History, asked by chauhankartik0888, 10 months ago

Why do we say that if was not natural fertility but high levels of food production that were the causes of early urbanization

Answers

Answered by sauravchintu08
29

Answer:

Explanation:

Answer: The early urbanization developed in Mesopotamia. It did not happen in the agriculturally fertile north-east rather it happened in the south. We have read that a city develops as a result of interdependencies among people for various economic activities. This only happens when people cease to be self-sufficient in terms of economic activities. It was not possible in naturally fertile land where food production could be the only or main economic activity. Examples of many earliest cities give concrete proof for this. So, it is said that it was not natural fertility and high levels of food production which were the causes of early urbanization.

Answered by Anonymous
9

Answer:

Natural fertility refers the ability of mass to reproduce naturally without using any artificial and external means. Food production on the other hand refers to the ability of the society to produce their own food so it is available for the generation.

When we speak of urbanization, people migrate from rural to urban areas in search of food, facilities and shelter. In present time, this trend has also continued as even today people move from rural areas to urban areas in search of better job opportunities and living conditions.

Living conditions also refers to the availability of food resources for the people who migrate to the urban regions. As the mass or people are now living in the urban areas so they also look forward to reproduce and grow their numbers for their family.

Places that have better access to all services including food, employment and health services are usually selected by the people for settlement. So it is just not fertility and food sources, but other factors play a major role as well for urbanization.

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