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over worked land and drought
replacing natural grasses to plant winter wheat led to topsoil erosion.
Deforestation, bad weather, overuse of the land for agriculture and poor cultivation techniques all contributed to the dust bowl in the U.S.
Drought, and infertile land
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 rich topsoil helped the crops grow quickly. The wind blew the topsoil away, causing the dust bowl.
Dust Bowl
to much farming
When dry weather blanketed the plains in the 1930s, the wind eroded unprotected topsoil, reducing farmlands across several U.S. states to a barren wasteland called the Dust Bowl.
the dust bowl affected many crops. They were unable to grow because all the topsoil was blown away.
Alex Wood
overworked land and drought
the great deppression, also known as the dust bowl
over worked land and drought
Soil erosion. Overworked land and drought
over worked land and drought
replacing natural grasses to plant winter wheat led to topsoil erosion.