English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2007-01-20 02:01:33 · 3 answers · asked by jacknjill 1 in Arts & Humanities History

3 answers

Well, I'm NO genius, but their number one problem would have to be that they live on the prairies, no?

I mean like 105 degrees during the summer, minus 45 during winter, flat as a billiard table for 100s of miles in every direction, plus the fact that EVERYTHING that you can see is either all yellow (in summer) all brown (fall and spring) or all white (winter).

2007-01-20 02:37:02 · answer #1 · answered by Bob Dole Jr. 2 · 1 0

I assume you mean the early farmers. They had to deal with Indians, prairie fires, long winters in isolation, finding material for houses, hail.

If your referring to more recent times: Long, cold, winters, Blizzards, tornadoes, soil erosion, hail (still), loss of land.

Hope this helps.

2007-01-20 11:39:10 · answer #2 · answered by rabbitmedic 3 · 0 0

Draught, infertial land, ranchers, native americans who wanted there land back

2007-01-21 00:02:39 · answer #3 · answered by Bertine 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers