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Great Plains Quarterly4
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Rowley, Rex J. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2008
Crop insurance is a relatively recent invention that attempts to level the playing field in our contest with the environment. It well represents the complexity and interaction within the human-land relationship. Ranching is another symbol of this relationship. The word stewardship captures a rancher's connection to the land. It denotes a respect…
Descriptors: Insurance, Agribusiness, Land Use, Economic Impact
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Amstutz, David Lee – Great Plains Quarterly, 2008
The state of Nebraska contributed to progressive thought in the 1880s. Like the other states in the Great Plains, Nebraska was heavily involved in the livestock industry. When contagious diseases threatened Nebraska's livestock, the state advocated a Federalist-Whig policy by requesting federal assistance. The national government's powers were…
Descriptors: Animals, Agribusiness, Federal Regulation, Public Policy
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Bogener, Stephen – Great Plains Quarterly, 2008
The Pecos River of the nineteenth century, unlike its faint twenty-first century shadow, was a formidable watercourse. The river stretches some 755 miles, from the Sangre de Cristo Mountains northeast of Santa Fe to its eventual merger with the Rio Grande. Control over the public domain of southeastern New Mexico came from controlling access to…
Descriptors: Land Acquisition, Water, United States History, Mexican Americans
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White, Mark Andrew – Great Plains Quarterly, 2006
In 1939, Texas artist Alexandre Hogue completed "The Crucified Land," a striking comparison of water erosion on a Denton, Texas, wheat farm to the martyrdom of Jesus of Nazareth. "The Crucified Land" was originally intended as the final canvas of Hogue's "Erosion" series, which the artist began in 1932 as a…
Descriptors: Artists, Ecology, Painting (Visual Arts), Religion