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Weather components and weather instruments
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⢠Agriculture is growing of crops and keeping of animals. ⢠People who practice agriculture are called farmers. ⢠Agriculture is very important to the family. Benefits to the family ⢠It provides food. ⢠It provides money. ⢠Agriculture gives us medicine. ⢠It provides jobs. ⢠Agriculture gives us transport and power. ⢠It helps most families become self sufficient. ⢠Farm tools are instruments used on farms to make work easier. ⢠They are usually handheld and are used frequently when practicing agricultural activities. ⢠Farm tools are light in weight, easy to handle and are suited to the strength of the farmer Name of tool Picture Use Watering can For fine watering of seed beds bucket Carrying manure, fertilizer,seed and ripe crops Name of tool Picture Use Sickle Cutting grass and harvesting of cereals like rice and wheat Slasher Cutting down tall grass and weeds USES OF FARM TOOLS Name of tool Picture Use Garden trowel Transplanting seedlings and making planting holes Hand fork Shallow cultivation of soil Aerating the soil USES OF FARM TOOLS Name of tool Picture Use Shovel Loading and offloading soil or manure into a wheelbarrow, scotch cart or truck Spade Digging and turning over of moist soil USES OF FARM TOOLS Name of tool Picture Use Garden fork Loosening and turn soil Garden line Marking straight ridges and garden beds USES OF FARM TOOLS Name of tool Picture Use wheelbarrow Moving items around the farm Items such as soil, mulch, animal feed. Etc Knapsack sprayer Spraying pesticides and herbicides Spraying fertilizers on crops. ⢠An inventory is a record of the things that you have. ⢠This is a list of tools issued out and tools received back and from whom Inventory of farm tools Inventory record sheets Created by Date Name of tool Sheet Tool numbenumber Description r Location Quantity Spade 1/15 Black,wooden handle Store room 2 SAFETY IN AGRICULTURE ⢠Agricultural activities can be dangerous. ⢠Hazards involved results in injury, disability and death of people and animals. ⢠The hazards are usually caused by physical injury and chemical poisoning. Common hazards in Agriculture 1. physical injury These include: ⢠Injury caused by accidents during use of farm tools, equipment and machinery. ⢠Misuse and improper storage of farm tools and equipment. ⢠Being kicked by animals. ⢠Drowning in farm pond, pool or dam. Common hazards in Agriculture 2 . Chemical poisoning These include: ⢠Spraying without protective clothing. ⢠Eating or smoking when spraying chemicals. ⢠Dumping toxic chemical left overs on land and in water. ⢠Eating agriculture produces without prior permission from adults. ⢠Pesticides, herbicides and fertilizers pollute water sources and kill animals. Chemical poisoning Ways of preventing common agricultural hazards 1. Wear protective clothing such as gloves, gumboots, respirator, hat and overalls. 2. Do not eat, drink or smoke when spraying. 3. Dispose off all chemical remains safely. 4. Bury or burn empty chemical containers and chemical left overs. 5. Wash thoroughly with running water and soap after using chemicals. 6. Do not spray during windy days. 7. Handle tools the right way. 8. Fence farm ponds and dams. Ways of preventing common agricultural hazards Climate and Landuse Seasons of Zimbabwe Seasons of Zimbabwe Definition of terms ⢠A season is a time of the year with almost the same weather patterns. ⢠Weather is the state of the atmosphere at a particular time at a particular place. ⢠it is the daily condition of air around us. ⢠Seasons are determined by rainfall and temperature. Seasons of Zimbabwe ⢠There are four seasons in Zimbabwe , which are: 1.The rain season 2.Post rain season 3.Cool dry season 4.Hot dry season Seasons of Zimbabwe 1.The rain season ( summer) ⢠It is also called the hot- wet season. ⢠The season begins in mid November to mid March. ⢠The period is rainy and hot. ⢠Dams and rivers fill up. Seasons of Zimbabwe 2 . The post rain season ( autumn ) ⢠It starts mid March ā May ⢠The days are bright and sunny. ⢠The leaves change from green to red, orange, yellow or brown before falling. ⢠In addition, there is less sunlight because the days are shorter. ⢠It is the harvesting period of most crops. Seasons of Zimbabwe 3. The cold dry season ( winter ) ⢠It begins mid May ā mid August ⢠The mornings, evenings and nights are very cold. ⢠Has short days and long nights. Seasons of Zimbabwe 4 . The hot season (spring ) ⢠It begins mid August ā mid November. ⢠The days are very hot with cool nights. ⢠A season for trees to develop new shoots. Summer Activities Agricultural activities done during the rain season includes: ⢠Ploughing and planting of summer crops for example maize, cotton. ⢠Weeding ⢠Pest and disease control ⢠Applying fertilizers. ⢠Weekly dipping of animals because ticks, lice and mites would be many. ⢠Harvesting of summer crops ⢠Preparing fireguards. A fireguard is a fire break. ⢠Beginning of the planting of wheat, barley and oats.ā Winter Activities ⢠Planting of winter crops such as wheat, barley and oats. ⢠Harvesting and selling of summer crops continues. ⢠Constructing frost barriers for frost sensitive crops such as tomatoes. ⢠Vaccinating animals against blackleg. ⢠Supplementary feeding of grazing animals. ⢠Dosing of animals to kill internal parasites. Spring Activities ⢠Shelling and threshing of grain crops. ⢠Dry planting of summer crops. ⢠Carrying manure to fields. ⢠Ploughing and harrowing. ⢠Making planting holes Soil Components ā¢Soil is made up of 4 components: 1)Mineral matter 2)Organic matter 3)Soil water 4)Soil air
Southeast Asia, vast region of Asia situated east of the Indian subcontinent and south of China. It consists of two dissimilar portions: a continental projection (commonly called mainland Southeast Asia) and a string of archipelagoes to the south and east of the mainland (insular Southeast Asia). Extending some 700 miles (1,100 km) southward from the mainland into insular Southeast Asia is the Malay Peninsula; this peninsula structurally is part of the mainland, but it also shares many ecological and cultural affinities with the surrounding islands and thus functions as a bridge between the two regions. Mainland Southeast Asia is divided into the countries of Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar (Burma), Thailand, Vietnam, and the small city-state of Singapore at the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula; Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam, which occupy the eastern portion of the mainland, often are collectively called the Indochinese Peninsula. Malaysia is both mainland and insular, with a western portion on the Malay Peninsula and an eastern part on the island of Borneo. Except for the small sultanate of Brunei (also on Borneo), the remainder of insular Southeast Asia consists of the archipelagic nations of Indonesia and the Philippines. Southeast Asia stretches some 4,000 miles at its greatest extent (roughly from northwest to southeast) and encompasses some 5,000,000 square miles (13,000,000 square km) of land and sea, of which about 1,736,000 square miles is land. Mount Hkakabo in northern Myanmar on the border with China, at 19,295 feet (5,881 meters), is the highest peak of mainland Southeast Asia. Although the modern nations of the region are sometimes thought of as being small, they areāwith the exceptions of Singapore and Bruneiācomparatively large. Indonesia, for example, is more than 3,000 miles from west to east (exceeding the west-east extent of the continental United States) and more than 1,000 miles from north to south; the area of Laos is only slightly smaller than that of the United Kingdom; and Myanmar is considerably larger than France. All of Southeast Asia falls within the tropical and subtropical climatic zones, and much of it receives considerable annual precipitation. It is subject to an extensive and regular monsoonal weather system (i.e., one in which the prevailing winds reverse direction every six months) that produces marked wet and dry periods in most of the region. Southeast Asiaās landscape is characterized by three intermingled physical elements: mountain ranges, plains and plateaus, and water in the form of both shallow seas and extensive drainage systems. Of these, the rivers probably have been of the greatest historical and cultural significance, for waterways have decisively shaped forms of settlement and agriculture, determined fundamental political and economic patterns, and helped define the nature of Southeast Asiansā worldview and distinctive cultural syncretism. It also has been of great importance that Southeast Asia, which is the most easily accessible tropical region in the world, lies strategically astride the sea passage between East Asia and the Middle EasternāMediterranean world. Within this broad outline, Southeast Asia is perhaps the most diverse region on Earth. The number of large and small ecological niches is more than matched by a staggering variety of economic, social, and cultural niches Southeast Asians have developed for themselves; hundreds of ethnic groups and languages have been identified. Under these circumstances, it often is difficult to keep in mind the regionās underlying unity, and it is understandable that Southeast Asia should so often be treated as a miscellaneous collection of cultures that simply do not quite fit anywhere else. Roofs of the Forbidden City, Beijing, China Britannica Quiz All About Asia Yet from ancient times Southeast Asia has been considered by its neighbors to be a region in its own right and not merely an extension of their own lands. The Chinese called it Nanyang and the Japanese NanāyÅ, both names meaning āSouth Seas,ā and South Asians used such terms as SuvarnabhÅ«mi (Sanskrit: āLand of Goldā) to describe the area. Modern scholarship increasingly has yielded evidence of broad commonalities uniting the peoples of the region across time. Studies in historical linguistics, for example, have suggested that the vast majority of Southeast Asian languagesāeven many of those previously considered to have separate originsāeither sprang from common roots or have been long and inseparably intertwined. Despite inevitable variation among societies, common views of gender, family structure, and social hierarchy and mobility may be discerned throughout mainland and insular Southeast Asia, and a broadly common commercial and cultural inheritance has continued to affect the entire region for several millennia. These and other commonalities have yet to produce a conscious or precise Southeast Asian identity, but they have given substance to the idea of Southeast Asia as a definable world region and have provided a framework for the comparative study of its components.
Weather
110.31.b.17.C
Topic: Reading/Vocabulary Development
STAAR English II High School 2014 - Past Paper
110.31.b.1.B
STAAR English I High School 2017 - Past Paper