The Dust Bowl of the 1930s lasted about a decade. The dust bowl winds began in 1932 but the Dust Bowl got its name from the horrendous winds beginning in 1935. The primary area it effected was the southern Plains. The northern Plains were not hit so badly but the drought, the blowing dust, and the decline of agriculture in the region had a nationwide effect. The wind "turned day into night" and was so strong it picked up the topsoil on the ground and blew it away in large clouds of dust. The farmers who worked the Great Plains had been breaking up the sod and soil on the plain states since the time of the Homestead Act. Poor farming techniques and years of depleting the soil led to the soil becoming susceptible to the winds.
The loss of agricultural production helped to lengthen the Depression, not only in the US but worldwide. The displaced farmers became the migrants described in John Steinbeck's, Grapes of Wrath. Families from Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Nevada and Arkansas, packed what they could in cars and trucks and headed west. Most were aiming for California where they would become a class of migrant farmers, following the crops during the harvesting season.
The Dust Bowl in Texas caused severe agricultural damage, leading to crop failures, soil erosion, and loss of livelihood for many farmers. The extreme drought and dust storms also resulted in environmental degradation, economic hardships, and mass migration as people were forced to leave the region in search of better opportunities. The Dust Bowl had long-lasting impacts on the ecosystem and economy of the Great Plains in Texas.
the cental plains states
The great plains
The southern Great Plains suffered an environmental disaster during the 1930s. Hardest hit were Kansas and Oklahoma, Northern Texas, and eastern Colorado adn New Mexico. Soon this region was dubbed the Dust Bowl.
Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas, The Dust Bowl was a period in the 30s where there were a series of severe dust storms causing agricultural and ecological problems. The Dust Bowl states were composed of mainly Oklahoma, Texas, and Kansas. The surrounding Great Plains regions were also affected by the severe dust storms.
The Dust Bowl was the loss of farmland in the Great Plains and adjacent areas, from Texas and the Oklahoma panhandle north to Canada. These prairies were once known as the Great American Desert, but were turned to agriculture by homesteaders during a long period of wetter weather from the 1890s to the 1920s.
they nuked the great plains
Crops in the Great Plains failed, and farmers went bankrupt.
the cental plains states
The farmers in the great plains crops failed and they went banked rupt
The great plains
The actual answer is northeast in the united nations text book does not say other places only this one
Nationwide effects of the Dust Bowl: migrants left effected areas to move elsewhere, decreased grain production.
The southern Great Plains suffered an environmental disaster during the 1930s. Hardest hit were Kansas and Oklahoma, Northern Texas, and eastern Colorado adn New Mexico. Soon this region was dubbed the Dust Bowl.
Texas and the southern plains
The most historically famous example of the devastation of the great plains was called the Dust Bowl. Droughts did devastate the Great Plains, but the Dust Bowl was caused by a combination of this and poor farming practices.
The most historically famous example of the devastation of the great plains was called the Dust Bowl. Droughts did devastate the Great Plains, but the Dust Bowl was caused by a combination of this and poor farming practices.
The dust bowl was mainly in The Great Plains of the United States of America.