The Dust Bowl mainly took place in Kansas. It also took place in some Canadian areas and it scattered through out the United States. It took place from 1930 to 1936. Some places lasted until 1940.
The Dust Bowl is an expression that refers to the drought in the midwest during the 1930's. The term alludes to the fact that the soil was so dry it was blowing away like dust. It resulted in a mass migration of people to California. In California many of the "Okies" were exploited by greedy farmers who used them as cheap labour. John Steinbeck's novel, The Grapes Of Wrath, is the classic novel about that episode in US history.
The dust bowl happened in the plains. The dust traveled to the eastsouth. Some states effected include: Oklahoma( arguably the most effected, Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, Texas, Colorado and New Mexico.
The Dust Bowl, or the Dirty Thirties, was a period of severe dust storms causing major ecological and agricultural damage to American and Canadian prairie lands from 1930 to 1936 (in some areas until 1940). The phenomenon was caused by severe drought coupled with decades of extensive farming without crop rotation, fallow fields, cover crops or other techniques to prevent erosion. Deep plowing of the virgin topsoil of the Great Plains had displaced the natural deep-rooted grasses that normally kept the soil in place and trapped moisture even during periods of drought and high winds.
During the drought of the 1930s, without natural anchors to keep the soil in place, it dried, turned to dust, and blew away eastward and southward in large dark clouds. At times the clouds blackened the sky reaching all the way to East Coast cities such as New York and Washington, D.C. Much of the soil ended up deposited in the Atlantic Ocean, carried by prevailing winds, which were in part created by the dry and bare soil conditions. These immense dust storms-given names such as "Black Blizzards" and "Black Rollers"-often reduced visibility to a few feet (around a meter). The Dust Bowl affected 100,000,000 acres (400,000 km2), centered on the panhandles of Texas and Oklahoma, and adjacent parts of New Mexico, Colorado, and Kansas.
Millions of acres of farmland became useless, and hundreds of thousands of people were forced to leave their homes; many of these families (often known as "Okies", since so many came from Oklahoma) migrated to California and other states, where they found economic conditions little better during the Great Depression than those they had left. Owning no land, many became migrant workers who traveled from farm to farm to pick fruit and other crops at starvation wages. Author John Steinbeck later wrote The Grapes of Wrath, which won the Pulitzer Prize, and Of Mice and Men, about such people.
High plains regions in Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, New Mexico, and Colorado became known as the Dust Bowl.
Mostly in the Great Plains states. Such as: Colorado, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming.
The dust bowl took place in Texas, Okhlahoma, New mexico, Colorado and Kansas
The dust bowl happened in Midwest America. The affected states were Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, and New Mexico.
Oklahoma im pretty sure.
extensive droughts.
it started in 1931 and lasted for a decadeit was a storm
The book about the dust bowl is called Out Of The Dust.
Because the dust bowl is the SOURCE of the dust raised by a dust storm.
The dust bowl was in the 1930s in the central part of the US, known as the High Plains. For more about the Dust Bowl, you can read The Facts About the Dust Bowl at http://history.knoji.com/facts-about-the-dust-bowl/
1932-1940
In the western states of USA.
extensive droughts.
another dust bowl
it started in 1931 and lasted for a decadeit was a storm
No the dust bowl was not shaped like a bowl
No the dust bowl was not shaped like a bowl.
The book about the dust bowl is called Out Of The Dust.
Because the dust bowl is the SOURCE of the dust raised by a dust storm.
The dust bowl was in the 1930s in the central part of the US, known as the High Plains. For more about the Dust Bowl, you can read The Facts About the Dust Bowl at http://history.knoji.com/facts-about-the-dust-bowl/
"And, all our yesterdays have lighted fools the way to dusty death." - William Shakespeare "In the dust of defeat as well as the laurels of victory there is a glory to be found if one has done his best." - Eric Liddell "It is not the beauty of a building you should look at; it's the construction of the foundation that will stand the test of time." - David Allan Coe
The Dust Bowl started in 1931 and ended in 1939. Exact dates are impossible to decide.