Farmers used trash to grow crops in barren sand 1000 years ago

Share This Post


One thousand years ago, people along Israel’s Mediterranean coast dug deeply enclosed plots in the sand, filled them with 80,000 tonnes of trash and used the fertile soil that formed for farming, allowing them to produce crops that would otherwise fail on such harsh ground.

This represents the oldest-known, large-scale plot-and-berm system that allows crop-growing in sand, putting it among multiple, less clearly dated sites across the globe. It might even be the origin of such oasis-like agricultural sites in deserts, some of which still exist today, says Joel Roskin at Bar-Ilan University in Israel.



Source link

spot_img

Related Posts

Final proposals leave SpaceX and Amazon with 4% of $20 billion rural broadband subsidies

TAMPA, Fla. — SpaceX and Amazon’s satellite constellations...

Amazon’s Kindle Scribe Colorsoft finally gets a US release date, Brits must wait

The Kindle Scribe Colorsoft and the non-colour companion...

Watch Nvidia’s Jensen Huang, Joe Rogan rhapsodize about AI

Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang. Joe Rogan. A...

Alarming Video Shows Humanoid Robot Demon-Scuttling

The tech industry has become obsessed with the...

AMD CEO Lisa Su Says Concerns About an AI Bubble Are Overblown

Earlier this year, WIRED said that AMD CEO...
spot_img