1. Arrosage des prés, des terres, par des rigoles ou saignées qui amènent l'eau d'une rivière, d'un ruisseau, etc. Canaux d'irrigation.
2. (Médecine) Processus par lequel le sang est amené aux organes.
ETYM Latin irrigatio: cf. French irrigation.
Artificial water supply for dry agricultural areas by means of dams and channels. Drawbacks are that it tends to concentrate salts at the surface, ultimately causing soil infertility, and that rich river silt is retained at dams, to the impoverishment of the land and fisheries below them.
Irrigation has been practiced for thousands of years, in Eurasia as well as the Americas. An example is the channeling of the annual Nile flood in Egypt, which has been done from earliest times to its present control by the Aswan High Dam.
1. Supplying dry land with water by means of ditches etc.
2. (Medicine) Cleaning a wound or body organ by flushing or washing out with water or a medicated solution.