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  2. Oct 27, 2009 · Learn about the Dust Bowl, a devastating drought and dust storm crisis that hit the Great Plains in the 1930s. Find out how federal policies, farming practices and weather conditions contributed to the disaster and its impacts on the region and the nation.

    • One monster dust storm reached the Atlantic Ocean. While “black blizzards” constantly menaced Plains states in the 1930s, a massive dust storm 2 miles high traveled 2,000 miles before hitting the East Coast on May 11, 1934.
    • The Dust Bowl was both a manmade and natural disaster. Beginning with World War I, American wheat harvests flowed like gold as demand boomed. Lured by record wheat prices and promises by land developers that “rain follows the plow,” farmers powered by new gasoline tractors over-plowed and over-grazed the southern Plains.
    • The ecosystem disruption unleashed plagues of jackrabbits and grasshoppers. If the dust storms that turned daylight to darkness weren’t apocalyptic enough, seemingly biblical plagues of jackrabbits and grasshoppers descended on the Plains and destroyed whatever meager crops could grow.
    • Proposed solutions were truly out-of-the-box. There were few things desperate Dust Bowl residents didn’t try to make it rain. Some followed the old folklore of killing snakes and hanging them belly-up on fences.
  3. Jun 19, 2024 · In the northern coniferous forests are found moose, woodland caribou, Canada lynx, and gray wolves (timber wolves). The region is not without its share of insect pests, such as the locust and the tiny chigger. Dust Bowl, both the drought period lasting from 1930 to 1936 in the U.S.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Dust_BowlDust Bowl - Wikipedia

    Dust Bowl conditions fomented an exodus of the displaced from the Texas Panhandle, Oklahoma Panhandle, and the surrounding Great Plains to adjacent regions. More than 500,000 Americans were left homeless. More than 350 houses had to be torn down after one storm alone.

  5. Nineteen states in the heartland of the United States became a vast dust bowl. With no chance of making a living, farm families abandoned their homes and land, fleeing westward to become migrant laborers.

  6. Timeline: The Dust Bowl. For nearly a decade, drought gripped the Great Plains. Explore a timeline of events. Along the highway near Bakersfield, California. Dust bowl refugees, Nov. 1935....

  7. Oct 19, 2023 · The Dust Bowl. Drought, wind, and poor farming practices created the Dust Bowl, but the economic disaster is caused led to much needed land-use reforms. Map by National Geographic Society.

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