1 / 13

Quantifying Dust Bowl Storms

Quantifying Dust Bowl Storms. By Sean King ME449 Air Quality. Table of Contents. Introduction Why was there a dust bowl? Maps of the Dust Bowl Storms How did the dust bowl end? Conclusion. Introduction.

xena
Download Presentation

Quantifying Dust Bowl Storms

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Quantifying Dust Bowl Storms By Sean King ME449 Air Quality

  2. Table of Contents • Introduction • Why was there a dust bowl? • Maps of the Dust Bowl Storms • How did the dust bowl end? • Conclusion

  3. Introduction • The object of this study to to locate and quantify dust storms that occurred during the ‘dust bowl’ period of the 1930’s • Dust storm information was extracted form articles in the Monthly Weather Review. The severity of the storms was objectively determined and applied to the data. • This report will breakdown the individual storms from 1936 to 1939 and give their location and severity. • Reasons why the dust bowl came about • Pictures of dust bowl storm distribution • How did the dustbowl end?

  4. Causes for the dust bowl • In the late 19thcentuaury , the population of the southern plains exploded due to new settlers, most farmers • From 1879 to 1887, phenomenally heavy rains fell on a patch of the High Plains from Texas to Canada. This gave false impressions of the usual rainfall in the region to the new settlers. • Crop production shifted from a variety of crops, used as fallbacks if one failed to predominantly wheat production • Farming took over land once considered sufficient only for grazing of livestock • The appearance of modern mechanical farm equipment encouraged farmers to plow up more land and to plant on acreage that was otherwise unusable • Not recognizing the problems of initiating massive agricultural programs meant farmers had no contingency plans when the drought hit. • Repeated drought and farming of marginally productive acreage was intensified by a lack of soil conservation methods

  5. Maps of the dust storms

  6. Maps depicting frequency of dust activity in early 1936

  7. Maps • Note that the center of the frequency distribution of the dust storms moves slightly to the north from March through May. • Also note that in June there was more than one center of peak dust activity, as the frequency overall increases. • Also in June the absolute maximum of dust activity frequency occurred in North Dakota, instead of in the Southern Plains, indicating that there is more than one specific region affected by the dust storms.

  8. Maps depicting Frequency and Severity of Dust Activity in March 1936 Note that the most frequent dust activity occurs at areas are at the edge of the most severe section for the storms for the month

  9. Description of a storm • Details describing a trip from Dodge City, KS to various spots in the dust bowl, February 17, 1937, by a weather bureau officer • Before 6am, light dust was blowing through Dodge City, with visibility a little over a mile. • Light dust was present on the way to Liberal, KS, where at 10 miles out, dense dust was encountered. This brought visibility was reduced to 15 to 20 feet. • Staying on the road was difficult. After over an hour, the 10 miles were covered. • Next stop Hooker, OK, while dense dust was still present. • Frequent stops were needed along the way because visibility was reduced to near zero for periods. • Three hours and forty five minutes were needed to drive the 23 miles between towns. • Drifts several feet high were noted along the way. • Finely powered dust was everywhere. • More deserted farmhouses were passed than inhabited ones.

  10. How it was resolved • New Deal relief and conservation programs • Government Agencies helped out • The Southwest Agricultural Association [SAA] • Federal Surplus Relief Corporation [FSRC] • New Soil conservation practices • Chisel plowing: digging deep into the soil and leaving large chunks of dirt intact, the ground itself could perform as a windbreak • Lister plowing, where gullies were cut deep for windbreaks • Planting of hardy plants like Kaffir and Sudan grass • Spreading the sand out in thin patches to allow the wind to redeposit it.

  11. Conclusion • Rapid population growth, increase in land farmed, new farming practices, and the uniform wheat crop dried out the soil in the American Southern Great Plains. • The great dust storms and the dust bowl mainly affected the south central portion of the United States, predominately the Texas panhandle, parts of Oklahoma, Colorado, and New Mexico. • Seasonality of dust storms seems to be centered around the spring and summer months. • Through the farmers conservation efforts and federal relief programs that helped them along, the dust bowl was finally brought under control

  12. Sources • For latitude and longitude positions: http://www.bcca.org/misc/qiblih/latlong_us.html • http://www.digital-neighbor.com • Dustbowl history • http://freespace.virgin.net/john.cletheroe/usa_can/usa/dbowl2.htm • http://www.mindspring.com/~jwar/dust/dirty.htm • http://www.swosu.edu/~bryantr/1614/ppt/c6pt1/sld001.htm • http://www.ptsi.net/user/museum/dustbowl.html • CAPITA Dustbowl Files • R. J. Martin, “Duststorms of February and March 1936 in the United States” The Monthly Weather Review, p87-88, April 1936 • R. J. Martin, “Duststorms in the United States, April 1936” The Monthly Weather Review, p137, April 1936

  13. Sources • R. J. Martin, “Duststorms of May 1936 in the United State” The Monthly Weather Review, p176, May 1936 • R. J. Martin, “Duststorms of August-December 1936 in the United States” The Monthly Weather Review, p429, December 1936 • R. J. Martin, “Duststorms of January-April 1937 in the United States” The Monthly Weather Review, p151-152, April 1937 • R. J. Martin, “Duststorms of 1938 in the United States” The Monthly Weather Review, p12-15, January 1939 • R. J. Martin, “Duststorms of 1939 in the United States” The Monthly Weather Review, p446-451, February 1940 • J. P. Kohler, “Duststorms in the United States, June 1936” The Monthly Weather Review, p206, June 1936 • H.F. Choun, “Duststorms in the Southwestern Plains Area” The Monthly Weather Review, p195, June 1936

More Related