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    Even a small thing like dust can affect an entire country or continent, especially if there are tons of it. The 1930s, better known as “the dirty thirties,” was a hard time for many people because of the Great American Dust Bowl. From 1934 to 1937 drought came and later dust struck the southern states and many other parts of America. The Great American Dust Bowl was one of the most catastrophic events in the world. Even though the Dust Bowl lasted four years, it felt like it could have lasted…

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    Chicago in 1871 was a city ready to burn and the author Jim Murphy showed all the reasons why Chicago suffered the death rays of heat. First of all, most of the buildings were made up of wood. Wood is flammable and can make fire spread very easily. Almost every sidewalk in Chicago was made of wood as well, which would help out the fire. Some the buildings were made of stone though like factories, restaurants, and other buildings in the windy city but, they had a lot of flammable things in them…

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    Causes Of The Dust Bowl

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    The Dust Bowl began on Thursday, April 18, 1935, it was a huge, black, cloud of dirt, piled up on the western horizon. This storm was enormous and deadly. The Dust Bowl affected Oklahoma, Texas, parts of Kansas, Colorado, and New Mexico. These states were vulnerable to the dust storm for their lack of rainfall, light soil, and high winds. As a result, soil lacked the strong roots of grass in order to stay in place, this made it easier for high, hectic winds to get a hold of the soil. Years…

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    Treaty Six In Canada

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    By 1886, John A. MacDonald ordered the NWMP to carry out ecocide meaning that the police are now authorised to entirely wipe out the few remaining buffalo to force the First Nations in signing the Treaty as dependence on the government. When Treaty 6 was signed between 1886 and 1890 however, the Canadian government continued…

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    “No longer were they slaves to the simple necessities of survival; they were a lordly and dangerous society of fighters and thieves, hunters and priests of the sun” (Momaday 28). The Way to Rainy Mountain is the story of a member of the Kiowa tribe retracing his ancestors steps as they moved from Montana to Oklahoma. In the story it is easy to see the influence of the Kiowa culture, beliefs, and history. In The Way to Rainy Mountain the grandmother was remembering about the sun dance.…

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    Paulina Rosas 8/30/17 PAX 110 S. Kapoor Life and Legacy of A Peace Maker Cesar Chavez Estrada was his full name he was founder the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA). Cesar was born on March 31st 1927 at a family store near Yuma, Arizona. He was son of immigrants his father was Librado Chavez. Cesars father was owner of a small pool hall, small store, and small land. He was a hardworking man who also helped on his fathers farm. Cesar’s mother was a woman named Juana Chavez. During the…

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    The Dust Bowl was a tragic event that occurred mostly in the Midwest as well the mid-south. A dust storm is when strong winds blow loose sand and other loose objects from the ground. We probably all have experienced a mass of rainfall at one time, now imagine that all being dust and sand, but they had no rain. It was a extremely dark period of time, literally dark, there was so much dust that it would be similar to a tremendous black cloud yet one that was lower to the ground. The Dust Bowl was…

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    are very nomadic people they have gone from place to place. Originally they lived on the northern plains of north america. “The Lakota are known as the Teton or Western Sioux”. In 1640 the Lakota probably lived closer to their Dakota relatives. “The Lakota began to move west for three reasons. First, conflict with neighboring tribes. Second, to follow the large herds of buffalo, which roamed the plains. Thirdly, to avoid the encroaching whites who were moving west”. The army sent troops to…

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    The Dust Bowl Migration

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    left the Plains states in the 1930s. Most moved to neighboring states, but some 460,000 people moved to the Pacific Northwest, where they found jobs in lumbering or building the Bonneville and Grand Coulee Dams More than 300,000 others moved to California (Gale - Enter Product Login ).The large movement was an effect of a natural climate change called The Dust Bowl. The Dust Bowl is a situation where people take control of the atmosphere, which makes living conditions in the Great Plains for…

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    The Alaskan Gold Rush

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    The Alaskan a Gold Rush. It was a big deal in the late 1800s. It attracted many people all over North America from Canada to Mexico. Everyone wanted to go to Alaska just got this. It was a out burst of people. It drew a lot of attention! There we many stories and novels written about the gold rush, such as "Gold Rush Fever" or the Last Great Gold a Rush. But there are two stories by Jack London that he had written about gold in this time era. The two books that he had wrote are "the Love of…

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