Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, Texas, and New Mexico.
The hardest hit dust bowl states that lost population in the 1930's were North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma.
The states in the Dust Bowl that suffered the least seem to be northeast New Mexico and parts of the east slops of the Rockies to the Mississippi. The states that were hit hard was Texas and Oklahoma.
The states in the Dust Bowl that suffered the least seem to be northeast New Mexico and parts of the east slops of the Rockies to the Mississippi. The states that were hit hard was Texas and Oklahoma.
The dust bowl was mainly in The Great Plains of the United States of America.
five states
What states where in the dust bowl
The Dust Bowl was caused by an incredibly severe drought. The states most affected were Texas and Oklahoma.
The Dust Bowl primarily affected states in the Southern Plains region of the United States, including Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, and New Mexico. These states experienced severe drought, wind erosion, and dust storms during the 1930s.
In the western states of USA.
No, it is not considered a Dust Bowl state. Though heavy droughts led to the the Dust Bowl, not every state experiencing a drought also experienced severe dust storms. States that are considered to have experienced these severe dust storms are Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. Iowa, however, is listed as a state experiencing a drought during the Dust Bowl era, it is just not classified as having severe dust storms.
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, also known as the Dirty Thirties, was a period of severe dust storms in the Midwest. It affected 27 states and covered almost 75% of the entire United States.