The Dust Bowl refers to a drought experienced in the Plains states. Subsistence farmers were hit by foreclosures owing to their inability to farm. Many packed up their belongings and moved to California in search of farm worker jobs to support their families. President Roosevelt included specific bills in his New Deal Program, aimed at helping the victims of the Dust Bowl. These included allocation of federal, protected lands under the Taylor Act of 1934, and the Civil Conservation Corps, which allowed young men to do outdoor work and send money home to their families.
Causes:
drought, erotion, lack of plants
Effect:
caused families to leave homes, some to go blind
On the great plains dust storms raced across the dry farmland which the wind picked up the topsoil and blew it away.
Deforestation, bad weather, overuse of the land for agriculture and poor cultivation techniques all contributed to the dust bowl in the U.S.
over worked land and drought
it made a shortege of food becuse it destroyd farms
The long drought conditions were just one of the causes for the Dust Bowl- overuse of the land and falling farm product prices also contributed to this disaster.
The book about the dust bowl is called Out Of The Dust.
The two causes of the Dust Bowl were drought and poor agricultural practices.
Deforestation, bad weather, overuse of the land for agriculture and poor cultivation techniques all contributed to the dust bowl in the U.S.
it was a cause
over worked land and drought
Soil erosion. Overworked land and drought
over worked land and drought
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Nationwide effects of the Dust Bowl: migrants left effected areas to move elsewhere, decreased grain production.
No the dust bowl was not shaped like a bowl
it made a shortege of food becuse it destroyd farms
No the dust bowl was not shaped like a bowl.
The long drought conditions were just one of the causes for the Dust Bowl- overuse of the land and falling farm product prices also contributed to this disaster.