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This is the Cimarron National Grassland1 in western Kansas. You can see that it's not very farmable but is worth preserving.
In 1935, during the heart of the Great Depression, whole sections of the American Midwest suffered through a terrible drought that produced monstrous2 dust storms. They sucked up what little topsoil existed on prairie farms and blew away the livelihood3 of thousands of small farmers with it.
One day that spring, a government soil surveyor named Hugh Hammond Bennett testified before Congress, pleading for creation of a federal service that would teach farmers how to plant the grasses that would save their land.
As he spoke4, a thick cloud of dust howled by the window, almost blotting5 out the sun. It had blown all the way from the Great Plains, more than 3,000 kilometers away.
Oklahoma Conservation Commission
Hugh Haskell Bennett stands in a heavily eroded6 farm field near Haskell, Oklahoma, in 1943.
There, gentlemen, Hugh Bennett told the congressional committee, goes Oklahoma.
That certainly made his point, and the Soil Conservation Service was born. It began to plant grasses and crops that anchor the soil and keep it from blowing or washing away. Today, 20 publicly owned National Grasslands7 spread over 1.5 million hectares stand as the legacy8 of that effort.
They are generally marginal lands - their soil too poor for cultivation9. Scars from abuse by plowing10 or overgrazing remain. Where too many cattle trampled11 the earth and turned the sod to dust, useless yucca and sagebrush have replaced the grass.
Library of Congress
A man and two boys bend to the howling wind outside a ramshackle shack12 in Oklahoma during the Dust Bowl of the 1930s, which blew away whole fields of topsoil.
Fewer than 50 centimeters of rain a year fall on much of the western plains, so dust still blows. But the U.S. Forest Service, which oversees13 the grasslands, encourages managed grazing on these public lands, for which ranchers pay fees that help pay for rural roads and schools.
The Forest Service calls this living carpet of grass an ecosystem14. Despite new and managed growth on the Plains, one still finds the ruts of the tall wagons15 called prairie schooners16 that, a century and a half ago, brought modern civilization, with its blessings17 and curses, to these seas of grass.
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