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    Fire Ants In The 1940's

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    The 1940’s, the decade when the American agriculture industry was building back up from one of their lowest points. Yes, I’m speaking of the dust bowl, but little did they know the farmers and ranchers had yet another obstacle to prepare for that they probably would have never expected. The red imported fire ant was making its way into the United States. Once again, they would have to adjust to the new ways to run their industry. Originally, from the lowland areas of South…

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    Zodiac Killer Theory

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    Have you ever wondered about the Zodiac Killer or the Vanishing Amber Room? Among these , Stonehenge is no less cloaked in mystery than the rest. Everything about it is remarkable, even though it was created in ancient times. Many theories have emerged, using all the known facts to explain the mysteries unsolved, such as, who? Why? And how? Although these theories use the facts in a reasonable fashion (most of the time), they are still theories, and further research should commence to completely…

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    “The Dust Bowl” is a documentary movie by Ken Burns. The film describes the environmental and economic disaster Midwesterners faced during the mid-1930’s. Present day interviews with survivors of the dust bowl punctuate the photographs, stories, facts, and film footage throughout the movie. The documentary gives 20th century Americans a glimpse of the hardships faced by farmers and their families and friends some 80 years ago. Dust Pneumonia During the dust bowl, the amount of dirt was so…

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    The Trials and Tribulations of the 1930’s Intense dust storms and droughts plagued the Southwest and Midwest regions. These natural disasters were referred to as the Dust Bowl, in which numerous families in farming were completely eliminated by the rough circumstances surrounding the climate. The Great Depression was a global, economic downfall in the 1930’s, ranking as the longest and most damaging time of job loss and business collapse in the 1900’s (McDaniel 22). The Great Depression began in…

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    Dust Bowl Research Paper

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    The Dust Bowl was a drought that strickened the Southern PLains region of the united states.They suffered from severe dust storms that had severe high winds. The choking dust swept the region from Texas to Nebraska. Many people were killed from this tragic disaster. The Dust Bowl also killed the livestock and it had also failed crops across the entire region. This disaster drove many families on a desperate migration for search of work and better living conditions. Roughly 7,000 people died due…

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    Native American Tribes

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    In this T.E.K, we will cover information about the Native Tribes that lived in the Gulf Coastal and Central Plains. We will also go over the housing that they had and the modifications they had to make to live in their set areas. For all the Glossary words for the T.E.K continue reading until you get to the Glossary. In the Gulf Coastal plains, there were two different Native American Tribes: the Karankawa and the Coahuiltecan. Karankawa: The Karankawa were a Native American Tribe that lived…

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    Dust Bowl Dbq

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    In early 1931, farmers in the southern plains were at their highest peak of money making. While the rest of the nation was being affected by the Great Depression, farmers were producing wheat in masses. The land was described as green and lush and the soil rich. Nobody had realized what they were witnessing would only last a short time before tragedy struck. Railroad companies and states released advertisements to lure settlers to move to the south. Not conscious of the drought to come, farmers…

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    but farmers in the Great Plain states were losing their land. In Steinbeck’s novel, Of Mice and Men, George and Lennie frequently discuss their dream of owning their own piece of land. While George and Lennie have almost nothing but the dream in their possession, they have a plan on how they are going to achieve a little piece of the American Dream. George always gave great detail about exactly…

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    Essay On The Dust Bowl

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    its inhabitants was The Dust Bowl of the 1930’s. This name was given to the Great Plains region devastated by drought in depression-ridden America (Dust). In Stinging Dust & Forgotten Lives, it is mentioned that [The Dust Bowl] was a benchmark between human complacency and changes that would protect the landscape from further degradation (Stinging). When drought plagued the land from 1934 to 1937,…

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    for America. Times were rough from the New York City streets to the Great Plains. Banks began to close on an everyday basis. In Donald Worsters book "Dust Bowl" he writes about the Great Plains and how the people have struggled through out "the dirty thirties". In Chapter 9 "Unsettled Ground" George Taton Believes that if people would have just gave up trying to plant seed in dust that mother nature would have fixed the Plains in half the time it had took. The 1930s were a hard time on America…

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