A
plough is a farm implement that turns over the upper layer of
soil, bringing fresh nutrients to the surface as part of preparation for sowing seeds or planting. In early agriculture, soil was turned by hand using
digging sticks and
hoes. The first animal-drawn plough was the
ard, with the earliest evidence of a ploughed field dating to the
Indus Valley Civilisation site of
Kalibangan from around 2800 B.C. Wheels were introduced by
Celtic peoples during the Roman era, and the mouldboard plough, a major innovation in plough technology, was invented in the 18th century. Modern ploughs are usually reversible ploughs, mounted on a
tractor.
This painting, Ploughing in the Nivernais, was completed by the French artist Rosa Bonheur in 1849 and is now in the Musée d'Orsay in Paris.Painting: Rosa Bonheur