. Yearbook of agriculture . WHEAT PRODUCTION, 1909 ST*TE BUSHfXS STATt BUSHELS 1 III ... : Kara. Ind .. | Ncbr. ;Ic OlhtT. 16339 lU. S .. 683J79i59 Fig. 20.—Wheat production in the United States in 1900. In the liard springwheat district of the northern Great Plains area and the hard red winterwheat of the central Great Plains area there is increased produc-tion and steady westward movement of production. There is a marked de-cline in California and some


. Yearbook of agriculture . WHEAT PRODUCTION, 1909 ST*TE BUSHfXS STATt BUSHELS 1 III ... : Kara. Ind .. | Ncbr. ;Ic OlhtT. 16339 lU. S .. 683J79i59 Fig. 20.—Wheat production in the United States in 1900. In the liard springwheat district of the northern Great Plains area and the hard red winterwheat of the central Great Plains area there is increased produc-tion and steady westward movement of production. There is a marked de-cline in California and some decline in the Ohio WHEAT PRODUCTION. 1919 STATE OUi. K« I 70390317 Ind ... Wuli . 65^ 61,540,404 Otli^r. 58,124351 . u s ,,756 iG. 21.—Wheat production in the United States in 1919. The stimulus ofthe World War on wheat production is markedly evident in. this was greatly increased production of soft red winter wheat in thecenti-al or corn-belt States and of hard red winter wheat in the centralsection of the Great Plains, but a decreased production of hard red springwheat in the northern plains because of unfavorable conditions. 96 Yearbook of the Department of Agriculture, 1921. Wheat production, 1889.—This map (Fig. 18) revealsanother remarkable shift in the wheat belt. The spring-wheat district of the northern Great Plains, the harJ-winter-wheat district of central Kansas, and the dry-farmed dis-tricts of the Far West show a marked increase in upper Mississippi Valley shows


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectagriculture, bookyear