SDE BOGER, Israel ? The archeological remains of Avdat seem like a strange place to study farming.
The site ? a camel caravan stop built by the Nabateans more than 2,000 years ago in the Negev Desert ? sits in the middle of a vast, dry desert. Hard brown loess lightly sprinkled with stunted shrubs and bleak weeds stretches for miles.
The only substantial greenery is clustered at a farm irrigated by desalinated water piped miles away from the coast and a roadside McDonald?s. It looks like Arizona on a bad day.
But Hendrik Bruins, a professor of the Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research and the Swiss Institute for Dryland Environmental Research, implores observers to take a closer look. Some of those scraggly shrubs grow in straight lines. Notice the random, low wall peeking out of the crust.
Nearly half of the world?s population lives in dry lands, and deserts are expanding. What can be done to reverse the tide?
Soon, it becomes apparent. This isn?t pristine desert. The bush geometry in the region is a remnant of an extensive terraced agricultural system. Growing grapes or wheat in the region requires a minimum of 300 millimeters of water and Avdat only gets 85 millimeters of rain a year. The terraced walls stood 300 millimeters tall, just enough to support the local ancient wineries.
Could the system, or some element of it, be revived?
?This started as experimental archeology, but it has become practical,? Bruins said.
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Source: http://feeds.wired.com/~r/wired/index/~3/-QQDrogDoe4/
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