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Sarah Thomas Karle & David Karle

Conserving the Dust Bowl

Today;s conversation is with architects Sarah Thomas and David Karle about their book Conserving the Dust Bowl’.

Dust Bowl WEB2

Conserving the Dust Bowl: The New Deal’s Prairie States Forestry Project’.

The United States in 1930’s experienced what is referred to as the dust bowl in which a combination of poor farming and business practices caused massive wind erosion called black blizzards’ that resulted in many farmers abandoning their farms in states of Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and beyond, just as the Great Depression was underway. 

The research story here is about one of the initiatives from President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal initiatives. This being the creation of a shelter belts’, more precisely, the planting of more than 220 million trees from North Dakota down through Texas in a seven year time frame to help stabilize soil and rejuvenate farming communities. Essentially, an act of planning and environmental conservation to be better prepared for a future of farming in the Great Plains.

Sarah Thomas Karle

Sarah Thomas Karle is an Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture in the College of Architecture at the University of Nebraska where she teaches undergraduate courses in landscape architecture.

David Karle

David Karle is an Associate Professor of Architecture in the College of Architecture at the University of Nebraska where he teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on architecture, landscape architecture, and urbanism.

N Ws Episodes 3