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The Dust Bowl: A Natural Disaster

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The Dust Bowl: A Natural Disaster
The Dust Bowl is both a manmade and a natural disaster. Beginning with World War I, the wheat crop of the United States was flowing as gold as demand increased. Tempted by the record-breaking wheat prices and the promise of land developers that "rain after plowing," farmers using new gasoline tractors plowed and grazed the southern plains. When drought farmers and the Great Depression emerged in the early 1930s, the wheat market economy collapsed. Great Depression: After many years of bad practice, the Great Recession has made it impossible for farmers to grow as many crops as they can. Thus, many parts of the delta are deserted even by grass. Cattle deaths: Cattle were blinded by the impact of the Dust Bowl, and the sky was overwhelmed by

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