History, asked by 4team, 4 months ago

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Answered by shristipal
1

Answer:

Shifting cultivation is an agricultural system in which a person uses a piece of land, only to abandon or alter the initial use a short time later. This system of agriculture is often practised at the level of an individual or family, but sometimes may involve an entire village. ...

And practised

For thousands of years, and continuing today, native peoples of the Amazon basin have practiced traditional shifting cultivation, which combines farming with forested habitats. Shifting cultivation, sometimes called swidden or slash and burn, is commonly found throughout the Amazon and other tropical regions worldwide.....

Answered by deveshkumar9563
1

Explanation:

Shifting Cultivation

Shifting cultivation is a mode of farming long followed in the humid tropics of Sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, and South America. In the practice of “slash and burn”, farmers would cut the native vegetation and burn it, then plant crops in the exposed, ash-fertilized soil for two or three seasons in succession. As the original organic matter reserve in the topsoil decomposed and as the high rainfall would leach out the nutrients from the root zone, the farmers would abandon the cleared plot and move to an adjacent patch of forest.

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