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USII 2.a The Great Plains – Week 4
Study Guide for LAA1
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Climate & Physical Features
Flatlands that rise gradually from east to west (lack of trees) Land eroded by wind & water Low rainfall Frequent dust storms
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Inventions: Barbed wire Steel Plow Windmills Railroads
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Barbed Wire Used for fencing because of the lack of wood; needed to keep cattle in and to keep cowboys and cattle drives off the settlers’ property.
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Windmills Lack of water; windmills and mechanical well-drilling machines allowed farmers to get enough water for their families and crops.
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Steel Plow Enabled farmers to cut through the thick, tangled roots of the tough prairie soil in order to farm the land.
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Railroads Transported settlers and goods to the Great Plains; they provided a way for farmers and ranchers to transport cattle and crops raised on the Great Plains to markets in the East with buyers hungry for beef and grains.
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Adaptations: Sod Houses Dry Farming Beef Cattle Raising Wheat Farming
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Sod Houses Because of lack of wood, settlers built homes with sod; the houses were enhanced or replaced over time with lumber and other materials brought to the Great Plains by railroad.
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Dry Farming: Developed to farm the drier lands of the Great Plains; soil is plowed deeply to break the soil and to slow the evaporation; or land is plowed, but not planted for a season, allowing it to hold moisture.
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Wheat Farming: Wheat was a hardy crop that adapted to the dry growing conditions of the Great Plains.
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Beef Cattle Raising: Cattle could be raised on large areas of open grassland that were unsuitable for growing crops; thousands of cattle were herded from area to area during the “open range” period of the Great Plains.
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