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Irrigation
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Irrigation sits at the intersection of environmental science, agriculture, history, and anthropology, making it a subject that appears across disciplines from geography and civil engineering to archaeology and cultural studies. It concerns the controlled application of water to land for crop production and has shaped human civilization since ancient times. Students engage with it as a lens for examining how societies manage natural resources, sustain populations, and develop technologies in response to environmental constraints. Because water access has driven both cooperation and conflict throughout history, irrigation raises genuinely complex questions about economy, governance, and ecological impact.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Historical and civilizational analyses examine how ancient societies organized water management across multiple periods, tracing the economic and agricultural foundations of early civilizations including ancient Egypt. Ethnographic and regional approaches appear as well, with studies of specific communities such as the Basseri of Iran exploring how water use connects to social organization. Hydrogeological case studies, such as aquifer analyses in Texas, represent a more technical angle, while cultural perspectives on water — including Hopi relationships between moisture, ancestors, and rain — show how irrigation can be studied through indigenous worldviews. Health-focused papers also appear, as irrigated environments can affect disease transmission.

A strong essay on irrigation benefits from a clearly bounded thesis — focusing on one region, period, or problem rather than attempting a global survey. Evidence drawn from archaeological records, hydrological data, or ethnographic fieldwork tends to carry the most weight depending on the discipline. A common pitfall is treating irrigation purely as a technical subject while neglecting the social, political, and cultural systems that determine who controls water and who benefits from it.

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Paper Undergraduate
Nile River and Ancient Egypt
The Nile River is the "blood life and backbone" of the Egyptian way of life. The river prevented this area in northeast Africa from being just a continuation of the wasteland known as the Sahara Desert (Ashcroft, NDI).
Thesis Doctorate
Rhizobium Bacteria in Soybeans
The microorganism, Bradyrhizobiumjaponicum, displays a symbiotic relationship with soybean plants. There are different factors that may affect the relationship of this microorganism with plant biomass. These factors may be pH, temperature, the nutrition status and density of soil. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of different soil treatments, in different soil types, on nodule formation and the dry weight of the plant. For this purpose, soil samples were collected from three locations, namely, at a forest, near a stream and potted soil. Each sample was then analyzed with a hydrometer and classified to a soil type. The forest soil was of clay loam type, the pot soil was loam soil and the stream sample was loamy sand. The samples were subjected to different treatments, such as sterilization and inoculation. The dry weight and number of nodules on each soil type was measured. Results showed that the greatest number of nodules were in plants that were grown in soil samples grown from the stream and least for samples collected from the forest. However, no direct relationship was observed between the number of nodules and dry weight of plants. Moreover, according to observations, the most important factor in determining nodule formation and dry weight of plants was inoculation. These results provide a significant insight to certain factors that may enhance nodule formation and crop yield.
Research Paper Doctorate
History of the Pacific Northwest
¶ … History of the Pacific Northwest [...] how representative the lives of Mary Arkwright Hutton, Annie Pike Greenwood, and Teiko Tomita were considering the racial and class tensions of the twentieth century.
Research Paper Doctorate
Humanities: history, theory, and disciplinary approaches
¶ … endangered species' means any species which is in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range other than a species of the Class Insect a determined by the Secretary to constitute a pest…
Paper Undergraduate
Geology concepts and applications
Water is an important resource of earth and an inevitable requirement of life. There is no life without water; regardless it is human life, animal life or plant life. Water is mandatory for all kinds of life and it is no exaggeration to mention that if life ends, no activity is required on the face of earth. So it is a valid statement that water is life.
Paper Undergraduate
Professional Portfolio Develop a Marketing Portfolio for an Adult Nurse Practitioner Position
Adult Nurse Practitioner Marketing Portfolio
Research Paper Undergraduate
Gray water systems and household water reuse applications
As the world's population continues to grow, there will be an ever greater need for potable or purified water. Most people are completely unaware of just how big the problem of world water consumption is because they…
Paper Doctorate
Peri-implantitis: inflammation and clinical implications of dental implants
Infections of the implantation area the mainly widespread of the dental implant complications. Implant infection is a state which is known as peri-implantitis which has a sign of swelling or inflammation of the tissues…
Paper Undergraduate
Myanmar FDI Entry Into Foreign
The objective of this study is to examine whether Cameron International Corporation with revenues of $6,134.8 million (FY 2010), net profit of $562.9 million (FY 2010) and an operating profit of $858.5 (FY 2010), provides flow equipment and pressure control equipment for both land and sea oil rigs should make an entry into the Myanmar, formerly the Burma market. The pros and cons of entry into this market will be examined.
Paper Doctorate
California's natural resources and economic development
This is a paper on the natural resources that are fond within California and the various management and exploitation and use of these resources are concerned. It looks at the extent to which these resources contribute to the economy of California, the regional accumulation of the wealth as well as the prospecting process.