GENERAL DEFINITION OF THE TECHNIQUE Protection of Spontaneous Vegetation

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GENERAL DEFINITION OF THE TECHNIQUE TKWB
Technique: Protection of Spontaneous Vegetation

DEFINITION CHARACTERS DESCRIPTION AND DIFFUSION

People from the Paleolithic period created the first artifical irrigation systems and harvested water from caves while also replenishing spontaneous vegetation. 

GENERAL CHARACTERS DESCRIPTION AND DIFFUSION

The Palaeolithic people harvested drinking water in the cave-dwellings and on the stone paving and created dams and ditches to favour spontaneous vegetation and the practice of fishing. They used to dig pools under the stalactites in the caves to harvest and store drinking water dripping from the rocks. In the proximity of the areas where useful wild herbs grew, they dug out pits and little streams, on slopes or before caves, in order to replenish spontaneous vegetation and improve its yield by creating the first artificial irrigation system (Drower, 1954). 

ADVANTAGES AND SUSTAINABILITY

TRADITIONAL TECHNIQUE DATA

Technique
Protection of Spontaneous Vegetation
Icon
Cathegory
A - Silviculture, breeding, hunting and harvesting
Identification code
A2
 
Local applications of the technique
 
Success stories
 
Innovative technologies and solutions

RELATED TECHNIQUES

Author:
IPOGEA
Reference:
www.ipogea.org
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