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Encyclopedia results for Arable

  1. Arable

    Wiktionary Arable IPAc en icon r b l relates to the growing of crops Arable farming or agronomy , the cultivation of field crops Arable land , land upon which crops are cultivated Arable crops program , a consolidated support system operated under the EU Common Agricultural Policy. Fivehead Arable Fields , a Site of Special Scientific Interest in Somerset, England. See also Vegetable farming disambig ...   more details



  1. Arable land

    Refimprove date June 2008 Image 040719 172 dorset marnhull2.jpg thumb Modern arable agriculture typically uses large field agriculture fields like this one in Dorset , England , United Kingdom Image Famlandstburyan.JPG ... sea In geography and agriculture , arable land from Latin language Latin wikt aro Latin ar I plough ... resulting from shifting cultivation is not included in this category. Data for arable land are not meant ..., the world s total arable land amounted to 13,805,153  km , whereas 48,836,976  km was classified ... en ref Although constrained by land mass and topology, the amount of arable land, both regionally and globally ... productive portion of arable land is that from sediment s left by rivers and the sea in geological ... arable land Image Arable land percent world.png thumb 230px Map of world percentage arable land File ... Land which is unsuitable for arable farming usually has at least one of the following deficiencies ... exists on marginally arable land. Non arable land is sometimes called wasteland , badlands , worthless or no man s land . However, non arable land can sometimes be converted into arable land. New arable ... and politically independent, because food importation is reduced. Making non arable land arable ... arable land being turned into fertile arable land are Aran Islands These islands off the west coast ... for arable farming because they were too rocky. The people covered the islands with a shallow layer of seaweed and sand from the ocean. This made it arable. Today, crops are grown there. Israel Israel .... Some examples of fertile arable land being turned into infertile land are Droughts like the dust ... by many natives. Each year, arable land is lost to desertification and erosion from human industrial ... arable land shortage and the case Article from Technorati on Shrinking Arable Farmland in the world DEFAULTSORT Arable Land Category Agricultural land ar bcl Naaaradong daga de Kulturboden es Tierra arable fa fr Terre arable ko hr Obradivo tlo is R ktarland mk ...   more details



  1. Fivehead Arable Fields

    Infobox SSSI image name Fivehead Arable Fields aos Somerset interest Biological gridref gbmappingsmall ST337224 latitude 50.99716 longitude 2.94615 displaymap Somerset area convert 10.3 ha km2 sqmi notifydate Start date 1990 enref 1003135 Note WGS84 lat long, converted from OSGB36 grid ref Fivehead Arable Fields gbmapping ST337224 is a 10.3 hectare 25.4 acre biological Site of Special Scientific Interest near the village of Fivehead in Somerset , SSSI notification notified in 1990. This site has one of the most important assemblages of arable weeds in Britain, several of which are now nationally rare or scarce. There is a large population of the nationally rare Corn salad Broad fruited Cornsalad Valerianella rimosa . ref cite web title Fivehead Arable Fields work English Nature url http www.english nature.org.uk citation citation photo 1003135.pdf accessdate 2006 08 12 ref References reflist External links http www.somersetwildlife.org reserve 58.php Fivehead Arable Fields from Somerset Wildlife Trust SSSIs Somerset biological Category Sites of Special Scientific Interest in Somerset Category Geography of Somerset Category Sites of Special Scientific Interest notified in 1990 Category Important Plant Areas in England ...   more details



  1. Arable crops program

    The arable crops program is a consolidated support system operated under the EU Common Agricultural Policy for producers of major cereals, oilseeds, and protein crops. Production of these crops constituted 21 of farm income and 40 of agricultural lands in the EU in 2000. Main elements of the program include area compensatory payment s, reductions in administered prices also known as intervention prices , and annual land set aside program requirements. References CRS article Report for Congress Agriculture A Glossary of Terms, Programs, and Laws, 2005 Edition url http ncseonline.org nle crsreports 05jun 97 905.pdf author Jasper Womach DEFAULTSORT Arable Crops Program Category Agriculture by region ...   more details



  1. Parable of Arable Land

    Infobox Album See Wikipedia WikiProject Albums Name The Parable of Arable Land Type Album Artist The Red Crayola with the Familiar Ugly Cover Released 1967 Recorded Andrus Studio, Texas , March 1967 Genre Experimental rock , Psychedelic rock , Avant garde , Noise Rock Length 38 24 Label International Artists original release br Radar Records Radar 1978 UK release br Charly Records Charly 1988 UK reissue br Get Back Records Get Back Italian reissue Producer Lelan Rogers Reviews Allmusic Rating 3 5 Allmusic class album id r47686 pure url yes Piero Scaruffi Rating 9 10 http www.scaruffi.com vol2 redcrayo.html Chronology The Red Krayola Last album This album The Parable of Arable Land br 1967 Next album God Bless the Red Krayola and All Who Sail With It br 1968 The Parable of Arable Land 1967 is the first album by the Red Krayola , then known as the Red Crayola. The album is self described as a Free Form Freak Out, and remains one of the most infamous in their catalogue. A Free Form Freak Out segues each of the actual songs, often resurfacing again elsewhere within the songs. The songs introduce mainstay Mayo Thompson s signature style of abstract lyrics wed to minimalist and often avant garde melodies and rhythms. The album is also notable for instrumental cameos by label mate and 13th Floor Elevators frontman Roky Erickson . The Familiar Ugly The Familiar Ugly refers to the fifty or so friends of the band who provide the Free Form Freak Outs of which Erickson is a member . They were instructed by the band to play whatever they pleased. To demonstrate, the liner notes from one ... of the typical parentheses lifted directly from its own lyrics except for The Parable of Arable Land ... of Arable Land And the End Shall Be Signaled By The Breaking of a Twig 3 00 Free Form Freak Out ... credits pure url yes DEFAULTSORT Parable Of Arable Land Category Psychedelic rock albums Category ... albums it The Parable of Arable Land ...   more details



  1. IACR

    IACR may refer to International Association for Cryptologic Research Institute of Arable Crops Research Institute of Advanced Computer & Research disambig ...   more details



  1. Farm enterprise

    Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Orphan date December 2009 A farm enterprise is a component of a farm business. For example a farm may include an agronomy arable enterprise and a dairy enterprise. Category Agriculture DEFAULTSORT Farm Enterprise Agri stub ...   more details



  1. Small-scale agriculture

    Unreferenced date January 2009 cleanup date September 2011 agriculture Small scale agriculture is an alternative to factory farming or more broadly, intensive agriculture or unsustainable farming methods that are prevalent in primarily first world countries. Environmental Health Perspectives has noted that Sustainable agriculture is not merely a package of prescribed methods. More important, it is a change in mind set whereby agriculture acknowledges its dependence on a finite natural resource base including the finite quality of fossil fuel energy that is now a critical component of conventional farming systems. http ehp.niehs.nih.gov members 2002 110p445 456horrigan horrigan full.html sust Small scale agriculture includes a number of sustainable farm practices such as organic farming , which removes all chemical pesticides and fertilizer from agriculture permaculture , which provides a holistic methodology for farm design arable land arable land use , arable land from Latin arare , to plough is a form of agriculture agricultural land use , meaning land economics land that can be and is used for growing agriculture crops . David Ricardo incorporated the idea of arable land into economic theory . arable land non arable land use pastoral , pastoral refers to the lifestyle of shepherds and Pastoralism pastoralist s, moving livestock around larger areas of land according to seasons and availability of water and feed. rainfed agriculture biodynamic farming, was developed by Rudolf Steiner, which consists of using herbal and homeopathic preparations for the cow dung manure that is used extensively on the crops for fertilizer. The methods of food sustainability and economics are being hotly debated. This is a question between economics and the draining of the largely unaccounted natural capital . Dietary methods Some dietary methods may contribute to sustainability such as macrobiotic , vegan , vegetarianism or restricting animal products to those produced using the above ...   more details



  1. Farmland (disambiguation)

    Farmland generally refers to agricultural land , or land currently used for the purposes of farming . It may also refer to Arable land , land capable of cultivating crops Farmland, Indiana , a town in the United States Farmland Industries , founded in 1929 as the Union Oil Company, later renamed Consumers Cooperative Association CCA and Farmland Industries, Inc. Disambig de Farmland ...   more details



  1. Plaggen soil

    Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Plaggen is a type of soil created in Europe in the Middle Ages , as a result of so called plaggen cultivation , created by cutting turves of peat from an outfield area, and then using them as bedding for cattle the slurry soaked bedding was later spread on the arable fields as fertilizer. Over time, this created a very rich agricultural soil which could be over 1m in depth unlike our modern arable soils, which tend to be just 30  cm deep. In Orkney these soils were created already in the 12th to 13th Centuries, and on some islands in Shetland these methods continued to be used until the 1960s. DEFAULTSORT Plaggen Soil Category Soil science Category Types of soil Soil sci stub de Plaggenesch nl Anthrosol ...   more details



  1. Eàrlaid

    Orphan date February 2009 arlaid was the right sometimes sold by an outgoing to an incoming tenant to enter into possession of the arable land early in Spring season Spring the incomer doing the ploughing , sowing and planting, and subsequently claiming the resulting Crop agriculture crop . It is in vogue only in places where Whitsunday is the removal term for farmer s. References Dwelly arlaid DEFAULTSORT Earlaid Category Agriculture in Scotland Category Scots law Scotland law stub ...   more details



  1. 1609 in Ireland

    YearInIrelandNav 1609 Events Brockhill Taylor John Taylor is granted 1,500 acres 6  km of arable land in Ballyhaise , County Cavan . Kilkenny was granted a royal charter in 1609 by James I of England . Births William Tirry , Irish Catholic Martyrs martyred Roman Catholic priest, executed d. 1654 in Ireland 1654 . Category 1609 in Ireland Category 1600s in Ireland Category 1609 by country Ireland Category Years of the 17th century in Ireland Ireland hist stub DEFAULTSORT 1609 In Ireland ...   more details



  1. Kherlenbayan-Ulaan, Khentii

    Kherlenbayan Ulaan lang mn is a settlement in the Delgerkhaan, Khentii Delgerkhaan sum district of Khentii Province in eastern Mongolia . Kherlenbayan Ulaan is an arable farming center. coord 47 12 43 N 108 44 38 E display title region MN type city source GNS enwiki Category Populated places in Mongolia Mongolia geo stub mn ...   more details



  1. Golden Triangle (Finland)

    Orphan date February 2009 The golden triangle is an informal Finnish English term for the area of South western Finland between the cities of Helsinki , Turku , and Tampere where most of the country s population, arable land, and GDP is done. External links http www2.hs.fi english archive news.asp?id 20021209IE5 Half of Finland s regions experience natural net population loss, Helsingin Sanomat coord missing Finland DEFAULTSORT Golden Triangle Finland geo stub Category Geography of Finland ...   more details



  1. Musa Qala River

    unreferenced date September 2008 The Musa Qala is a river in Afghanistan . It is supporting the Helmand River and highly participates in the irrigation of arable lands of the district it is about 5 kilo meters crossing the district from east to west. coord missing Afghanistan Category Rivers of Afghanistan Afghanistan geo stub fr Musa Qala it Musa Qala fiume pnb ...   more details



  1. British NVC community OV17

    first A J year 1977 title A phytosociological survey of British arable weeds and related communities ...   more details



  1. Penton Mewsey

    Image Penton Mewsey Holy Trinity Church.jpg thumb Penton Mewsey Holy Trinity Church Penton Mewsey is a village in Hampshire , England . It is located 3 miles north west of Andover, Hampshire Andover at grid reference gbmappingsmall SU329474 . The village is home to approximately 400 people and has about 110 houses. The name Penton derives from the word Penitone , which is a word for a farm held at penny rent. Until the 1920 s the Pentons were mainly agricultural communities supporting sheep and corn, typical of northern Hampshire at the time. The Pentons are still surrounded by farmland which is currently completely arable land arable . Today, three stables provide the main village based commercial activities. The Holy Trinity church dates from the 14th century, although it was refurbished extensively in the 19th century. External links Commons category inline Penton Mewsey Category Villages in Hampshire coord 51.224775 1.528093 display title Hampshire geo stub pl Penton Mewsey ...   more details



  1. Mark system

    Unreferenced date March 2009 The mark system is a social organization that rests on the common tenure and common cultivation of the land by small groups of freemen. Both politically and economically the mark was an independent community, and its earliest members were doubtless blood relatives. In its origin the word is the same as mark or march, a boundary. First used in this sense, it was then applied to the land cleared by the settlers in the forest areas of Germany , and later it was used for the system which prevailed to what extent or for how long is uncertain in that country. It is generally assumed that the lands of the mark were divided into three portions forest , meadow and arable land arable , and as in the manorial system which was later in vogue elsewhere, a system of rotation of crops in two, three or even six fields was adopted, each member of the community having rights of pasture in the forest and the meadow, and a certain share of the arable. The mark was a self governing community. Its affairs were ordered by the marknien who met together at stated times in the markmoot. Soon, however, their freedom was encroached upon, and in the course of a very short time it disappeared altogether. Controversy The extent and nature of the mark system has been, and still is, a subject of controversy among historians. One school holds that it was almost universal in Germany that it was, in fact, the typical Teutons Teutonic method of holding and cultivating the land. From Germany, it is argued, it was introduced by the Angle and Saxon invaders into England , where it was extensively adopted, being the foundation upon which the prevailing land system in early England was built. An opposing school denies entirely the existence of the mark system, and a French writer, Fustel de Coulanges , refers to it contemptuously as a figment of the Teutonic imagination. This view is based largely upon the supposition that common ownership of the land was practically unknown amo ...   more details



  1. Tarialan, Khövsgöl

    NOTOC Tarialan lang mn , lit. arable land is a Sums of Mongolia sum of Kh vsg l Province Kh vsg l aimag . The area is 3,431 km , of which 1,582 km are pasture and 167 km are arable land 74 of Kh vsg l aimag total . In 2007, Tarialan had a population of 5,855 people largest rural sum in Kh vsg l aimag and 2nd most populous after the aimag capital M r n city M r n . The sum center, officially named Badrakh lang mn , in 2007 had 2,981 inhabitants and was the 2nd most populous settlement in the aimag after its capital. The sum center is located 160 km east of M r n city M r n and 521 km from Ulan Bator Ulaanbaatar . History The Tarialian sum was founded, together with the whole Kh vsg l aimag, in 1931. In 1933, it had 3,000 inhabitants in 908 households, and about 50,000 heads of livestock. In 1937, it became seat of a hay production base, which was expanded to a tractor base in 1938. The base became a state farm in 1943. Economy Arable farming is the basis of the sum economy, so population is dominantly settled in the sum centre. Minor part of the sum population is pastoral nomadic or seminomadic. In 2007, there were about 153,000 heads of livestock, among them 69,000 goat s, 59,000 sheep , 17,000 cattle and yak s, 8,000 horse s and 23 bactrian camel camel s. ref name Kh vsg l Yearbook 2007 http www.statis.mn portal content files comppmedia cxls0x45.xls Kh vsg l Aimag Statistical Yearbook 2007 ref Miscellaneous The place where Roman Ungern von Sternberg Baron Ungern was captured in August 1921 is today on the border between Tarialan and Teshig sum of Bulgan Province Bulgan aimag . References references Literature M. Nyamaa, Kh vsg l aimgiin lavlakh toli , Ulaanbaatar 2001, p. 129f coord 49 36 56 N 101 59 34 E region MN type city display title Districts of Kh vsg l Category Districts of Kh vsg l Province ga Tarialan Kh vsg l mk , mn ru ...   more details



  1. British NVC community OV1

    British NVC community OV1 Viola arvensis Aphanes microcarpa community is one of the Vegetation of open habitats in the British National Vegetation Classification system open habitat Terminology used in connection with the British National Vegetation Classification communities in the British National Vegetation Classification system. It is one of six arable weed and track side communities of light, less fertile acid soils. It is a widely distributed community. There are no Terminology used in connection with the British National Vegetation Classification subcommunities . Community composition The following Terminology used in connection with the British National Vegetation Classification constant species are found in this community Slender parsley piert Aphanes australis Annual meadow grass Poa annua Sheep s sorrel Rumex acetosella Field pansy Viola arvensis Two Terminology used in connection with the British National Vegetation Classification rare species are associated with the community Annual vernal grass Anthoxanthum aristatum Lesser quaking grass Briza minor Distribution This community is typically associated with arable crops on impoverished soils and is now very scarce, both because suitable soils have a localised distribution and because intensive cereal agriculture is not conducive to its development. It is found very locally, mostly in southern and eastern Britain, most often in fields of barley or fallow arable. References cite book last Rodwell first John S ed title Maritime communities and vegetation of open habitats url http www.cambridge.org gb knowledge isbn item5707753 ?site locale en GB series British Plant Communities volume vol 5 date March 2000 publisher Cambridge University Press isbn 978 0 521 39167 2 doi 10.2277 0521391679 NVC OV Category British National Vegetation Classification open habitat communities OV01 ...   more details



  1. British NVC community OV7

    British NVC community OV7 Veronica persica Veronica polita community is one of the Vegetation of open habitats in the British National Vegetation Classification system open habitat Terminology used in connection with the British National Vegetation Classification communities in the British National Vegetation Classification system. It is one of eight arable weed and wasteland communities of fertile loams and clays. It is a widespread community. There are no Terminology used in connection with the British National Vegetation Classification subcommunities . Community composition The following Terminology used in connection with the British National Vegetation Classification constant species are found in this community Black bindweed Fallopia convolvulus Fat hen Chenopodium album Scentless mayweed Tripleurospermum inodorum Matricaria perforata Knotgrass Polygonum aviculare Common chickweed Stellaria media Common field speedwell Veronica persica Grey field speedwell Veronica polita There are no Terminology used in connection with the British National Vegetation Classification rare species associated with the community. Distribution This is a weed community that is associated with annual arable crops on light, well drained, fertile soils, typically occurring patchily within and at the edges of such crops. It occurs widely in southern and eastern Britain and locally in coastal arable fields elsewhere. This community is essentially the same as the Veronico Lamietum hybridi assemblage of Kruseman & Vlieger 1939, though Lamium hybridum is not always present in the British community. References cite book last Rodwell first John S ed title Maritime communities and vegetation of open habitats url http www.cambridge.org gb knowledge isbn item5707753 ?site locale en GB series British Plant Communities volume vol 5 date March 2000 publisher Cambridge University Press isbn 978 0 521 39167 2 doi 10.2277 0521391679 cite journal last Kruseman first G coauthors Vlieger, J year 1939 tit ...   more details



  1. List of subsistence techniques

    list date February 2012 dablink This article is about techniques. For the 2006 video game, see Metal Gear Solid 3 Subsistence . Subsistence is the action or fact of maintaining or supporting oneself at a minimum level. The following is a list of subsistence economy subsistence techniques Hunter gatherer Hunting and Gathering techniques , also known as Foraging Artisan fishing a term which particularly applies to coastal or island ethnic groups using traditional techniques for subsistence fishing. Cultivation Horticulture plant cultivation, based on the use of simple tools. Subsistence agriculture Agriculture agricultural cultivation involving continuous use of Arable land arable crop land , and is more labor intensive than horticulture. Animal husbandry Pastoralism , the raising of grazing animals Pastoral nomad ism all members of the pastoral society follow the herd throughout the year. Transhumance or agro pastoralism part of the society follows the herd, while the other part maintains a home village. ranching Ranch agriculture non nomadic pastoralism with a defined territory. distribution business Distribution and wiktionary exchange Exchange Redistribution Norm of reciprocity Reciprocity exchange between social equals. Potlatch ing a widely studied ritual in which sponsors helped by their entourages gave away resources and manufactured wealth while generating prestige for themselves. LETS Local Exchange Trading Systems. See also Anthropological theories of value Staple food Society Category Agricultural economics ...   more details



  1. Friston

    Distinguish Friston, East Sussex Infobox UK place official name Friston country England region East of England os grid reference latitude 52.190 longitude 1.528 post town SAXMUNDHAM postcode area postcode district dial code shire county Suffolk hide services Yes website http www.friston.org.uk static image File St Mary Magdalene C of E, Friston geograph.org.uk 1436210.jpg 240px static image caption small St Mary Magdalene Church, Friston small Friston is a village in Suffolk , England . It is convert 3 mi 0 southeast of Saxmundham , its post town, and convert 4 mi 0 northwest of Aldeburgh . The River Alde bounds the village on the south. The surrounding land is chiefly Arable land arable . The soil becomes partly marshy in the lower grounds. The village is noted for its early nineteenth century Friston Windmill post mill . ref IoE 401005 ref Its name is recorded in the Domesday Book as Frisetuna and seems to come from Old English language Anglo Saxon Fr sa t n the farmstead of the Frisians Frisian s some of them may have come with the Angles and Saxons . References reflist External links Commons category inline Friston Suffolk Coastal Category Villages in Suffolk Category Civil parishes in Suffolk Suffolk geo stub nl Friston pl Friston sv Friston ...   more details



  1. Orovada (soil)

    Orovada series soil s are extensive in northern Nevada, where they have an extent of more than convert 360000000 acre in the Great Basin . They are common soils on semiarid rangeland with sagebrush grassland plant community plant communities . Orovada soils are Arable land arable , able to be cultivated, when irrigated and are considered prime farmland . Fact date March 2008 Alfalfa for hay and seed, winter wheat , barley , and Category Grasses of the United States grasses for hay and pasture are the principal crops grown on these soils. Orovada soils are well drained and formed in alluvium derived from mixed rock sources and in loess and volcanic ash . These soils typically occur in the Great Basin section of the Basin and Range physiographic province. Orovada series profile Surface layer light brownish gray sandy loam Subsurface layer light brownish gray loam Subsoil light gray fine sandy loam Substratum upper light brownish gray very fine sandy loam with carbonates Substratum lower pale brown silt loam with carbonates See also List of U.S. state soils External links http ortho.ftw.nrcs.usda.gov osd dat O OROVADA.html OROVADA series descritpion Category Soil in the United States Category Geology of Nevada Category Types of soil ...   more details



  1. Wincentów, Lubartów County

    other places Wincent w Infobox settlement name Wincent w settlement type Village total type   image flag image shield image map coordinates region PL subdivision type Countries of the world Country subdivision name POL subdivision type1 Voivodeships of Poland Voivodeship subdivision name1 Lublin Voivodeship Lublin subdivision type2 Powiat County subdivision name2 Lubart w County Lubart w subdivision type3 Gmina subdivision name3 Gmina Lubart w elevation m population total coordinates display title pushpin map Poland pushpin label position bottom latd 51 latm 25 lats 17 latNS N longd 22 longm 34 longs 53 longEW E website Wincent w IPAc pl w i n c e n t u f is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lubart w , within Lubart w County , Lublin Voivodeship , in eastern Poland. It consists of a scattering of farmsteads across flat wikt arable arable land to the west of highway 19. ref http www.rootsweb.com pollubel plubar lubar4j10.html Local website ref It lies approximately convert 6 km mi 0 south of Lubart w and convert 20 km mi 0 abbr on north of the regional capital Lublin . References reflist br Gmina Lubart w DEFAULTSORT Wincentow, Lubartow County Category Villages in Lubart w County Lubart w geo stub pl Wincent w powiat lubartowski ...   more details




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