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      • Tumbleweeds were already a detested farming pest and fire threat back in the late 19th century, but that didn’t stop them from becoming immortalized in 20th-century Western movies as rugged roamers, symbols of our national reverence for resilient individualism, wide-open spaces, and rambling frontier freedom.
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  1. Feb 7, 2022 · They may be romantic symbols of our national love affair with the Wild West, but tumbleweeds are also invasive weeds called Russian thistle, and many modern-day Westerners fear they’re taking...

    • Sidney Stevens
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  3. Aug 2, 2023 · When we think of the symbol of tumbleweed, we often imagine a dried-up, rolling mass of plant matter being blown across the desert. However, the symbol of tumbleweed actually has a deeper cultural significance than just being an image of a plant swept away by the wind.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TumbleweedTumbleweed - Wikipedia

    A tumbleweed is a structural part of the above-ground anatomy of a number of species of plants. It is a diaspore that, once mature and dry, detaches from its root or stem and rolls due to the force of the wind.

  5. Aug 1, 2017 · So just how did the tumbleweed come to symbolize the American West? Old Western films can take much of the credit. In them, tumbleweeds were often made to exemplify the cowboy spirit—individualist, self-reliant, and unafraid to traverse the wilderness alone.

    • Elizabeth Nicholas
  6. The arrival and spread of Russian thistle is considered to be one of the fastest plant invasions in the history of the United States. Today the plant is found in all states except Alaska and Florida. Tumbleweeds in a roadside ditch in Haskell County, Kansas, being burned in 1941.

  7. How did an invader from the Russian steppes become a symbol of the American West?

  8. Jan 10, 2018 · By 1895, just 35 years from the time they arrived in South Dakota, tumbleweeds reached the coastlines, from New Jersey to California. In the times before plowed fields, tumbleweeds would have been stopped in their tracks by native prairie grass.

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