becoming extinct if the drop in numbers.
- habitat
- organisms that have the same food source and live in the
- season: times of the year when fires are most likely
- an interaction between two organisms in which one of them benefits but the other one is not affected
- the place where all life exists; consists of Earth and its atmosphere
- a consumer that eats only other animals
- over a long period of time
- a scientist who studies
- vegetation: native vegetation that remains unchanged when surrounding areas have been changed by activities such as grazing or forestry.
- extinction and very small numbers remain
- breaking down dead matter and waste products
- the last known
- control: a method of controlling unwanted
Down
- organisms
- has died
- occur
- organisms that must eat other organisms to get the energy and nutrients they need; animals are
- the term used to describe differenttypes of living things
- characteristics that help an organism to survive in its environment
- part of the stem, root or leaf that is able to grow
- raised bank built to prevent water reaching buildings
- species: species that are close
- the chemical in plants that traps energy from the Sun and gives plants their green colour
- is not decreasing.
- species: species that has low numbers, often spread out over a large area; the
- a new plant
- ecosystem: an ecosystem that is diverse and able to provide for the needs of the organisms living
- factors: living factors in the environment
- growing of plants
- factors: non-living factors in the environment
- term used to describe a species that has not been seen in the wild for over 50 years, and of
36 Clues: occur • habitat • has died • organisms • a new plant • the last known • growing of plants • is not decreasing. • a scientist who studies • over a long period of time • species: species that are close • by using a natural predator or disease • organisms that get the energy they need • a consumer that eats only other animals • extinction and very small numbers remain • ...
Ecosystems Unit Vocabulary 2023-05-04
Across
- Succession following a disturbance that destroys a community without destroying the soil
- First integrated set of plants, animals, and decomposers found in an area undergoing primary ecological succession.
- An organism that cannot make its own food.
- An interaction in which one organism kills another for food.
- A group of ecosystems that share similar climates and typical organisms
- Following a series of stages; a point in a continuum of vegetation through time
- A biological community of interacting organisms and their physical environment.
- A consumer that eats only plants.
- A stable community that no longer goes through major ecological changes
- Derived from the oil palm tree; one of the fattiest and heaviest oils used.
- A carnivore that feeds on the bodies of dead organisms
- All the different populations that live together in an area
- A single organism
- A relationship between two species in which both species benefit
- An organism that obtains energy by feeding on other organisms
- An animal that eats both plants and animals
Down
- A consumer that eats only animals.
- The variety of life in the world or in a particular habitat or ecosystem.
- An ecological succession that begins in an area where no biotic community previously existed
- Consists of all life on Earth and all parts of the Earth in which life exists, including land, water, and the atmosphere.
- A series of gradual changes that occur in a community following a disturbance
- The change of terrestrial surface, including vegetation and landforms, by human activities such as agriculture, forestry, or mining.
- A common demand by two or more organisms upon a limited supply of a resource.
- An organism that makes its own food
- Grown in Indonesia and Malaysia in plantations, bears the palm oil fruit used to make palm oil and palm kernel oil.
- An organism that breaks down wastes and dead organisms
- A group of individuals that belong to the same species and live in the same area
- An organism that can make its own food.
28 Clues: A single organism • A consumer that eats only plants. • A consumer that eats only animals. • An organism that makes its own food • An organism that can make its own food. • An organism that cannot make its own food. • An animal that eats both plants and animals • An organism that breaks down wastes and dead organisms • ...
Chapter 29 - Progressivism 2018-02-05
Across
- fined railroads that gave rebates and the shippers that accepted them
- published devastating depiction of Standard Oil Company
- act preventing the mislabeling or adulteration of food and drugs
- "Father of the National Parks", naturalist, and author
- short-lived railroad trust created in part by J.P. Morgan and his associates
- reform minded journalists who exposed corruption and scandal
- financier and banker
- allowed bankers to invest in foreign affairs and foreign policy
- stated that prepared meat was subject to federal inspection
- Wisconsin governor, eliminated corrupt corporations
- brought attention to sweatshop conditions in factories
- 11th Chief Justice of the United States
- court case stating that it was constitutional to enact laws to protect women in factories
- voters vote directly to remove an elected official from office before their term has ended
- wrote "How the Other Half Lives" about the conditions in the New York slums
- York court case that invalidates the 10 hour baker law
Down
- voters directly propose legislation
- direct vote in which the electorate votes directly on a proposal
- Chief of Agriculture Department's Division of Forestry
- the term for the original members of a party that did not support change
- amendment that prohibited alcohol
- governor of California, broke grip of Southern Pacific Railroad on politics
- split Republican party, contributed to conservation
- imposed a high tariff on imports
- pressed for laws to help women and children at work
- educator, temperance reformer, suffragist
- restricted free passes and expanded Interstate Commerce Commission
- Roosevelt's Secretary of War, 27th President of the United States
- amendment passed to allow direct election of senators
- stated that money from the sale of public lands could be used to help find ways to irrigate crops in the West
- influenced Roosevelt to create more National Parks
- author of "The Jungle"
- wrote "The Shame of the Cities" about the corrupt alliance between the government and big businesses
- naturalist, novelist, and journalist
- mayor of Seattle
35 Clues: mayor of Seattle • financier and banker • author of "The Jungle" • imposed a high tariff on imports • amendment that prohibited alcohol • voters directly propose legislation • naturalist, novelist, and journalist • 11th Chief Justice of the United States • educator, temperance reformer, suffragist • influenced Roosevelt to create more National Parks • ...
Economics 2024-05-10
Across
- A situation in which the quanity demanded is greater than the supply
- Making, buying selling, and trading of a country
- the sum of all goods and services produced within a country's borders in one year
- the desire to own something and the ability to pay for it
- An economic system in which the government controls a country's economy.
- industry involved in the transfer and processing of information and knowledge
- a modern, industrialized country in which people are generally better educated and healthier and live longer
- An economy in which production is based on customs and traditions and economic roles are typically passed down from one generation to the next.
- market-based economic system with limited government involvement
- Industry that produces raw materials; examples include agriculture, fishing, mining, and forestry.
- a type of economy in which people are free to buy, sell, and produce whatever they want
Down
- The idea that certain restrictions should be placed on government to protect the natural rights of citizens.
- Land, labor, and capital; the three groups of resources that are used to make all goods and services
- economic system in which decisions on production are made by business owners and consumers
- A situation in which quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded
- A government in which no limits are imposed on the ruler's authority. The leaders don't have to follow the same laws as everyone else.
- A country that has low industrial production and little modern technology
- The amount of goods available
- total GDP divided by total population; average GDP
- the sum of all goods and services produced in a nation in a year
- A person who organizes, manages, and takes on the risks of a business.
- statistics that measure the performance of the economy
- Industry involved in providing goods and service to others
- Materials or substances such as minerals, forests, water, and fertile land that occur in nature and can be used for economic gain
- Industry that deals with making products that are likely to be directly consumed by individuals.
25 Clues: The amount of goods available • Making, buying selling, and trading of a country • total GDP divided by total population; average GDP • statistics that measure the performance of the economy • the desire to own something and the ability to pay for it • Industry involved in providing goods and service to others • ...
Built by Labor: Rail, Timber, and Trade 2025-08-29
Across
- machine that cuts or grinds wood into small chips, often used to process branches, limbs, or logging waste.
- route, a path or network used by traders to move goods from one location to another, historically by land or water.
- wood primarily harvested to make paper products. It's often made from smaller, lower-quality trees.
- post, a place where goods were exchanged, often located in remote or frontier areas and central to early commerce, especially between Indigenous peoples and settlers.
- jack, a tool used to lift one end of a log off the ground to make cutting easier and safer; also refers to some heavy equipment used in logging.
- wood from coniferous trees (like pine or spruce). It's generally lighter and used in construction and paper products.
Down
- the part of a tree that anchors it into the ground and absorbs water and nutrients; in forestry, roots can also impact soil and terrain stability.
- value, the current price a good, product, or asset would sell for on the open market.
- people or businesses involved in buying and selling goods, often in trade networks or marketplaces.
- wood that comes from deciduous trees (trees that shed their leaves), such as oak or maple. It's typically denser and used in furniture or flooring.
- capacity, the maximum weight a vehicle, machine, or structure can safely carry or support — crucial in logging and transportation.
- engineered wood made from thin layers (plies) of wood veneer glued together. It’s strong and used in construction and furniture.
- rails, long bars of steel that form the track on which trains run, designed to support heavy loads and provide a smooth rolling surface.
- animal skins that still have the fur on them, often traded for goods in historical fur trade economies.
- ties, also sleepers, these are rectangular supports (usually wood or concrete) that hold the rails in place and maintain the correct spacing.
15 Clues: value, the current price a good, product, or asset would sell for on the open market. • people or businesses involved in buying and selling goods, often in trade networks or marketplaces. • wood primarily harvested to make paper products. It's often made from smaller, lower-quality trees. • ...
Executive Departments 2020-03-07
Across
- Its purpose is to foster, promote, and develop the wellbeing of the wage earners, job seekers, and retirees of the United States, such as improve working conditions.
- Its mission is to enhance and protect the well-being of all Americans (Obamacare).
- Responsible for enforcing the laws of the United States federal government, such as ensuring public safety against foreign and domestic threats.
- Its purpose is to create jobs, promote economic growth, encourage sustainable development and block harmful trade practices of other nations.
- Responsible for the national highways and for railroad and airline safety, such as registration of vehicles and its related activities.
- A department of the federal executive branch entrusted with formulating military policies and maintaining American military forces.
Down
- Functions as the diplomatic wing of the federal government, such as promoting American foreign policy throughout the world.
- Responsible for providing vital services to America's ex-soldiers, such as providing health care services to them.
- Responsible for developing and executing federal laws related to farming, forestry, rural economic development, and food, such as inspecting foods for people’s safety.
- Responsible for promoting economic prosperity and ensuring the financial security of the United States, such as managing federal finances.
- Manages public lands and minerals, national parks, and wildlife refuges, also responsible for endangered species conservation and other environmental conservation efforts.
- Its mission is to promote student achievement and preparation for global competitiveness, such as giving funds to students.
- Works in the civilian sphere to protect the United States within, at, and outside its borders. Its stated goal is to prepare for, prevent, and respond to domestic emergencies, particularly terrorism.
- Responsible for national policies that improve and develop the Nation's communities, and enforce fair sheltering laws, such as increasing homeownership.
- Responsible for advancing the national security of the US through the implementation of policies regarding, for example, nuclear power, fossil fuels, etc.
15 Clues: Its mission is to enhance and protect the well-being of all Americans (Obamacare). • Responsible for providing vital services to America's ex-soldiers, such as providing health care services to them. • Functions as the diplomatic wing of the federal government, such as promoting American foreign policy throughout the world. • ...
Built by Labor: Rail, Timber, and Trade 2025-08-29
Across
- jack, a tool used to lift one end of a log off the ground to make cutting easier and safer; also refers to some heavy equipment used in logging.
- ties, also sleepers, these are rectangular supports (usually wood or concrete) that hold the rails in place and maintain the correct spacing.
- post, a place where goods were exchanged, often located in remote or frontier areas and central to early commerce, especially between Indigenous peoples and settlers.
- the part of a tree that anchors it into the ground and absorbs water and nutrients; in forestry, roots can also impact soil and terrain stability.
- wood from coniferous trees (like pine or spruce). It's generally lighter and used in construction and paper products.
- engineered wood made from thin layers (plies) of wood veneer glued together. It’s strong and used in construction and furniture.
- route, a path or network used by traders to move goods from one location to another, historically by land or water.
- wood primarily harvested to make paper products. It's often made from smaller, lower-quality trees.
Down
- rails, long bars of steel that form the track on which trains run, designed to support heavy loads and provide a smooth rolling surface.
- people or businesses involved in buying and selling goods, often in trade networks or marketplaces.
- machine that cuts or grinds wood into small chips, often used to process branches, limbs, or logging waste.
- wood that comes from deciduous trees (trees that shed their leaves), such as oak or maple. It's typically denser and used in furniture or flooring.
- value, the current price a good, product, or asset would sell for on the open market.
- animal skins that still have the fur on them, often traded for goods in historical fur trade economies.
- capacity, the maximum weight a vehicle, machine, or structure can safely carry or support — crucial in logging and transportation.
15 Clues: value, the current price a good, product, or asset would sell for on the open market. • people or businesses involved in buying and selling goods, often in trade networks or marketplaces. • wood primarily harvested to make paper products. It's often made from smaller, lower-quality trees. • ...
Agriculture 2024-04-08
Across
- Pest control methods that rely on natural (chemical-free) remedies.
- The federal agency that proposes programs and implements policies and regulations related to American farming, forestry, ranching, food quality, and nutrition.
- This federal agency is responsible for protecting the public health by ensuring the safety, efficacy, and security of human and veterinary drugs, biological products, and medical devices; and by ensuring the safety of our nation's food supply, cosmetics, and products that emit radiation.
- This federal agency protects people and the environment from significant health risks, sponsors and conducts research, and develops and enforces environmental regulations.
- Means to pursue knowledge and practices that can lead to more environmentally friendly and ecologically responsible decisions and lifestyles, which can help protect the environment and sustain its natural resources for current and future generations.
- An organism such as a plant, animal, or microorganism that has had its genetic material (DNA) changed using technology that generally involves the specific modification of DNA, including the transfer of specific DNA from one organism to another.
- Farming in such a way to protect the environment, aid and expand natural resources and to make the best use of nonrenewable resources.
Down
- the technique of growing plants using a water-based nutrient solution rather than soil
- The raising of aquatic plants and animals for human use or consumption
- A way of buying and selling products that makes certain that the people who produce the goods receive a fair price
- Rejects the use of all artificial agricultural chemicals, including pesticides used to control insects, diseases and weeds.
- The science or occupation of cultivating the soil, producing crops, and raising livestock
12 Clues: Pest control methods that rely on natural (chemical-free) remedies. • The raising of aquatic plants and animals for human use or consumption • the technique of growing plants using a water-based nutrient solution rather than soil • The science or occupation of cultivating the soil, producing crops, and raising livestock • ...
Executive Departments 2020-03-07
Across
- Functions as the diplomatic wing of the federal government, such as promoting American foreign policy throughout the world.
- Its purpose is to create jobs, promote economic growth, encourage sustainable development and block harmful trade practices of other nations.
- Responsible for developing and executing federal laws related to farming, forestry, rural economic development, and food, such as inspecting foods for people’s safety.
- Responsible for national policies that improve and develop the Nation's communities, and enforce fair sheltering laws, such as increasing homeownership.
- Its purpose is to foster, promote, and develop the wellbeing of the wage earners, job seekers, and retirees of the United States, such as improve working conditions.
- Its mission is to promote student achievement and preparation for global competitiveness, such as giving funds to students.
- Manages public lands and minerals, national parks, and wildlife refuges, also responsible for endangered species conservation and other environmental conservation efforts.
Down
- Responsible for enforcing the laws of the United States federal government, such as ensuring public safety against foreign and domestic threats.
- Responsible for promoting economic prosperity and ensuring the financial security of the United States, such as managing federal finances.
- Responsible for providing vital services to America's ex-soldiers, such as providing health care services to them.
- Its mission is to enhance and protect the well-being of all Americans (Obamacare).
- Works in the civilian sphere to protect the United States within, at, and outside its borders. Its stated goal is to prepare for, prevent, and respond to domestic emergencies, particularly terrorism.
- A department of the federal executive branch entrusted with formulating military policies and maintaining American military forces.
- Responsible for the national highways and for railroad and airline safety, such as registration of vehicles and its related activities.
- Responsible for advancing the national security of the US through the implementation of policies regarding, for example, nuclear power, fossil fuels, etc.
15 Clues: Its mission is to enhance and protect the well-being of all Americans (Obamacare). • Responsible for providing vital services to America's ex-soldiers, such as providing health care services to them. • Functions as the diplomatic wing of the federal government, such as promoting American foreign policy throughout the world. • ...
Ch.9 Dvelopment 2014-04-23
Across
- The percentage of a country's people who can read and write
- A country that is at a relatively early stage in the process of economic development
- A country that has progressed relatively far along a continuum of development
- Compares the level of development of women with that of both sexes
- Economic policies imposed on less developed countries by international agencies to create conditions encouraging international trade, such as raising taxes, reducing government spending, controlling inflation, selling publicly owned utilities to private corporations and charging citizens more for services
- The portion of the economy concerned with manufacturing useful products through processing, transforming, and assembling raw materials
- Investment made by a foreign company in the economy of another country
- The portion of the economy concerned with transportation, communications , and utilities, sometimes extended to the provision of all goods and services to people, in exchange for payment
- Indicator of level of development for each country, constructed by the United Nations, combining income, literacy, education,and life expectancy
Down
- The portions if the economy concerned with the direct extraction of materials from Earth's surface, generally through agriculture, although sometimes by mining, fishing, and forestry
- Eight international development goals that all members of the United Nations have agreed to achieve by 2015
- The value of a particular product compared to the amount if labor needed to make it
- Compares the ability of women and men to participate in economic and political decision making
- The value of the total output of goods and services produced in a country in a given time period
- A company that conducts research, operates factories, and sells products in many countries, not just where its headquarters or shareholders are located
- Alternative to international trade that emphasizes small businesses and worker-owned and democratically run cooperatives and requires employers to pay workers fair wages, permit union organizing, and comply with minimum environmental and safety standards
- A process of improvement in the material conditions of people through diffusion of knowledge and technology
- The gross value of the product minus the costs of raw materials and energy
18 Clues: The percentage of a country's people who can read and write • Compares the level of development of women with that of both sexes • Investment made by a foreign company in the economy of another country • The gross value of the product minus the costs of raw materials and energy • A country that has progressed relatively far along a continuum of development • ...
Ch.9 Dvelopment 2014-04-23
Across
- Investment made by a foreign company in the economy of another country
- Compares the ability of women and men to participate in economic and political decision making
- A country that is at a relatively early stage in the process of economic development
- The portion of the economy concerned with manufacturing useful products through processing, transforming, and assembling raw materials
- Compares the level of development of women with that of both sexes
- The value of a particular product compared to the amount if labor needed to make it
- The value of the total output of goods and services produced in a country in a given time period
- Economic policies imposed on less developed countries by international agencies to create conditions encouraging international trade, such as raising taxes, reducing government spending, controlling inflation, selling publicly owned utilities to private corporations and charging citizens more for services
- Alternative to international trade that emphasizes small businesses and worker-owned and democratically run cooperatives and requires employers to pay workers fair wages, permit union organizing, and comply with minimum environmental and safety standards
- The gross value of the product minus the costs of raw materials and energy
Down
- A process of improvement in the material conditions of people through diffusion of knowledge and technology
- Eight international development goals that all members of the United Nations have agreed to achieve by 2015
- A country that has progressed relatively far along a continuum of development
- A company that conducts research, operates factories, and sells products in many countries, not just where its headquarters or shareholders are located
- The portions if the economy concerned with the direct extraction of materials from Earth's surface, generally through agriculture, although sometimes by mining, fishing, and forestry
- The portion of the economy concerned with transportation, communications , and utilities, sometimes extended to the provision of all goods and services to people, in exchange for payment
- Indicator of level of development for each country, constructed by the United Nations, combining income, literacy, education,and life expectancy
- The percentage of a country's people who can read and write
18 Clues: The percentage of a country's people who can read and write • Compares the level of development of women with that of both sexes • Investment made by a foreign company in the economy of another country • The gross value of the product minus the costs of raw materials and energy • A country that has progressed relatively far along a continuum of development • ...
Agricultural and Related Technology 2017-02-26
Across
- A machine with a series of curved discs on a shaft used to prepare the seedbed for seeds and plants.
- Selective breeding and pollinating, which allows people to develop plants and animals with desirable traits.
- The process of using enzymes to cut the DNA chain at any point and splice them back together with more desirable parts.
- The process of gathering a crop once it has matured.
- Using materials, information, and machines to produce the food and natural fibers needed to maintain life.
- Growing plants in nutrient solutions without soil.
- A human-made complex reproducing some facets of the natural environment.
- A machine that provides power to pull all types of farm equipment.
- A machine that picks up a windrow (band of hay) and conveys it into a baling chamber, where the hay is compressed into a cube.
- To place seeds in the ground to grow.
- The breeding, feeding, and training of animals.
- Artificial watering to maintain plant growth in areas too dry for successful farming.
- A machine used on farm land to remove weeds and open the soil for water.
- A machine used to harvest grains.
Down
- A device used to control and distribute water.
- A type of irrigation that uses main lines to bring water near the plants. Individual tubes or emitters bring water from the main lines to each plant.
- A part of technology dealing with using biological agents in an industrial process to produce goods or services.
- Developing and using devices and systems to plant, grow, and harvest crops. It also includes raising livestock for food and other useful products.
- A spray used to control insects and weeds that may damage farm crops.
- The growing and harvesting of fish, shellfish, and aquatic plants in controlled conditions. It uses ponds, instead of soil, to grow its crop.
- The operation of breaking and pulverizing soil.
- The science of crossbreeding livestock.
- A blade-shaped plowshare that cuts, lifts, and turns over the soil.
- The growing of trees for commercial use, such as lumber and timber products, paper and pulp, and chips and fibers.
- Grain, vegetables, or fruit that has been agriculturally cultivated.
25 Clues: A machine used to harvest grains. • To place seeds in the ground to grow. • The science of crossbreeding livestock. • A device used to control and distribute water. • The operation of breaking and pulverizing soil. • The breeding, feeding, and training of animals. • Growing plants in nutrient solutions without soil. • ...
mai mai 2023-06-22
Across
- I've always believed that _____________ counts more than money.
- (n) the science of planting and taking care of large areas of trees
- The clock was _________ ten as we went into the church.
- He's got a really bad _________, always scolding others.
- I'm going to _______ smoking as I know it is not good to health..
- It's a little _____________ that no one knows where he was at the time of the murder.
- I really ________ people who can work in such difficult conditions.
- I was not given ____________ (slow running) for half an hour before breakfast.
- The children had an __________ about/over what game to play
- Buyers can ___________ his latest novel to read on a mobile device.
- She has every right to be proud of her _________ achievements.
- Retailers provide the best service to customers to gain their _________________.
- It was a Sunday, so she could _______ in till almost lunch time.
- The device is __________ available only in Japan. It cannot be found in Hong Kong.
- Three children survived in the Amazon _________ after 40 days.
- (n) someone who enjoys and looks for dangerous and exciting experiences
- The dog has been her constant ___________ these past ten years.
- My income's rather variable, but I earn £175 a day on _______.
Down
- The gang admitted they had committed four recent bank ________.
- Sleeping Pillow has lost her job. She is now ____________.
- Bat e.m. became deeply __________ when his little master dumped him to the street.
- You will need _______________ from your parents to go on the trip.
- The fire was thought to have been caused by a gas _________.
- Shoplifting is ______.
- he alarm is __________ by the lightest pressure.
- It's___________ to have a goalkeeper _________. They need to try again next year.
- Mai Mai asked me to let him play Fifi, but I _________.
- (v) (of an aircraft) to move slowly on the ground
- ________ out, Dad. The train doesn't leave for another hour!
- Any painting by Van Gogh is worth a _________.
- She has an ___________ memory and can remember details and names that I've long forgotten.
- Bat e.m. is a ______________ bat as he could plant special species of grapes.
- I'm _________ of the dark. Please stay with me.
- The town's ________ rests on its beautiful cathedral.
34 Clues: Shoplifting is ______. • Any painting by Van Gogh is worth a _________. • I'm _________ of the dark. Please stay with me. • he alarm is __________ by the lightest pressure. • (v) (of an aircraft) to move slowly on the ground • The town's ________ rests on its beautiful cathedral. • The clock was _________ ten as we went into the church. • ...
Interconnected world terms 2023-04-19
Across
- a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country
- refers to an economy's dependence on a particular resource in order to be successful
- manufacturing activities, which may be referred to as secondary production
- movement of people from rural areas, usually called towns, to urban areas, which are called cities
- a trade pact signed in 1992 between the United States and its North American neighbors
- The increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe
- business owners decide what to produce, as well as how to produce and distribute it
- little industrial development and therefore a relatively low standard of living
- an economic region of Europe that is united under the euro, a common currency
- the practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry
Down
- business owners and consumers still make most of the economic decisions. However, governments may regulate the markets in order to provide stability
- economic system in which the government controls the means of production
- the transmission of cultural elements, such as customs, ideas, and religions, from one group to another
- industries that offer services to other businesses and consumers.
- an index designed by the United Nations to measure the basic contentment of people living in a particular country
- It includes agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining, and other industries based on what a country has available in its own territory
- economic policy in which a nation does not try to limit imports or exports by enacting tariffs or subsidies
- intergovernmental organization of the world’s major oil-exporting nations
- a country has significant industrial development and therefore a relatively high standard of living
- informal name for India's large and popular movie industry
- policies put in place by a government to restrict trade with one country
- results in the exchange of cultures between groups and the creation of new settlements
- the act of coming to a new country from one’s home country to live permanently
- people’s quality of life based on the goods and services that are available to them
- underlying foundation or framework of a system, organization, or location
- the process by which previously colonized countries free themselves from their colonizers
26 Clues: informal name for India's large and popular movie industry • a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country • industries that offer services to other businesses and consumers. • the practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry • The increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe • ...
Chapter 19 Review 2025-02-03
Across
- Nickname for radical workers' organization formed in 1905 to unite all wage-earners regardless of race, ethnicity, or gender, and committed to the destruction of capitalism.
- The careful management of natural resources so that they yield the greatest benefit to present generations while maintaining their potential to meet the needs of future generations.
- New York artists who shared a focus on urban life.
- Racially integrated civil rights organization founded in 1910; it continues to work to end discrimination.
- Settlement house founded by Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr in 1889 in Chicago; supposedly haunted.
- African American reformer and journalist, prominent opponent of lynching and advocate for racial justice and woman suffrage.
- Last name of birth-control advocate who believed so strongly that information about birth control was essential to help women escape poverty that she violated laws against its dissemination.
- Popular name given to the Progressive Party in 1912.
- One who advocates reserving natural areas so as to protect them against human disturbance.
- The conviction that women are and should be the social, political, and economic equals of men.
- Last name of Montana reformer who, in 1916, became the first woman elected to Congress; she worked for woman suffrage and to protect women in the workplace.
- Progressive Era journalists who wrote articles exposing corruption in city government, business, and industry.
Down
- Political interest group advocating prohibition, founded in 1895; it organized through churches.
- Head of the Forestry Service from 1898 to 1910; promoted conservation and urged careful planning in the use of resources.
- Name applied by critics to the Taft administration's policy of supporting U.S. investments abroad.
- Last name of the socialist writer and reformer whose novel The Jungle exposed unsanitary conditions in the meatpacking industry.
- A 1906 law authorizing the Interstate Commerce Commission to set maximum railroad rates and regulate other forms of transportation.
- Full pen name of Samuel L. Clemens, prominent American author of the late nineteenth century; he wrote The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and other literary classics.
- Provisions that permit voters to make political decisions directly, including the direct primary, initiative, referendum, and recall.
- Theodore Roosevelt's term for his efforts to deal fairly with all.
20 Clues: New York artists who shared a focus on urban life. • Popular name given to the Progressive Party in 1912. • Theodore Roosevelt's term for his efforts to deal fairly with all. • One who advocates reserving natural areas so as to protect them against human disturbance. • ...
UAV Mapping Crossword Puzzle 2024-11-11
Across
- - Metadata includes descriptive information that aids in interpreting UAV mapping data.
- - Proper exposure ensures images are captured with ideal lighting conditions in UAV mapping.
- - A point cloud is generated from LiDAR data to form detailed 3D maps.
- - Drones allow surveyors to generate both 2D and 3D maps of geographical locations.
- - Georeferencing aligns aerial images to real-world coordinates for accurate mapping.
- - Remote sensing in UAV mapping captures Earth’s surface data from above.
- - Orthophoto maps are created from aerial images that are geometrically corrected.
- - UAV mapping requires a consistent altitude to avoid distortions in the data.
- - Side overlap between images ensures enough data for accurate stitching in mapping.
- - Metadata, such as GPS coordinates and timestamps, provides essential context for UAV maps.
- - UAV mapping enables high-resolution aerial imagery for precise terrain analysis.
- - Orthomosaic software stitches together images to create a seamless aerial map.
Down
- - Multispectral mapping helps monitor vegetation health in agriculture and forestry.
- - Orthomosaic maps are widely used in large-scale terrain analysis and planning.
- - Virtual fences set boundaries for the mapping area, preventing drones from veering off.
- - An orthophoto is a corrected aerial image, ideal for precise measurements and mapping.
- - The Remote Pilot in Command (RPIC) is responsible for UAV control during mapping flights.
- - Ground Station Pro (GS Pro) software automates flight plans for mapping missions.
- - Front overlap between images is necessary to generate accurate 3D models.
- - Environmental factors like wind and lighting can impact the quality of mapping.
- - The shooting angle of the drone camera affects the level of detail in the mapped area.
- - Line spacing is set between flight paths to capture data efficiently during mapping.
- - Structure from Motion (SfM) is a technique that generates 3D models from a series of images.
- - UAV mapping data can be imported into a GIS for further spatial analysis.
- - Photogrammetry in UAV mapping uses images to create accurate maps and measurements.
- - Capture mode determines the intervals for image capture based on distance or time.
- - The overlap ratio is essential in UAV mapping to ensure comprehensive area coverage.
- - The drone’s flight pattern is crucial for capturing overlapping images during mapping.
- - Spatial resolution of the camera determines the detail and clarity of a UAV map.
- - LiDAR technology is frequently used with UAVs to create detailed topographic maps.
30 Clues: - A point cloud is generated from LiDAR data to form detailed 3D maps. • - Remote sensing in UAV mapping captures Earth’s surface data from above. • - Front overlap between images is necessary to generate accurate 3D models. • - UAV mapping data can be imported into a GIS for further spatial analysis. • ...
FFA CDEs 2022-09-08
Across
- In which competitive event do participants identify various cuts of meat?
- In which competitive event do participants create sales strategies?
- In which competitive event do participants identify weeds, seeds, and crops?
- In which competitive event do participants develop practical skills in marketing?
- In which competitive event do participants learn and apply skills that can be applied to personal financial management?
- In which competitive event do participants work to respond to a scenario involving soils, water, ecosystems, and waste management?
- In which competitive event do participants identify food products based on aroma?
- In which competitive event do participants identify plant materials, disorders, and equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants identify equine equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants research the pros and cons of an agricultural issue and present to a panel of judges?
- In which competitive event do participants develop the ability to express themselves on a given subject without having prepared or rehearsed the content in advance?
Down
- In which competitive event do participants demonstrate skills based on environmental and natural resources systems, technology, and agricultural machinery equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants learn about production priorities through the evaluation and selection of beef cattle, swine, sheep, and meat goats?
- In which competitive event do you have to be a seventh, eighth, or ninth grade student?
- In which competitive event do participants learn to participate effectively in a business meeting?
- In which competitive event do participants demonstrate the ability to evaluate, select, and manage a modern herd of dairy cattle?
- In which competitive event do participants identify parasites in animals?
- In which competitive event do participants present a prepared manuscript in a six- to eight-minute presentation?
- In which competitive event do participants work collaboratively to effectively communicate and advocate for agriculture?
- In which competitive event do participants evaluate poultry and poultry products within the industry?
- In which competitive event do participants work to develop, practice, and demonstrate skills needed for seeking employment in the agriculture industry?
- In which competitive event do participants pot or propagate nursery stock?
- In which competitive event do participants identify trees and disorders?
- In which competitive event do participants identify different types of cheese?
24 Clues: In which competitive event do participants create sales strategies? • In which competitive event do participants identify equine equipment? • In which competitive event do participants identify trees and disorders? • In which competitive event do participants identify various cuts of meat? • ...
FFA CDEs 2022-09-08
Across
- In which competitive event do participants identify various cuts of meat?
- In which competitive event do participants create sales strategies?
- In which competitive event do participants identify weeds, seeds, and crops?
- In which competitive event do participants develop practical skills in marketing?
- In which competitive event do participants learn and apply skills that can be applied to personal financial management?
- In which competitive event do participants work to respond to a scenario involving soils, water, ecosystems, and waste management?
- In which competitive event do participants identify food products based on aroma?
- In which competitive event do participants identify plant materials, disorders, and equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants identify equine equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants research the pros and cons of an agricultural issue and present to a panel of judges?
- In which competitive event do participants develop the ability to express themselves on a given subject without having prepared or rehearsed the content in advance?
Down
- In which competitive event do participants demonstrate skills based on environmental and natural resources systems, technology, and agricultural machinery equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants learn about production priorities through the evaluation and selection of beef cattle, swine, sheep, and meat goats?
- In which competitive event do you have to be a seventh, eighth, or ninth grade student?
- In which competitive event do participants learn to participate effectively in a business meeting?
- In which competitive event do participants demonstrate the ability to evaluate, select, and manage a modern herd of dairy cattle?
- In which competitive event do participants identify parasites in animals?
- In which competitive event do participants present a prepared manuscript in a six- to eight-minute presentation?
- In which competitive event do participants work collaboratively to effectively communicate and advocate for agriculture?
- In which competitive event do participants evaluate poultry and poultry products within the industry?
- In which competitive event do participants work to develop, practice, and demonstrate skills needed for seeking employment in the agriculture industry?
- In which competitive event do participants pot or propagate nursery stock?
- In which competitive event do participants identify trees and disorders?
- In which competitive event do participants identify different types of cheese?
24 Clues: In which competitive event do participants create sales strategies? • In which competitive event do participants identify equine equipment? • In which competitive event do participants identify trees and disorders? • In which competitive event do participants identify various cuts of meat? • ...
REVIEW4 - QTR 2 2025-10-13
Across
- – Used to dig and cut trenches.
- – Used to remove weeds.
- - A type of plant that produces fruits, which are mature ovaries containing seeds, as part of its reproductive process.
- - Used to mix and cut soil.
- - Deals with the large-scale cultivation and production of perennial trees to supply food, timber, rubber, and other tree-based raw materials to different industries.
- - A government agency that teaches skills for farming and agribusiness.
- – Used to level the surface of seedbeds.
- A type of soil that is best for ornamental plants
- – Used in planting seedlings and cultivating plants.
- - involves sowing seeds in a seed box or seedbed before moving them to a garden plot
- - A government agency that protects the rights of farm workers.
- - An international agency that fights hunger and helps improve food supply around the world.
- – Used to spray plants with disease protection.
- – Used to cut roots when digging
- - A government agency that helps farmers sell their products
- – Used to sharpen garden tools.
Down
- - Used to carry tools and garden soil.
- – Used to cut grasses and remove dried branches and leaves.
- - Are edible plants. Their bulbs, flowers, fruits, leaves, roots, seeds, shoots, stems, and tubers may be consumed raw or cooked.
- - A government agency that protects the environment (forests, land, water, and animals).
- – Used to water the plants.
- - Used to dig and mix manure.
- - involved cutting a mature stem from a healthy plant with a sharp tool and planting it directly into the ground
- - A government agency that provides training and seminars for farmers.
- Are plants grown to beautify our homes and surroundings. Their visual appeal can enhance the atmosphere of our homes, gardens, and landscapes.
- - A government agency that utilize the science and inventions to help farming.
- – Is the science of soil management and crop production, including food crops, fodder crops, fiber crops, sugar, and oil seeds.
- - Is the science, art, or practice of cultivating the soil, producing crops, harvesting, and marketing the resulting products
- – Focused on cultivating flowers, fruits, vegetables, ornamental plants, and species and processing these plants into products like condiments and beverages.
- - directly sowing seeds into the garden plot or spot
30 Clues: – Used to remove weeds. • – Used to water the plants. • - Used to mix and cut soil. • - Used to dig and mix manure. • – Used to dig and cut trenches. • – Used to sharpen garden tools. • – Used to cut roots when digging • - Used to carry tools and garden soil. • – Used to level the surface of seedbeds. • – Used to spray plants with disease protection. • ...
CDEs 2022-08-31
Across
- In which competitive event do participants develop the ability to express themselves on a given subject without having prepared or rehearsed the content in advance?
- In which competitive event do participants demonstrate the ability to evaluate, select, and manage a modern herd of dairy cattle?
- In which competitive event do participants learn about production priorities through the evaluation and selection of beef cattle, swine, sheep, and meat goats?
- In which competitive event do participants present a prepared manuscript in a six- to eight-minute presentation?
- In which competitive event do participants work to respond to a scenario involving soils, water, ecosystems, and waste management?
- In which competitive event do participants identify plant materials, disorders, and equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants identify trees and disorders?
- In which competitive event do participants create sales strategies?
- In which competitive event do participants work collaboratively to effectively communicate and advocate for agriculture?
- In which competitive event do participants develop practical skills in marketing?
Down
- In which competitive event do participants research the pros and cons of an agricultural issue and present to a panel of judges?
- In which competitive event do participants learn and apply skills that can be applied to personal financial management?
- In which competitive event do participants demonstrate skills based on environmental and natural resources systems, technology, and agricultural machinery equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants learn to participate effectively in a business meeting?
- In which competitive event do participants work to develop, practice, and demonstrate skills needed for seeking employment in the agriculture industry?
- In which competitive event do participants evaluate poultry and poultry products within the industry?
- In which competitive event do you have to be a seventh, eighth, or ninth grade student?
- In which competitive event do participants identify various cuts of meat?
- In which competitive event do participants identify parasites in animals?
- In which competitive event do participants identify food products based on aroma?
- In which competitive event do participants identify different types of cheese?
- In which competitive event do participants identify equine equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants pot or propagate nursery stock?
- In which competitive event do participants identify weeds, seeds, and crops?
24 Clues: In which competitive event do participants create sales strategies? • In which competitive event do participants identify equine equipment? • In which competitive event do participants identify trees and disorders? • In which competitive event do participants identify various cuts of meat? • ...
LATest2020 2020-07-13
Across
- (n) synonym: relaxation/ leisure/ free-time pursuits
- (adj) the quality of a material that does not allow water to go through it
- (adj) the quality of a material that does not allow water to go through it
- (adj) connected with the countryside - opposite of urban
- (n) something that is intended to make life more pleasant or comfortable or convenient for the people – for instance a park/ a public transit system
- (n) a specific area of ground – for building or a habitat
- (adj) causing little or no damage to the environment and therefor able to continue for a long time
- (adj) describes a landscape that is unable to produce plants or fruits: synonym infertile
- (n uncountable) the leaves of a plant or tree: greenery
- (n) the process of land degradation (for instance through over-farming or tree removal) such that it becomes dry and infertile
- (n) a wild plant that grow unwanted in your planting bed (as a verb: to undertake their removal)
- (n) the process by which people leave the countryside to live in cities
- (n) the (arguably) inborn affinity/ love human beings have for other forms of life
Down
- (n) uniformity: the quality of consisting of parts or people that are similar to each other or are of the same type
- (adj) describes a trees that lose and regrow their leaves seasonally
- (n) the science or practice of planting and taking care of trees and forests
- (n) the practice of supplying land with water so that crops and plants will grow
- (n) the process of making land that is underwater or in poor condition suitable for building or farming
- (n) distinct ecosystem that is flooded by water - either permanently or seasonally
- (n) the process of removing salt from seawater
- (adj) synonym: rare or in short supply
- (adj) peoples or plants belonging to a very specific place: synonym: native
- (n) another word for a bush
- (n) a place at the centre of activity – often use to describe a transport node
- (n) small rounded stones used in drainage or as a finish for paths
- (n) rainwater that falls impermeable surfaces and can be collected for watering
- (n) a layer of rock/ sand/ earth that contains water or allows water to pass through it
27 Clues: (n) another word for a bush • (adj) synonym: rare or in short supply • (n) the process of removing salt from seawater • (n) synonym: relaxation/ leisure/ free-time pursuits • (n uncountable) the leaves of a plant or tree: greenery • (adj) connected with the countryside - opposite of urban • (n) a specific area of ground – for building or a habitat • ...
2408 Industry TEST5 2024-08-26
Across
- Which word means "to get ready for something"?
- Which word means to move things or people from one place to another?
- What do we call the work of making goods in factories?
- What do we call a place where minerals are taken from the ground?
- Which word means "to reach a destination"?
- What is the term for a place where goods are made?
- What is the process of moving goods from raw materials to the final consumer called?
- Which word means "to carry something to another place"?
- Which word means "not enough, very little"?
- Which type of industry processes raw materials into products like cars and clothes?
- What planet is often called the "Red Planet"?
- What is a central place for important activities called?
- Which type of industry involves activities like farming, forestry, and fishing?
- What is the place called where people grow crops and raise animals?
- What is the name of the planet where we live?
- What word describes something that is shared by many people or things?
- What word means "to make products from raw materials"?
- Which word means "to finish something"?
Down
- What word describes doing something repeatedly to improve a skill?
- What do we call the basic substances used to make products?
- What word is used to describe something related to more than one country?
- What phrase describes the everyday activities and routines that people do?
- What word describes something that is not the same as something else?
- What word describes something that is hard to understand or solve?
- What do we call the action of keeping something in a safe place for later use?
- What do we call the process of collecting crops from the field when they are ready?
- Which word means "to need something for a purpose"?
- What word describes something that is related to one country?
- What is the term for a large town with many buildings and people?
- What word means "to leave a place and start a journey"?
- If something is very hard to find and not common, what word do we use?
- What do we call the practice of farming and raising animals?
32 Clues: Which word means "to finish something"? • Which word means "to reach a destination"? • Which word means "not enough, very little"? • What planet is often called the "Red Planet"? • What is the name of the planet where we live? • Which word means "to get ready for something"? • What is the term for a place where goods are made? • ...
Interconnected world terms 2023-04-19
Across
- a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country
- refers to an economy's dependence on a particular resource in order to be successful
- manufacturing activities, which may be referred to as secondary production
- movement of people from rural areas, usually called towns, to urban areas, which are called cities
- a trade pact signed in 1992 between the United States and its North American neighbors
- The increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe
- business owners decide what to produce, as well as how to produce and distribute it
- little industrial development and therefore a relatively low standard of living
- an economic region of Europe that is united under the euro, a common currency
- the practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry
Down
- business owners and consumers still make most of the economic decisions. However, governments may regulate the markets in order to provide stability
- economic system in which the government controls the means of production
- the transmission of cultural elements, such as customs, ideas, and religions, from one group to another
- industries that offer services to other businesses and consumers.
- an index designed by the United Nations to measure the basic contentment of people living in a particular country
- It includes agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining, and other industries based on what a country has available in its own territory
- economic policy in which a nation does not try to limit imports or exports by enacting tariffs or subsidies
- intergovernmental organization of the world’s major oil-exporting nations
- a country has significant industrial development and therefore a relatively high standard of living
- informal name for India's large and popular movie industry
- policies put in place by a government to restrict trade with one country
- results in the exchange of cultures between groups and the creation of new settlements
- the act of coming to a new country from one’s home country to live permanently
- people’s quality of life based on the goods and services that are available to them
- underlying foundation or framework of a system, organization, or location
- the process by which previously colonized countries free themselves from their colonizers
26 Clues: informal name for India's large and popular movie industry • a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country • industries that offer services to other businesses and consumers. • the practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry • The increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe • ...
Upson County Extension/4-H 2025-10-21
Across
- clearer thinking
- one of the top three Agriculture Commodities for Upson County focusing on hay/baleage
- a camp providing recreational and athletic facilities for children during the summer vacation period
- test providing information on the soil actual nutrients status
- practice of farming, including cultivation of the soil for the growing of crops and the rearing of animals
- the color between blue and yellow
- one of the top three Agriculture Commodities for Upson County focusing on timber/trees
- voluntary work intended to help people in a particular local areas of need.
- symbol for 4-H
- a competitive shooting group, often for young people, that uses BB guns for sport and competition
- SHOWING, an event where individuals, often 4-H and FFA members, exhibit livestock animals to be judged
- a gathering of members of a club, an organization with a common interest, to meet, discuss, and make decisions about their shared purpose
- the process of acquiring social, cognitive, and emotional skills to prepare young people for adulthood through positive, supportive experiences and relationships
- member of the 4-H program who is in kindergarten through third grade
- the color of milk or fresh snow
Down
- dried livestock food source
- Upson County's Top Agriculture Commodity focusing on meat chickens
- a team-based academic competition where two teams compete to answer questions on a wide range of subjects
- a group of athletes who compete in the shooting sports disciplines of trap, skeet, and sporting clays
- trained, responsible junior/senior 4-H members who mentor younger 4-H members, teach workshops, and assist with leadership roles at events and in clubs
- domestic fowl, such as chickens, turkeys, ducks, and geese
- large ruminant livestock animals
- member of the 4-H program who is in fourth through sixth grade
- an instructional session where individuals learn culinary techniques, recipes, and food preparation skills
- the U.S. federal agency for national service and volunteerism
- better living
- an organized group of young people who advise local governments, community organizations, or businesses on issues that affect youth
- the process of analyzing a water sample to determine its quality, safety, and suitability for various uses
- larger service
- greater loyalty
30 Clues: better living • symbol for 4-H • larger service • greater loyalty • clearer thinking • dried livestock food source • the color of milk or fresh snow • large ruminant livestock animals • the color between blue and yellow • domestic fowl, such as chickens, turkeys, ducks, and geese • the U.S. federal agency for national service and volunteerism • ...
MegaMapping Crossword 2023-09-15
Across
- Most of Canada is in the ___________ forest vegetation zone.
- The country of the ________________ lies just south of Canada
- The Canadian province of _________ lies at 50N / 70W
- Territory of Canada northeast of Northwest Territories
- The border between California and _______ lies along the ______ West longitude line.
- 30N / 90W is located in the _____________________ climate zone
- The vegetation zone found at 35N / 115W
- The Gulf of _______ is located at 25N / 90W
- State found at 30N / 100W
- Body of water at 30N / 70W
- Province found at 55N / 125W
- The climate zone that the Colorado River flows through
- The Canadian province located northeast of Maine
- The vegetation zone found at 40N / 80W is the __________ forest vegetation zone.
- The resource found at 50N / 110W
- The northern tip of _________ is located at about 71N / 155W
- City located just south of Los Angeles
- ________ is the state with the most petroleum resources.
- The state of ________ is located northeast of Utah and southwest of South Dakota
- 40N / 120W is located in the ____________ climate zone
- 40N / 90W is located in the _____________________ climate zone.
Down
- In southern Canada, much of the land is used for ___________, or cutting down trees.
- The ____________ half of the United States is more densely populated than the western half is.
- Cities with over 8,000,000 people have a larger _____ on the map than the other cities do.
- All of North America is located north of the ___________.
- Texas has an abundance of ______________, a resource used to make gasoline.
- The southern tip of ________ is located at about 24N / 81W
- The resource that can be found at 35N / 77W
- The land use found at 45N / 95W.
- Physical Feature found at 60N / 80W
- The type of grassland found in the central United States
- The most common resource in the eastern United States is _________.
- State located between New Mexico and Louisiana
- Body of water at 40N / 140W
- State located south of Oklahoma
- The water around all of North America is used for ___________________________.
- At the southern tip of Florida, you will find a nice __________ wet and dry climate
- Island located along the 50N line just west of southern Canada
- The country of __________ lies north of the United States
- The _____________ half of North America is much less densely populated than the southern half is.
- All of the islands of northern Canada are in the ________ climate zone.
41 Clues: State found at 30N / 100W • Body of water at 30N / 70W • Body of water at 40N / 140W • Province found at 55N / 125W • State located south of Oklahoma • The land use found at 45N / 95W. • The resource found at 50N / 110W • Physical Feature found at 60N / 80W • City located just south of Los Angeles • The vegetation zone found at 35N / 115W • ...
Chapter 11 America Comes of Age 2024-02-14
Across
- Led the Division of Forestry department and recommended that the national parks be preserved for the public.
- This act made the natives have American citizenship with full voting rights
- Employees come together to decide work schedules and pay
- Who discovered yellow fever?
- The support for or advocacy of social reform
- Managing editor of McClure's, famous for uncovering social problems
- Allows people to approve or reject laws passed by the legislature
- Great White Fleet was the nickname for what
- What did Frances Willard support
- A group that met at Niagara Falls to tackle African Americans to vote
- The leading figure in the settlement house movement, also played a part in the settlement success
- This gave people the power to put a proposed new law on the voting ballot in the next upcoming elections
- Believed that women were hurt by unfair prices for goods needed to run their homes
- This act was made to keep the wealthy and powerful people from taking advantage of the small business wonders and the poor
- Citizens voted to select nominees for upcoming elections
- Settlement houses and other civic groups played a prominent role in what
- Set aside 148 mil acres of forest land and 80 million acres of mineral lands
Down
- More than 100 of these groups in many cities joined a network called
- This person's efforts helped make Yosemite National Park in 1890
- Gave voters the power to remove public servants from office before their term ended
- The 32nd president of the United States
- Which amendment gave women the right to vote
- The blended ideas of the German socialism and the American Progressivism
- African American teacher and journalist who helped form the National Association of Colored Women (NACW)
- What war was in 1904-1905
- What country had an affair in 1902
- What were journalists called
- This person took pictures of unsafe living environments where the urban poor lived and wrote a book about it shocking the nation
- Gave special labels and urged women to buy them
- Canal connecting the Pacific and Atlantic
- A community center that provided social services to the urban poor
31 Clues: What war was in 1904-1905 • Who discovered yellow fever? • What were journalists called • What did Frances Willard support • What country had an affair in 1902 • The 32nd president of the United States • Canal connecting the Pacific and Atlantic • Which amendment gave women the right to vote • Great White Fleet was the nickname for what • ...
Glossary of key terms: What is a business? 2025-10-10
Across
- the process of increasing the worth of a product or service by improving it or enhancing its appeal to customers, so that the final selling price exceeds the cost of inputs.
- the business function concerned with managing people—recruiting, training, motivating, and maintaining an effective workforce.
- the business function responsible for managing money, recording transactions, and analyzing financial information to support decision-making.
- the function that converts raw materials and resources into finished goods or services efficiently and effectively.
- desires for goods and services that are not essential for survival but improve quality of life.
- the part of the economy that provides services to consumers and businesses rather than producing goods.
- the basic requirements essential for human survival, such as food, water, clothing, and shelter.
- people who take the initiative to set up, organize and manage a business, assuming the financial risks in the hope of earning a profit.
- an organization that produces goods and/or provides services to satisfy customer needs and wants, usually with the aim of making a profit.
- the part of the economy concerned with manufacturing and construction—transforming raw materials into finished products.
- the part of the economy involved in extracting natural resources, such as farming, fishing, mining, or forestry.
- intangible activities that provide value to customers, such as education, banking, or transport.
- the process of combining inputs or resources to create goods or services that have value.
- physical and tangible products that can be seen, touched, and stored, such as clothing, cars, or computers.
Down
- the difference between the selling price of a product and the cost of the materials and components used to produce it.
- individuals or organizations that buy goods or services from a business; they may or may not be the end users.
- the process of identifying and meeting customer needs profitably through market research, product design, pricing, promotion, and distribution.
- the part of the economy focused on knowledge-based activities like research, information technology, and consultancy.
- the resources required to produce goods and services—typically land, labour, capital and enterprise.
- the process of starting and running a new business venture, involving creativity, risk-taking, and decision-making to exploit business opportunities.
- individuals or groups who use goods and services to satisfy their needs and wants.
21 Clues: individuals or groups who use goods and services to satisfy their needs and wants. • the process of combining inputs or resources to create goods or services that have value. • desires for goods and services that are not essential for survival but improve quality of life. • ...
MODYUL 1: MGA HAMONG PANGKAPALIGIRAN 2019-02-09
Across
- Tumutukoy ang mga gampaning ito sa mga karapatan, obligasyon, at mga inaasahan ng lipunan na kaakibat ng posisyon ng indibiduwal.
- ito ay tumutukoy sa mga pangyayari na nagdudulot ng panganib at pinsala sa tao, kapaligiran, at mga gawaing pang-ekonomiya. Maaaring ang disaster ay natural gaya ng bagyo, lindol, at pagputok ng bulkan o gawa ng tao tulad ng digmaan at polusyon?
- tumutukoy ito sa mga kahulugan at paliwanag tungkol sa pinaniniwalaan at tinatanggap na totoo.
- paggamit ng puno bilang panggatong. Isang halimbawa ay ang paggawa ng uling mula sa puno.
- tumutukoy sa kakayahang makita ang kaugnayan ng mga personal na karanasan ng isang tao at ang lipunang kanyang ginagalawan.
- Tumutukoy ang social group sa dalawa o higit pang taong may magkakatulad na katangian na nagkakaroon ng ugnayan sa bawat isa at bumubuo ng isang ugnayang panlipunan.
- Ang likas na yaman ng Pilipinas sa kasalukuyan – pagbaba ng kabuuang timbang ng mga nahuhuling isda sa 3 kilo bawat arawmula sa dating 10 kilo.
- ito ay nagaganap sa pagitan ng isang tao at ilang malalapit sa kanya.
- . Ayon kay Carter (1992), ito ay isang dinamikong proseso na sumasakop sa sa pamamahala ng pagpaplano, pag-oorganisa, pagtukoy ng mga kasapi, pamumuno at pagkontrol.?
- paggamit ng media upang mamulat ang mgamamamayan sa suliraning pangkapaligiran. Nanguna sa reforestationng La Mesa Watershed at sa Pasig River Rehabilitation Project.
- ito ay tumutukoy sa inaasahang pinsala sa tao, ari-arian, at buhay dulot ng pagtama ng isang kalamidad. Ang vulnerable na bahagi ng pamayanan ang kadalasang may mataas na risk dahil wala silang kapasidad na harapin ang panganib na dulot ng hazard o kalamidad. Vulnerable Human Risk Structural Risk 88 6. Resilience–a
- tumutukoy sa paglalapat ng kahulugan sa isang bagay ng mga taong gumagamit dito.
- naglalayong baguhin ang kaugalian at pananaw ng tao
- sa panahon ng pananakopa anong taon Itinayo ang kauna-unahang Forestry School (ngayon ay College of Forestry and Natural Resources) sa Los Baños, Laguna.
Down
- ito ay likas na yaman ng Pilipinas sa kasalukuyan, mabilis at patuloy na pagliit ng forest cover mula sa 17 ektarya noong 1934 ay naging 6. 43 milyong ektaraya noong 2003.?
- . ang pagiging resilient ng isang komunidad ay tumutukoy sa kakayahan ng pamayanan na harapin ang mga epekto na dulot ng kalamidad. Ang pagiging resilient ay maaaring istruktural, ibig sabihin ay isasaayos ang mga tahanan, tulay o gusali upang maging matibay
- tumutukoy ito sa mga asal, kilos, o gawi na binuo at nagsisilbing pamantayan sa isang lipunan. -- nagsisilbing batayan ng mga ugali, aksyon, at pakikitungo ng isang indibiduwal sa lipunang kaniyang kinabibilangan.
- . Ilegal na pagputol sa mga puno sa kagubatan.
- Ito ay isang NGO kong saan tumutulong sa pagtatayo ng MRF sa mga barangay?
- - ay binubuo ng mga indibiduwal na may pormal na ugnayan sa isa’t isa. Karaniwang nakatuon sa pagtupad sa isang gawain ang ganitong uri ng ugnayang panlipunan. Isang halimbawa nito ay ang ugnayan sa pagitan ng amo at ng kaniyang manggagawa, gayundin ang ugnayan ng mga manggagawa sa isa’t isa.
- Ang_______ay tumutukoy sa mga taong sama -samang naninirahan sa isang organisadong komunidad na may iisang batas, tradisyon, at pagpapahalaga.
- pampublikong paksa kung saan apekto ang buong pamayanan.
- . Tumutukoy ang __________sa mga basurang nagmula sa mga tahanan at komersyal na establisimyento, mga basura na nakikita sa paligid, mga basura na nagmumula sa sektor ng agrikultura at iba pang basurang hindi nakakalason
- Ang ___________ay tumutukoy sa pagsusuri sa lawak, sakop, at pinsala na maaaring danasin ng isang lugar kung ito ay mahaharap sa isang sakuna o kalamidad sa isang partikular na panahon
- . ito naman ay tumutukoy sa mga hazard na dulot ng kalikasan. Ilan sa halimbawa nito ay ang bagyo, lindol, tsunami, thunderstorms, storm surge, at landslide. Ipinakikita sa kasunod na larawan ang pagbabalita sa pagdating ng isang malakas na bagyo.
- tumutukoy ang vulnerability sa tao, lugar, at imprastruktura na may mataas na posibilidad na maapektuhan ng mga hazard. Ang pagiging vulnerable ay kadalasang naiimpluwensiyahan ng kalagayang heograpikal at antas ng kabuhayan.
- Anong batas ang ipinatupad upang magkaroon ng legal na batayan sa iba’tibang desisyon at proseso ng pamamahala ng solid waste sa bansa?
- - ay tumutukoy sa malapit at impormal na ugnayan ng mga indibiduwal. Kadalasan, ito ay mayroon lamang maliit na bilang. Halimbawa nito ay ang pamilya at kaibigan.
- . Isa sa sinasabing dahilan nito ay ang patuloy na pag-init ng daigdig o global warming dahil sa mataas na antas ng konsentrasyon ng carbon dioxide na naiipon sa atmosphere. Nanggagaling ito mula sa usok ng pabrika, mga iba’t ibang industriya, at pagsusunog ng mga kagubatan.
- ito ay tumutukoy sa mga banta na maaaring dulot ng kalikasan o ng gawa ng tao. Kung hindi maiiwasan, maaari itong magdulot ng pinsala sa buhay, ari-arian, at kalikasan.?
- at pangangalaga sa kalikasan at pagsusulong ng kapayapaan sa kabila ng mga nabanggit na batas at programa ay nananatili pa rinang mga suliranin sa solid waste sa Pilipinas
31 Clues: . Ilegal na pagputol sa mga puno sa kagubatan. • naglalayong baguhin ang kaugalian at pananaw ng tao • pampublikong paksa kung saan apekto ang buong pamayanan. • ito ay nagaganap sa pagitan ng isang tao at ilang malalapit sa kanya. • Ito ay isang NGO kong saan tumutulong sa pagtatayo ng MRF sa mga barangay? • ...
Human Impact 2020-11-13
Across
- revolution leading to an increase in medical understanding that led to prolonging the lives of humans
- The science of planting and caring for forests and the management of growing timber
- the process or industry of obtaining coal or other minerals from a mine.
- reduction in the number or quantity of something
- The use of Earth's renewable and nonrenewable natural resources in ways that do not constrain resource use in the future.
- farming for the raising of livestock (particularly cattle)
- revolution leading to a dramatic social change in important structures brought about relatively quickly by the introduction of new technology
- the amount of food required to feed a population. Food demand increases as populations increase
- revolution when human beings first domesticated plants and animals and no longer relied entirely on hunting and gathering
- the amount of food that is available to the population.
- the cultivation of a single crop in a given area.
- the process by which fertile land becomes desert, typically as a result of drought, deforestation, or inappropriate agriculture.
Down
- refers to a decrease in the pH of the ocean over an extended period of time, caused primarily by uptake of carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere
- an undesirable in the natural environment that is caused by the introduction of substances that are harmful to living to organisms or by excessive wastes, heat, noise, or radiation
- an increase in the ratio or density of people living in urban areas rather than in rural areas
- revolution of rapid growth in the use of machines in manufacturing and production that began in the mid-1700s
- the capture of wild fish and other seafood living in the waters
- the process of removing salt from seawater
- A form of oxygen that has three oxygen atoms in each molecule; when not in the stratosphere, it is an unstable toxic gas with a pungent odor and powerful oxidizing properties
- refers to the biosphere, or all the spaces on earth occupied by living organisms
- the practice of growing, breeding, and caring for plants and animals that are used for food, clothing, housing, transportation, and other purposes
- Organisms that have been genetically altered to improve their usefulness
- urban air pollution composed of a mixture of smoke and fog produced from industrial pollutants and burning fuels
23 Clues: the process of removing salt from seawater • reduction in the number or quantity of something • the cultivation of a single crop in a given area. • the amount of food that is available to the population. • farming for the raising of livestock (particularly cattle) • the capture of wild fish and other seafood living in the waters • ...
Chapter Seven: Best Management Practices and Water Quality 2023-04-04
Across
- Crossing: provides a hard, stable area where livestock or equipment can cross a stream without damaging the streambed or banks.
- the raising of traditionally undomesticated animals in an agricultural setting to produce
- the practice and science of cultivating soil for growing crops to provide food, fiber, and other commodities and products for people to purchase and consume.
- Department: poultry, cattle and calves, greenhouse and nursery, cotton, and soybeans.
- Law: protect and promote U.S. agricultural health, administer the Animal Welfare Act, carry out wildlife damage management activities, and ensure that America's agricultural exports are protected from unjustified trade restrictions.
- in the area that is close to (a place)
- Plots or parcels of land
- crops which are alive year-round and are harvested multiple times before dying.
- a natural filter of vegetation adjacent to a natural or manmade water body.
- the area of land that drains or sheds water into a specific receiving waterbody, such as a lake or a river.
- corn, soybeans, hay, wheat and tobacco.
- harvesting: the cutting or removal of timber for purposes of sale or profit for wood product purposes, such as lumber, biomass or fire wood, in conformance with the California Forest Practice Rules
- he process and practices used to remove excess water from the soil surface and from the soil profile.
- the natural or intentional restocking of existing forests and woodlands that have been depleted, usually through deforestation.
Down
- that all soil disturbing activities at the site have been completed and that a uniform perennial vegetative cover with a density of at least 70%
- Quality: the suitability of water to be used to irrigate and tend animals.
- also known as agricultural chemicals – are substances that are used to protect plants against pests.
- Commission: protecting, expanding and promoting the sustainable management of woodlands.
- Alabama Department of Environmental Management.
- Maps: a geographical representation showing diversity of soil types and/or soil properties (soil pH, textures, organic matter, depths of horizons etc.) in the area of interest.
- represent the earliest form of organized social life.
- species-rich habitats performing valuable ecosystem services such as flood protection, water quality enhancement, food chain support and carbon sequestration.
- a measure of water clarity.
- breeding, raising, and harvesting fish, shellfish, and aquatic plants.
- transitory or quickly fading.
25 Clues: Plots or parcels of land • a measure of water clarity. • transitory or quickly fading. • in the area that is close to (a place) • corn, soybeans, hay, wheat and tobacco. • Alabama Department of Environmental Management. • represent the earliest form of organized social life. • breeding, raising, and harvesting fish, shellfish, and aquatic plants. • ...
Unit 2: Brazil 2025-12-01
Across
- types of economic activities. A way to categorize different parts of the economy.
- these are processed for their oil and food for livestock. A smaller percentage is processed for human consumption and made into products
- coming from or relating to a foreign country or an outside institution/ businesses; international
- the “Manufacturing and building” sector of the economy. Ex: steel factories, construction, automotive, oil refineries.
- the variety of life in the world or in a particular habitat or ecosystem
- a slum or shantytown located within or on the outskirts of the country's large cities
- the action of clearing a wide area of trees
- the “Providing service and distributing” sector of the economy. Ex: healthcare, legal services, banking, real estate, data management, education, government, retail.
- the process of converting land to a new purpose by constructing buildings or making use of its resources
- a problem or issue
- a system of paved and unpaved roads designed to increase settlement and exploitation of the vast underpopulated Amazon River Basin.
- using resources in such a way that they will continue to be available in the future
- businesses or industries involved in agriculture (farming) in some way
- the process of working together toward the same goal
- taking advantage of something or someone; unfairly benefiting from someone or something else
Down
- to control and make use of
- to protect from harm or destruction, prevent wasteful harm or over-use
- the“Getting and growing” sector of the economy. Ex: fishing, mining, forestry, farming, ranching.
- a change in global or regional climate patterns, in particular, a change apparent from the mid to late 20th century onwards and attributed largely to the increased levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide produced by the use of fossil fuels.
- the basic physical and organizational structures and facilities.(ex: roads, power grids) needed for the operation of a society to function
- belonging to a group that has a common national or cultural tradition (not the same as race)
- a group who have traditionally lived on that land, native
- a set of circumstances that makes it possible to do something
- the term for the region of Brazil considered “the Amazon”
- relating to affairs and activities within a country; domestic
25 Clues: a problem or issue • to control and make use of • the action of clearing a wide area of trees • the process of working together toward the same goal • a group who have traditionally lived on that land, native • the term for the region of Brazil considered “the Amazon” • a set of circumstances that makes it possible to do something • ...
MODYUL 1: MGA HAMONG PANGKAPALIGIRAN 2019-02-09
Across
- desisyon at proseso ng pamamahala ng solid waste sa bansa?
- mga suliranin sa solid waste sa Pilipinas
- tumutukoy ang vulnerability sa tao, lugar, at imprastruktura na may mataas na posibilidad na maapektuhan ng mga hazard. Ang pagiging vulnerable ay kadalasang naiimpluwensiyahan ng kalagayang heograpikal at antas ng kabuhayan.
- tumutukoy sa paglalapat ng kahulugan sa isang bagay ng mga taong gumagamit dito.
- Ang_______ay tumutukoy sa mga taong sama -samang naninirahan sa isang organisadong komunidad na may iisang batas, tradisyon, at pagpapahalaga.
- . Ayon kay Carter (1992), ito ay isang dinamikong proseso na sumasakop sa sa pamamahala ng pagpaplano, pag-oorganisa, pagtukoy ng mga kasapi, pamumuno at pagkontrol.?
- sa dating 10 kilo.
- Tumutukoy ang mga gampaning ito sa mga karapatan, obligasyon, at mga inaasahan ng lipunan na kaakibat ng posisyon ng indibiduwal.
- Ang ___________ay tumutukoy sa pagsusuri sa lawak, sakop, at pinsala na maaaring danasin ng isang lugar kung ito ay mahaharap sa isang sakuna o kalamidad sa isang partikular na panahon
- sa panahon ng pananakopa anong taon Itinayo ang kauna-unahang Forestry School (ngayon ay College of Forestry and Natural Resources) sa Los Baños, Laguna.
- pagtrato at pangangalaga sa kalikasan at pagsusulong ng
- . ito naman ay tumutukoy sa mga hazard na dulot ng kalikasan. Ilan sa halimbawa nito ay ang bagyo, lindol, tsunami, thunderstorms, storm surge, at landslide. Ipinakikita sa kasunod na larawan ang pagbabalita sa pagdating ng isang malakas na bagyo.
- ito ay tumutukoy sa mga pangyayari na nagdudulot ng panganib at pinsala sa tao, kapaligiran, at mga gawaing pang-ekonomiya. Maaaring ang disaster ay natural gaya ng bagyo, lindol, at pagputok ng bulkan o gawa ng tao tulad ng digmaan at polusyon?
- ito ay tumutukoy sa inaasahang pinsala sa tao, ari-arian, at buhay dulot ng pagtama ng isang kalamidad. Ang vulnerable na bahagi ng pamayanan ang kadalasang may mataas na risk dahil wala silang kapasidad na harapin ang panganib na dulot ng hazard o kalamidad. Vulnerable Human Risk Structural Risk 88 6. Resilience–a
- kabila ng mga nabanggit na batas at programa ay nananatili pa rin
- . Isa sa sinasabing dahilan nito ay ang patuloy na pag-init ng daigdig o global warming dahil sa mataas na antas ng konsentrasyon ng carbon dioxide na naiipon sa atmosphere. Nanggagaling ito mula sa usok ng pabrika, mga iba’t ibang industriya, at pagsusunog ng mga kagubatan.
- tumutukoy ito sa mga kahulugan at paliwanag tungkol sa pinaniniwalaan at tinatanggap na totoo.
Down
- Tumutukoy ang social group sa dalawa o higit pang taong may magkakatulad na katangian na nagkakaroon ng ugnayan sa bawat isa at bumubuo ng isang ugnayang panlipunan.
- Ang likas na yaman ng Pilipinas sa kasalukuyan – pagbaba ng kabuuang timbang ng mga nahuhuling isda sa 3 kilo bawat araw
- ito ay nagaganap sa pagitan ng isang tao at ilang malalapit sa kanya.
- - ay tumutukoy sa malapit at impormal na ugnayan ng mga indibiduwal. Kadalasan, ito ay mayroon lamang maliit na bilang. Halimbawa nito ay ang pamilya at kaibigan.
- . Ilegal na pagputol sa mga puno sa kagubatan.
- ito ay tumutukoy sa mga banta na maaaring dulot ng kalikasan o ng gawa ng tao. Kung hindi maiiwasan, maaari itong magdulot ng pinsala sa buhay, ari-arian, at kalikasan.?
- paggamit ng puno bilang panggatong. Isang halimbawa ay ang paggawa ng uling mula sa puno.
- pampublikong paksa kung saan apekto ang buong pamayanan.
- Anong batas ang ipinatupad upang magkaroon ng legal na batayan sa iba’t
- paggamit ng media upang mamulat ang mga
- tumutukoy sa kakayahang makita ang kaugnayan ng mga personal na karanasan ng isang tao at ang lipunang kanyang ginagalawan.
- Ito ay isang NGO kong saan tumutulong sa pagtatayo ng MRF sa mga barangay?
- La Mesa Watershed at sa Pasig River Rehabilitation Project.
- - ay binubuo ng mga indibiduwal na may pormal na ugnayan sa isa’t isa. Karaniwang nakatuon sa pagtupad sa isang gawain ang ganitong uri ng ugnayang panlipunan. Isang halimbawa nito ay ang ugnayan sa pagitan ng amo at ng kaniyang manggagawa, gayundin ang ugnayan ng mga manggagawa sa isa’t isa.
- sa suliraning pangkapaligiran. Nanguna sa reforestation
- . Tumutukoy ang __________sa mga basurang nagmula sa mga tahanan at komersyal na establisimyento, mga basura na nakikita sa paligid, mga basura na nagmumula sa sektor ng agrikultura at iba pang basurang hindi nakakalason
- naglalayong baguhin ang kaugalian at pananaw ng tao
- tumutukoy ito sa mga asal, kilos, o gawi na binuo at nagsisilbing pamantayan sa isang lipunan. -- nagsisilbing batayan ng mga ugali, aksyon, at pakikitungo ng isang indibiduwal sa lipunang kaniyang kinabibilangan.
- ito ay likas na yaman ng Pilipinas sa kasalukuyan, mabilis at patuloy na pagliit ng forest cover mula sa 17 ektarya noong 1934 ay naging 6. 43 milyong ektaraya noong 2003.?
- . ang pagiging resilient ng isang komunidad ay tumutukoy sa kakayahan ng pamayanan na harapin ang mga epekto na dulot ng kalamidad. Ang pagiging resilient ay maaaring istruktural, ibig sabihin ay isasaayos ang mga tahanan, tulay o gusali upang maging matibay
37 Clues: sa dating 10 kilo. • paggamit ng media upang mamulat ang mga • mga suliranin sa solid waste sa Pilipinas • . Ilegal na pagputol sa mga puno sa kagubatan. • naglalayong baguhin ang kaugalian at pananaw ng tao • sa suliraning pangkapaligiran. Nanguna sa reforestation • pagtrato at pangangalaga sa kalikasan at pagsusulong ng • ...
Trees and Forests Vocabulary Review 2020-02-21
Across
- An organism that's made of both fungus and algae (plant) cells
- Tiny tubes running up a plant's trunk that transport water and minerals upwards from the roots to the branches and leaves.
- A perennial, woody plant that has a trunk and is at least a few metres tall
- The outer covering of a tree that protects the inside
- The green pigment inside plants. Traps light energy used for photosynthesis
- A place that a type of animal or plant lives
- The inner bark tissue of a tree that transports nutrients from the leaves to the rest of the tree
- Trees that have cones and needles
- The amount of different species living in an ecosystem
- The care and use of forests. Works to protect forests
- The loss of water through the pores in leaves
- A plant eater
- Living organisms that break down dead material
- Any organism that can create its own food from sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water
- Rebuilding a forest by planting or reseeding
- Non-living parts of an ecosystem
- A small perennial plant
- The process by which a plant uses sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water to create sugar
- A forested areas used for recreation
- An area of living and non-living parts that interacts and lives together
Down
- Living parts of an ecosystem
- Activities you do for fun!
- An organism that feeds on other organisms to gain matter and energy
- The top branches and leaves of the trees in a forest
- The chemical process of turning sugar into energy. It releases carbon dioxide.
- A meat-eating animal
- A gas made of carbon and oxygen. It's breathed out by humans and animals
- An organism that eats both plants and animals
- The practice of managing, conserving, and utilizing forests for wood products
- Tiny holes on the underside of leaves that allow gases in and out of the leaves
- Trees and plants that loves their leaves each fall
- Small parts of coniferous trees which contain the seeds
- Removing all the trees from a section of forest at once
- A group of trees
- A diagram showing the eating relationships of organisms in an ecosystem
35 Clues: A plant eater • A group of trees • A meat-eating animal • A small perennial plant • Activities you do for fun! • Living parts of an ecosystem • Non-living parts of an ecosystem • Trees that have cones and needles • A forested areas used for recreation • A place that a type of animal or plant lives • Rebuilding a forest by planting or reseeding • ...
lumber industry crossword puzzle 2025-10-14
Across
- what is a large, powerful stationary saw with a rotating, disc-shaped blade used to break down raw logs into lumber
- what is a machine used to smooth and size rough-cut timber into finished dimensional lumber, flooring, and other products
- what is a controlled, oven-like chamber used to remove moisture from wood
- what is a heavy machine that grabs felled trees and rapidly removes their branches and cuts them into specific, uniform log lengths
- what is a heavy-duty vehicle used to pull or drag felled trees from the logging site to a roadside landing
- what is a heavy, off-road vehicle used to transport cut logs from the stump in the forest to a roadside landing
- what is a critical section of uncut wood used to control the direction and safety of a falling tree.
- what is the unprocessed, cut section of a tree trunk, used as the raw material for producing lumber, furniture, and other wood products
- what is a powerful machine that uses a system of cables and winches to move logs from their stump to a landing or collection point
Down
- what is a portable, motorized saw used for felling trees, processing timber, and other forestry-related tasks.
- what is wood that has been processed into uniform and useful sizes like beams and planks, primarily for construction and finishing
- what is the raw material—a living or felled plant—that is processed into various products like timber, lumber, and pulp
- what is a specialized machine that fells, delimbs, and cuts trees into specific log lengths (bucking)
- what is a machine used to straighten and smooth the rough, irregular edges of sawn boards.
- what is a cut or indentation made into a piece of wood for a specific purpose
- what is a specialized vehicles used to transport wood at all stages of the supply chain
- what is a manufacturing plant that converts raw logs into usable lumber through a series of powerful, motorized saws
- what is a heavy-duty machine used for lifting, sorting, stacking, and transporting logs and other wood products
- what is a high-performance power saw that uses a continuous, looping band of toothed steel to make precise, efficient cuts
- what is a tool used by loggers for felling and bucking trees.
20 Clues: what is a tool used by loggers for felling and bucking trees. • what is a controlled, oven-like chamber used to remove moisture from wood • what is a cut or indentation made into a piece of wood for a specific purpose • what is a specialized vehicles used to transport wood at all stages of the supply chain • ...
Land, Soil, Water, Natural Vegetation and Wildlife Resources 2025-08-19
Across
- – Another name for community land resources.
- - An international convention that lists several species of animals and birds in which trade is prohibited.
- – Factor of soil formation related to altitude and slope.
- – Type of irrigation that checks water losses through seepage and evaporation.
- – Conservation method where rocks are piled up to slow the flow of water.
- - A natural resource that plants produce that we need to breathe.
- – Caused by untreated sewage, chemicals, and industrial effluents.
- – Land owned by the community for common use like fodder, fruits, nuts, or medicinal herbs.
- - The name for protected areas linked through a global network to demonstrate conservation and development.
- – The main natural source of fresh water on land.
- - A large animal with tusks mentioned as being on the verge of extinction
- – Practice of making broad flat steps on steep slopes to reduce surface runoff.
- - The name for a system where living beings are inter-related and interdependent.
- – Rows of trees planted in dry regions to check wind movement.
- – Collecting and storing rainwater for future use.
- – Stones, grass, or soil used to build barriers along slopes to collect water.
- – Conservation method where bare ground between plants is covered with straw or organic matter to retain moisture.
Down
- - The type of vegetation found in cold Polar Regions.
- - One of the major concerns for wildlife that results in a sharp decline in the number of particular species.
- – Growing alternate rows of different crops to reduce soil erosion.
- - The layer of the Earth that includes land.
- - The collective name for all the living parts of the Earth.
- – Artificial method of supplying water to crops.
- – Type of land owned by individuals.
- – Thin layer of grainy substance covering the surface of the earth, containing minerals, humus, water, and air.
- – Irrigation method useful in dry regions to conserve water.
- – Factor of soil formation that influences the rate of weathering and humus formation.
- – A renewable resource covering three-fourths of the earth’s surface.
- – The way land is used for agriculture, forestry, mining, building houses, and setting up industries.
- - The sphere of water on Earth.
- – Determines colour, texture, and mineral content of soil.
- – The washing away of the fertile top layer of soil.
- park - The name for a natural area designated to protect the ecological integrity of one or more ecosystems.
- – The uppermost layer of soil rich in humus and vegetation.
34 Clues: - The sphere of water on Earth. • – Type of land owned by individuals. • – Another name for community land resources. • - The layer of the Earth that includes land. • – Artificial method of supplying water to crops. • – The main natural source of fresh water on land. • – Collecting and storing rainwater for future use. • ...
Sustainability words 2023-05-23
Across
- It is the process by collecting, separating and transforming materials that have been discarded, to give them a new use or turn them into new products.
- agents Chemical, biological or physical compounds that can cause harm or disease when they come into contact with living organisms, including humans, animals and plants.
- use The use of natural resources and ecosystem services responsibly, guaranteeing their long-term conservation and avoiding their depletion or irreversible degradation.
- The capacity of a material or substance to decompose or disintegrate naturally through biological processes, generally through the action of microorganisms, such as bacteria and fungi.
Down
- areas Are natural or urban spaces that are covered with vegetation, such as parks, gardens, forests, squares and vegetation zones in cities.
- Cycle It is the natural cycle of birth, growth, reproduction and death that occurs in all forms of life on Earth.
- It refers to the introduction or presence in the environment of physical, chemical or biological substances or agents that alter its natural composition and may be harmful to human health, flora, fauna and ecosystems in general.
- It is a chemical compound composed of two oxygen atoms bonded to one carbon atom. It is a colorless, odorless, non-flammable gas found naturally in the Earth's atmosphere.
- Is a type of fuel produced from renewable organic matter, such as agricultural crops, vegetable residues, vegetable oils and animal fats.
- Organic matter of plant or animal origin that is used as an energy source. It includes a wide range of materials, such as agricultural residues, forestry residues, food residues, energy crops and wood industry by-products.
10 Clues: Cycle It is the natural cycle of birth, growth, reproduction and death that occurs in all forms of life on Earth. • Is a type of fuel produced from renewable organic matter, such as agricultural crops, vegetable residues, vegetable oils and animal fats. • ...
Sustainability words 2023-05-23
Across
- It is the process by collecting, separating and transforming materials that have been discarded, to give them a new use or turn them into new products.
- agents Chemical, biological or physical compounds that can cause harm or disease when they come into contact with living organisms, including humans, animals and plants.
- use The use of natural resources and ecosystem services responsibly, guaranteeing their long-term conservation and avoiding their depletion or irreversible degradation.
- The capacity of a material or substance to decompose or disintegrate naturally through biological processes, generally through the action of microorganisms, such as bacteria and fungi.
Down
- areas Are natural or urban spaces that are covered with vegetation, such as parks, gardens, forests, squares and vegetation zones in cities.
- Cycle It is the natural cycle of birth, growth, reproduction and death that occurs in all forms of life on Earth.
- It refers to the introduction or presence in the environment of physical, chemical or biological substances or agents that alter its natural composition and may be harmful to human health, flora, fauna and ecosystems in general.
- It is a chemical compound composed of two oxygen atoms bonded to one carbon atom. It is a colorless, odorless, non-flammable gas found naturally in the Earth's atmosphere.
- Is a type of fuel produced from renewable organic matter, such as agricultural crops, vegetable residues, vegetable oils and animal fats.
- Organic matter of plant or animal origin that is used as an energy source. It includes a wide range of materials, such as agricultural residues, forestry residues, food residues, energy crops and wood industry by-products.
10 Clues: Cycle It is the natural cycle of birth, growth, reproduction and death that occurs in all forms of life on Earth. • Is a type of fuel produced from renewable organic matter, such as agricultural crops, vegetable residues, vegetable oils and animal fats. • ...
