The causing effects for the dust bowl were sandy, loss type soil. There was a drought that was being experienced so everything was dry. During the 1900’s, lots of hot days caused grass fires in the prairies caused the sod to be burnt so exposing even more ground to wind erosion. Farmers then tilled up sod with steam tractors and one way plows that exposed farming ground to wind erosion also.
The ways that people used to prevent them from being affected by all the dust was people sealed windows with tape or putty, then they hung wet sheets in front of doors to filter out any dust they could. When it came to dinner time they would eat on dishes that layers of dust on them and made people's teeth gritty. Even light bulbs were covered with a layer of dust that brought them to a …show more content…
There also were diseases in the air that caused people to get sick. Many people even died from dust pneumonia.
The start of restoring the land back in the 1930’s started with the Soil Erosion Service that established projects and demonstrations to farmer to restore their land back to working condition. The SES was then changed to SCS, the Soil Conservation Service. The services that were created were there to help farmers to start stopping wind erosion and start helping with their ground to keep crops growing. Some of these ideas that were introduced were contour plowing, terracing, strip cropping, and planting drought resistant crops such as sorghum.
To completely restore the lands back from the dust bowl was needing to restore the grazing land such as rotating, reseeding, and resting so the grass could cover the grounds and protect the