Depending on who is telling it, the history of Euro-American
farmers on the Great Plains has been a story of either agricultural
triumph or ecological failure--an optimistic tale of taming
nature for human purposes or a dire account of disrupting nature
and suffering the environmental consequences. In both stories,
human beings dominate the narrative, whether as subduers or
as destroyers of the natural processes that define this grassland
ecosystem.
In On the Great Plains, author Geoff Cunfer poses an
alternative scenario: that people were not the masters of nature
on the Great Plains. Land use in America's vast interior prairies
has stayed remarkably stable throughout the twentieth century,
changing little as droughts came and went, as farmers shifted
from horses to tractors, and as federal subsidies and fluctuating
crop prices transformed the economics of farming. An equilibrium
between natural and human forces emerged as farmers plowed and
planted the same amount of cropland during most of this period,
maintaining two-thirds of the Great Plains in unplowed, native
vegetation. Even the Dust Bowl of the 1930s was a "temporary
disruption in a stable system" that may be considered sustainable.
To support his theory, Cunfer looks at the entire Great Plains
(450 counties in ten states), tapping historical agricultural
census data paired with GIS mapping to illuminate land use on
the Great Plains over 130 years. Coupled with several community
and family case studies, this database allows Cunfer to track
plowing and grazing practices, crop choices, technological advances,
nutrient systems, and weather, soil, and drought conditions
to reassess the interaction between farmers and nature in the
Great Plains agricultural landscape.
Combining the readability of evocative local history with the
explanatory power of systematic regional analysis, On the
Great Plains makes a compelling argument for those interested
in western, environmental, and agricultural history, grassland
management, and the geography and demography of the Great Plains.
Texas A&M U Press, 2005