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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This six page paper reviews the factors that contributed to the giant dust storms and environmental destruction of this period in American history. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PP697973.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. The Dust Bowl of the 1930s Research
Compiled by 04/2012 Please
The American Dust Bowl was one of the earliest large scale illustrations of the ecological damage that this country incurred as a result of the cultural transition from indigenous lifeways
to European ones. The Dust Bowl occurred directly because of overutilization of lands that werent particularly suited in the first place for the use to which they were put.
The impact wasnt only the destruction of prairie grassland habitat of the open plains but also wide-scale damage as a result of the great dust storms that plagued the
nation from the prairies to the eastern seaboard. When the European peoples first invaded these lands, the savannahs, prairies, tree-fringed meandering streams, and
ecologically complex wetlands that once comprised North America were barely impacted by the Native American peoples that lived there. The Native Americans of the Great Plains, in particular, were
primarily hunter gathers. Most didnt plant and tend crops and those that did did so in moderation using technology and methodologies that were considerably less destructive of the overall
habitat than the European crops that ultimately took their place. Indeed, when Europeans first discovered the Great Plains, they considered them unsuitable for European style agricultural endeavors (Worster, 2004).
As more and more non-Natives flooded the continent, however, pressure on the Great Plains became inevitable. Initially, that pressure came largely in the form of cattle ranching.
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