@minion10010164 help me please medal
how did soil turn in too dust copy paste where u got that from and then put info in ur own words if u help me i will medal u
can u help me
i have no idea I am trying to look now
for sure u will help me
if i can find it
type in queastion and then help me put it reword
which do u think is talking about soil turn to dust
hold on @jagr2713 @Jamierox4ev3r
go on the web and then copy paste a pargraph talking about soil turn in to dust and reword it please
Hi @hiamme , I believe this is in reference to the Dust Bowl that occurred around the time of the Great Depression in America
I know for a fact that the Dust Bowl was caused by over cultivating the land, and then abandoning it due to the drop is profits of crops and migration to the North for better opportunities.
And the source that I have this information from is my AP US. History textbook @hiamme
@hiamme I can explain here
what more would you like to know?
that is from ur text word can u find the part where it talks about ho w soil turn in to dust i need copy paste and reword
fan medal for for u
oh okay. So in the roaring twenties, farmers planted wheat. The harvest was super bountiful in 1931. Farmers had been planting more land, and the land was exceedingly fertile. The result was that far more wheat was produced that fall than could possibly e consumed. Europe, like the United States was currently in a depression, so farmers abandoned the farms. As a result, due to overprinting and plowing of soil with too little water led to massive must storms that destroyed agricultural communities in states from Texas to North Dakota ^^ right there is the brunt of the explanation :)
so which one is reword and copy paste
the smaller paragraph
is ur paragraph and mine same CopyPaste http://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h1583.html:Homesteaders flocked to the grasslands, certain that they had found the richest soil in the world and the ideal place to settle down. Men began to clear the land — using the endless prairie to grow wheat, and the trees to build houses, barns and outbuildings. What was unknown to these early pioneers was that the grass and trees of the plains essentially nourished and held the soil in place with their tough roots. When they were gone, the moisture that would have gone to the roots ran off into creeks, streams and rivers — basically carrying the land with it. The scene was set for the Dust Bowl. this mine
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