River civilization
|
|
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2012) |
A river civilization or river culture is an agricultural nation or civilization at a river. River civilizations are civilizations based around rivers. Some common examples are Ancient Egypt (Nile), the fertile crescent (Tigris/Euphrates), Ancient China (Yellow River) and Ancient India (Indus).
Rivers provide a steady supply of drinking water. It also makes the land fertile for growing crops. Moreover, goods and people could be transported easily, and the people in these civilizations could hunt the animals that came to drink water. Also, they could catch fish in the rivers.
In addition, survival techniques call for those lost in the wilderness to return to civilization by travelling downstream, where centers of human population tend to concentrate.
References
- Clayton, Peter A. & Dent, John (1973). The Ancient River Civilizations: Western Man & the Modern World. Elsevier. ISBN 13: 9780080172095
| This history article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
Read in another language
This page is available in 2 languages
