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Gaining from the deserts Chapter 18

Gaining from the deserts

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Gaining from the deserts. Chapter 18. Irrigation. The Aswan Dam Project. The river flooded farm lands at times but at other times no water was received. This was unreliable for the farmers. The River Nile flows through Egypt which is a country in Africa. Where. Problem. 4 positives - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Gaining from the deserts

Gaining from the deserts

Chapter 18

Page 2: Gaining from the deserts

Irrigation

Page 3: Gaining from the deserts

The Aswan Dam Project

Page 4: Gaining from the deserts
Page 5: Gaining from the deserts

The Nile

Problem

Whe

re

Solut

ion

Other details4 positivesClean waterIrrigationTransportTourismElectric powerFishing

4 negativesBuying fertilizers90,000 move homeTombs floodedSalt water on land

The river flooded farm lands at times but at other times no water was received. This was unreliable for the farmers.

The River Nile flows through Egypt which is a country in Africa.

The Aswan Dam was built to control the flow of the river waters. Water was available for irrigation.

Worlds largest dam½ km wideLake Nasser: artificial lakeProvides energy for people of Egypt.

Page 6: Gaining from the deserts

Two sides of the Aswan Dam story

Pick out the main detail in each

Page 7: Gaining from the deserts

102

Page 8: Gaining from the deserts

Aswan Dam

project, Egypt

River Nile flooded

sometimes and did not

supply enough regular water to farms at other times

Aswan Dam built in 1960.

½ km wide creating a

large artificial lake called

Lake Nasser.

Water pumped from Lake Nasser to

farmlands to irrigate the

land and help crops grow.

Building the dam has left positive and

negative effects on the

people and land of Egypt

Page 9: Gaining from the deserts