The National Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) was established in 1933 in response to a catastrophic event in the Southern Great Plains region know as the “Dust Bowl” or “Dirty Thirties”. In 1869‚ the railroad made its way to the Great Plains and became home to the many early settlers who took advantage of the “free soil” or land tracts offered by the government via the Homestead Act; a bill enacted in hopes to curb slave labor and increase the number of individual farmers who owned and operated
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The Cause of the Dust Bowl and the Effect on Agriculture In the early 1930s‚ a severe drought struck the region‚ drying the upper layers of already extremely loose topsoil. Heavy windstorms declined‚ carrying the dust in thick black clouds. These black clouds were so dark that livestock were sometimes fooled into thinking that night had come. The dust collected in huge drifts‚ sometimes covering homes and farms‚ and once productive farmland became dry. Citizens of the affected regions started
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the flow of liquid heads toward low elevation areas (Belnap‚ Field‚ Munson 2). Although higher elevations are few and far in-between leveling the land at a higher ground at one end would have drained water into more starved crops during and after the dust storms occurred and possibly managing to support vegetation for a longer period during one of the worst man-made environmental disasters ever recorded. Data has also shown that over the Atlantic Ocean the temperature was much warmer than usual for
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Climate was the biggest reason leading The Dust Bowl occurred‚ the climate of The Great Plain’s region consists of an average of less than 20 inches of precipitation per year and winds normally reach the speed of 60 miles per hour. Scientists believed that the drought that caused the Dust Bowl Era between 1930 and 1937 occurred because of a La Niña event in the Pacific Ocean. Where cool ocean surface temperatures reduced the amount of moisture entering the jet stream and directed it south to the
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“Dust Bowl Refugee” is a song written by Woody Guthrie concerning the struggles of migrants‚ particularly those trying to escape the economic and ecological disaster known as the Dust Bowl this is certainly an appropriate song for discussing class and social identity of a Southern community effected by migration‚ because although Southern identity is not directly referenced in the song‚ many Southerners experienced the kinds of things to which this song refers. It affected the entire nation and created
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Michael Clagett Mr. Ben Demuth‚ Ms. Katie Noll World History‚ English I 6 January 2016 The Dust Bowl Did you know that the Dust Bowl was one of the most devastating events in the history of the United States? The Dust bowl helped improve agriculture in the U.S. The Dust Bowl was also known as the Dirty Thirties. It greatly damaged the ecology and agriculture of the U.S. and Canadian Prairies. The “Homestead Act” of 1862‚ offered settlers 160 acre plots. Around 1904‚ The federal government expanded
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Dust being carried and swept all around your home and town basically describes The Dust Bowl. The Dust Bowl led to a major decline in an area’s population because large numbers of people moved‚ people left to go to safe states‚ people lost jobs‚ and the number of storms affected the population. To start things off‚ the first reason the population declined is because large numbers and groups of people moved during The Dust Bowl. “Recurrent dust storms wreaked havoc‚ choking cattle and pasture lands
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13 going on 14‚ I am from the Great Plains and I’ve been a victim of what they call the “Dust Bowl”. I’ve been trapped in my house for 100 hours due to these wild winds. The wind blows so hard sometimes I think my house is going to blow straight off the ground. Once the winds stop me and Paw walked out to see our fields blown over in dust; I can still see the dazed look on my father’s face when the first dust storm hit. I remember hearing my neighbor say to my father that looking out on the dusted
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The Dust Bowl: The Era of Destruction The 1920’s was a horrible time for all‚ especially those from the midwest‚ and those farmers now had to use new and improved methods involving machines and new revolutions to increase the speed and growth of their extravagant crops. But now the damage is done‚ because World War 1 is over. Most thought this destruction was at an end and only good was to come‚ but in 1931 things took a turn for the worst and more devastation piled on from an era known as the “Dirty
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The Dust Bowl was a treacherous storm‚ which occurred in the 1930’s‚ that affected the midwestern people‚ for example the farmers‚ and which taught us new technologies and methods of farming. As John Steinbeck wrote in his 1939 novel The Grapes of Wrath: "And then the dispossessed were drawn west- from Kansas‚ Oklahoma‚ Texas‚ New Mexico; from Nevada and Arkansas‚ families‚ tribes‚ dusted out. Carloads‚ caravans‚ homeless and hungry; twenty thousand and fifty thousand and a hundred thousand and two
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