because when all the crops dired up the dirt became usless in the drought and the dust flew and coverd the skies al the way to new york
Texas and the southern plains
Because a large amount of rice is produced there.
The actual answer is northeast in the united nations text book does not say other places only this one
The northern plains in India are called the food bowl, because they have good soil, and plenty of rain.
they nuked the great plains
Texas and the southern plains
During the 1930s Dust Bowl, an estimated 75% of the topsoil was blown off the southern plains due to drought and unsustainable farming practices, leading to severe dust storms and agricultural devastation.
The Dust Bowl primarily affected the central United States, mainly the Great Plains region, during the 1930s. It did not extend all the way to the Atlantic Ocean.
That was the Dust Bowl.
Because a large amount of rice is produced there.
the great deppression, also known as the dust bowl
The soil loss on the southern Great Plains in the 1930s, known as the Dust Bowl, was caused by a combination of drought, poor land management practices, and extensive plowing of the grasslands. This led to the topsoil becoming eroded and turning into dust storms that devastated agriculture and forced many people to leave the area in search of better living conditions.
The great plains
The actual answer is northeast in the united nations text book does not say other places only this one
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.
The Dust Bowl was an ecologically devastated area in the southern plains of the United States, primarily in Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas, and Colorado, during the 1930s. It was characterized by severe drought, poor land management practices, and dust storms that led to agricultural collapse and widespread environmental damage.
The Great Plains were the area affected by the loss of agricultural land in the 1930s.