The Palliser Triangle Challenge
Captain John Palliser's 1857 expedition found a large area of southern Alberta and Saskatchewan too dry for farming. With just 10-15 inches of rain a year, it challenged settlers.
The Palliser Triangle stretched from Kindersley, Saskatchewan in the north to the Cypress Hills in the south, encompassing over 20 million acres of semi-arid prairie. Early homesteaders who ignored climatological warnings often faced crop failures and abandonment.
But farmers and scientists created specialized techniques that turned much of this "Great American Desert" into productive land. These dry farming methods became the prairie's foundation.