Agricultural
Dirt: More than Meets the Eye
Crop Designs
Waterways
Ecosystems
100

Agriculture that does not deplete the soil faster than it forms.

What is sustainable agriculture?

100

Sediment consisting of particles less than 0.002 mm in diameter.

What is a clay?

100

The practice of plowing furrows sideways across a hillside, perpendicular to its slope, to help prevent the formation of rills and gullies.

What is contour farming?

100

Arctic, Atlantic, Indian, Pacific, and Southern oceans

 What are the main oceans on Earth?

100

the variety of life in the world or in a particular habitat or ecosystem.

What is biodiveristy?

200

Food producing practices that rely on biological approaches such as composting and biological pest control


What is organic agriculture?

200

The continuous mass of solid rock that makes up the Earth's crust.

What is bedrock?

200

Planting different types of crops in alternating bands or other spatially mixed arrangements.

What is Intercropping?

200

It’s a land area that channels rainfall and snowmelt to creeks, streams, and rivers, and eventually to outflow points such as reservoirs, bays, and the ocean

What is a watershed

200

a species on which other species in an ecosystem largely depend, such that if it were removed the ecosystem would change drastically.

What is a keystone species?

300

Fish farming

What is aquaculture?

300

A distinct layer of soil.

What is a soil horizon?

300

The uniform planting of a single crop over large areas.

What is monoculture?

300

212 Degrees F

What is waters boiling point?

300

a semi-arid, shrub-dominated collaboration of hard-leaved, woody plants shaped by Mediterranean climate (wet winters, hot, dry summers) and sporadic fires, consisting of summer-drought-tolerant plants and hard sclerophyllous evergreen leaves.

What is Chapparal?

400

Agriculture in which humans and animal muscle power, along with hand tools and simple machines, perform the work of cultivating, harvesting, storing, and distributing crops.

What is traditional agriculture?

400

The base geological material in a particular location.

What is parent material.

400

Agriculture that does not involve tilling. The most intense for of conservation tillage.

What is no till?

400

 a reduction in the pH of the ocean over an extended period of time, caused primarily by uptake of carbon dioxide (CO 2) from the atmosphere.

What is ocean acidification?

400

Organisms that modify, maintain and/or create habitat

What are ecosystem engineers?

500

A form of agriculture that uses large scale mechanization and fossil fuel combustion to cultivate, harvest, transport, etc.

What is industrial agriculture?

500

The range of number of microorganism species in 1 gram of soil.

6,000-50,000

500

A row of trees or other tall perennial plants that are placed along the edges of farm fields to break the wind, and therefore minimize wind erosion.

What are shelterbelts?

500

the excessive richness of nutrients in a lake or other body of water, frequently due to runoff from the land, which causes a dense growth of plant life and death of animal life from lack of oxygen.

What is eutrophication?

500

artificial, terrestrial, lentic and lotic.

What are the four ecosystem types?