Which of these is NOT true of cattle ranches in Texas from the early 1900's until the Great Depression? A) railroads took away land that had once been used for cattle farms B) open ranges ended as smaller, fenced-in ranches began to be established droughts and a lack of good grass hurt the productivity of cattle ranches D) : ranching died out in Texas completely as new technologies such as oil refineries emerged​

Respuesta :

Answer:

it is D

Explanation:

it is D because its talking about the same thing  i hope it helps

In the Nineteenth (19th)  Century, the cowboy style of ranching was popular in the 19th-century cattle sector. The movement of a cowherd across the country, today is known as a cattle drive, was part of this approach.

Option (d) is the correct answer.

What happened to ranches until the Great Depression?

Texas had built large ranches by the late 1800s, that is the early 1900s, changes in the railroads were one aspect that aided their expansion.

Because most train links terminated north of Texas in the 1860s, cattle had to be transported there. Cattle could now be shipped from far closer locations.

As a result, ranching in Texas has completely faded out like other technologies such as oil refineries have replaced cattle ranches is not true.

For more information about Cattle Ranches, refer below

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