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Report on various types of soil in Qatar released
Sunday, October 16, 2005 8:03 AM PDT |
Report on various types of soil in Qatar released Gulf Times Sun, 16 Oct 2005 2:36 AM PDT Staff Reporter THE Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Agriculture (MMAA) has released the first comprehensive scientific study on soil in Qatar titled ‘The Atlas of Soil for the State of Qatar’, brought out by the department of agriculture and water research at the ministry. | Agriculture and Intercultural Dialogue IPP Media Sat, 15 Oct 2005 10:13 PM PDT In the Adam and Eve era was there hunger? Did they use fertilizers, pesticides or machines to ensure they realised a bumper harvest or increased production? Why do we now have food shortages from time to time? | Carolina Bays Show Biological Diversity AP via Yahoo! News Sat, 15 Oct 2005 6:49 PM PDT It may not have the beauty of a waterfall or waves crashing on the beach, but few places on the Southeast shore can match the variety found inside the mysterious shallow depressions along the coastal plains called Carolina Bays. | We must adapt to climate change - or die Independent Online Sun, 16 Oct 2005 6:51 AM PDT The National Climate Change Conference will be the meeting place for top scientists from Africa and the rest of the world to discuss the threat of climate change in South Africa and the sub-continent. | Sustainable farming can feed the world Swissinfo Sun, 16 Oct 2005 1:46 AM PDT On World Food Day, Swiss agricultural specialist Hans Rudolf Herren tells swissinfo that hunger can be overcome if farming practices are improved. | City residents buying farmland some even to farm AG Weekly Sat, 15 Oct 2005 9:08 PM PDT Pushing wheelbarrows full of home-equity or low-interest mortgages, more people all across America are heading for the countryside -- to raise animals, to experience life in the rough, sometimes even to grow a crop or two. | Farmers fret over fertilizer costs as natural gas prices soar Lincoln Journal Star Sat, 15 Oct 2005 10:03 PM PDT Dave Nielsen just spent nearly $14,000 to fertilize his crops, an amount he never could have imagined when he started farming 20 years ago. But the $410 a ton Nielsen paid is symptomatic of the crunch farmers are feeling this year as the cost of fertilizer soars. |
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