Until he enters the trash box, he has never lived in the ground. This is a ten-year sandstorm that has affected dozens of farmers and their farmland. Difficulty is one of the influences of the storm and affects farm workers and urban residents. Arashi also brought the elements of destruction and darkness that dominated the whole plain. Due to these problems, this storm has become a popular name of "Black Blizzard" (documentary, 2014). The name is given by the visibility of the storm as a huge black cloud, it makes it look bad and terrible.
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
In recent years, the Department of Natural Resources Protection of the US Department of Agriculture was established to cope with the crisis of the sand storm of the 1930 's, which promoted cultivation of soil carbon as an important agricultural activity. However, the more important aspect of the regenerative farming movement is that it is primarily driven by farmers themselves. Concerns about the soil carbon of the supporters are not necessarily the reason why N.R.C.S. tells them and the reason they are concerned about the destiny of the earth. They discovered that doing so would help their net gains
If people are not well managed by farmland, or if natural forces collude to destroy the soil, the result may be devastating. One of the most prominent examples occurred in what was later called a dust bowl. It was widely used in agricultural areas in Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas and even Colorado in 1934 and 1935. Over the course of a few months agricultural land once produced has almost no benefit, it becomes useless cockroaches and dust and is very vulnerable to storms.