Sandstorm brought huge agriculture and economic blow to the Great Plains, exacerbated the legacy of the US economy during the Great Depression (NASA). Large-scale storms almost destroyed agricultural crops, destroyed all of the farms and destroyed the lives and careers of thousands of farmers. This led to more collapse of the US economy during the Great Depression. Because of overcultivation of land by farmers and soil erosion, dust basins occurred in Great Plains around 1930.
Sandstorms in the 1930s were ecological disasters that destroyed the lives of many farmers and farmers. Ironically, settlers living in this land necessarily become tools of their own death. Their lack of knowledge and poor agricultural practices have led to massive erosion of the prairie. Both wind and water erode large amounts of soil, but colonists allow this by agriculture and pasture technology. This can only be resolved after the Government has made enormous efforts to settle the dilemma. For farmers and ranchers, sandstorms are valuable learning experiences to prove the dangers of agricultural development without proper knowledge. In order not to be a problem again, farmers and ranchers have to learn from past mistakes.
Especially farmers and ranchers are undergoing a great blow because cotton and livestock prices plummeted. Between 1934 and 1939, the storm, a severe wind and dry ecological disaster, brought massive storms in Texas and its surrounding plains, of which more than 500,000 Americans lost their homes. Hunger and unemployment Thousands of people are leaving this area forever and seeking economic opportunities in California. For most remaining farmers, New Deal's Agriculture Adjustment Law was a collapse plan that began in 1933, and even if agents and committees face poor roads, bureaucratic delays, supply, within 2 weeks cotton I signed the grower. Insufficient, scorpion, and there is no language barrier. It brought about recovery in the mid 1930 's. And raised the price of cotton by controlling the amount of growing farmers
This strange thing that the earth and sand fell in the Midwest between the 1920s and the 1930s reminds us of the legislature that established the WSCC, especially to protect soil resources. "And to promote the protection of state renewable resources, control and prevention of soil erosion, prevention of flood and sediment damage, and water conservation, development, use and disposal at the agricultural and nonagricultural stage. Protection and promotion of damages to reservoirs, maintenance of navigation of rivers and ports, protection of wildlife, protection of tax base, protection of public land, health of people of the state, safety and general welfare
Agricultural contamination in Puget Sound: meaning of changing Washington's dependence on voluntary incentives to save salmon