Scenarios about 'Dust Bowl'
The Dust Bowl was a severe environmental disaster that devastated the Great Plains region of the United States during the 1930s, characterized by severe drought and wind erosion that created massive dust storms. This ecological catastrophe, exacerbated by poor agricultural practices and lack of soil conservation, forced hundreds of thousands of farming families to migrate from states like Oklahoma, Texas, and Kansas, fundamentally altering American demographics and agricultural policy.
What If The North American Great Plains Had Different Agricultural Practices?
Exploring the alternate timeline where Indigenous agricultural methods in the Great Plains were sustained and integrated into modern farming, potentially transforming the ecological history and economic development of North America's heartland.