Dust Bowl Vocabulary
Across
- 2. an informal term used in the diary for a dust storm; a sudden blast of dust and wind that sweeps across a region.
- 5. an underground room beneath a house used for storage or shelter; families considered going down to the cellar to ride out severe dust storms.
- 9. the movement of people from one region to another; during the Dust Bowl many families migrated westward (often to California) in search of work and better living conditions.
- 12. made extremely poor; describes families who lost crops, livestock, or livelihoods during the Dust Bowl.
- 13. the process by which soil is worn away and removed by wind, water, or other natural forces; a key cause of the Dust Bowl when topsoil blew off plowed fields.
- 14. (not in text but related) a widespread affliction; in this context, a severe widespread problem like the Dust Bowl that harms people, animals, and crops.
- 15. storm — a strong wind event that carries large amounts of dust and sand through the air, reducing visibility and causing breathing and health problems.
Down
- 1. made to feel less hopeful or confident; discouraged; how many farmers felt after repeated storms and crop failures.
- 3. conservation techniques — methods that farmers use to protect soil from erosion and keep it fertile (for example, crop rotation, contour plowing, planting cover crops).
- 4. blizzard — a nickname for the massive, coal-black dust storms (like “Black Sunday”) that swept the Great Plains and darkened skies.
- 6. destroyed or badly damaged; used to describe how drought and poor farming practices harmed the land.
- 7. language — words and phrases that describe sights, sounds, smells, tastes, and touch (for example, “coal black,” “howling wind,” “tasted like dust”); authors use this to help readers feel what characters experienced.
- 8. small particles of sand or dirt that mixed into water and food during dust storms; students should connect “grit” with tiny grains that make filtering necessary.
- 10. a serious, difficult, or unfortunate situation; the desperate circumstances faced by Dust Bowl families.
- 11. (The Great Depression) — a severe, long-lasting economic downturn in the 1930s that increased poverty and made the Dust Bowl’s effects worse for families.