Muscat Daily

INTERESTIN­G FACTS ABOUT DUST BOWL OF 1930S

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The 1930s were some of the driest years in American history. Eight long years of drought, preceded by inappropri­ate cultivatio­n technique, and the financial crises of the Great Depression forced many farmers off the land abandoning their fields throughout the Great Plains that run across the heart of mainland US.

When the high winds came, it lifted the topsoil from barren lands and carried them in large choking clouds of dust for thousands of miles. Many dust storms started around the panhandles of Texas and Oklahoma and touched adjacent sections of New Mexico, Colorado and Kansas. But eventually, the entire country was affected forcing tens of thousands of families to abandon their farms and migrate in search for work and better living conditions.

The early European explorers thought the Great Plains was unsuitable for agricultur­e. The land is semi-arid and is prone to extended drought, alternatin­g with periods of unusual wetness. But the federal government was eager to see the land settled and cultivated.

A stretch of unusually wet weather in the beginning of the 20th century confirmed the belief that the Plains could be tamed after all, leading to increased settlement and cultivatio­n. Farmers ploughed through the land eliminatin­g the native grasses that held the fine soil in place. When crops began to fail with the onset of drought in 1930, the bare soil became exposed to the wind, and it began to blow away in massive dust storms blackening the sky.

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