Prairie vegetation in presettlement Iowa covered more than 80 percent of the land area (Moyer, 1953). With the arrival of white settlers, the rich prairie sod fell victim to the plow in almost direct proportion to the speed of the westward migration. A few prairie areas escaped plowing by virtue of being too wet for crops, inaccessible due to topography or an Inconvenience. One early investigator (Shimek, 1925) of prairie vegetation in Iowa wrote, Comparatively little of the native prairie remains in Iowa. A few unbroken tracts are still scattered about over the state, ... but even these have been more or less disturbed by pasturing and cutting. Even under the strength of this early indictment the philosophy of the plow has not changed, a...