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slash-and-burn cultivation

Cutting down trees and other vegetation in a patch of forest, leaving the cut vegetation on the ground to dry, and then burning it. The ashes that are left add nutrients to the nutrient-poor soils found in most tropical forest areas. Crops are planted between tree stumps. Plots must be abandoned after a few years (typically 2-5 years) because of loss of soil fertility or invasion of vegetation from the surrounding forest. See also shifting cultivation.

Subject: 
Environmental Science [1]
Vocabulary: 
Chapter 2 - Environmental History, an Overview [2]

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Links
[1] https://course-notes.org/subject/environmental_science [2] https://course-notes.org/vocabulary/chapter_2_environmental_history