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The Great Plains (french: Grandes Plaines), sometimes simply "the Plains", is a broad expanse of plain, flatland in North America. It is located west of the Mississippi River and east of the Rocky Mountains, much of it covered in prairie, steppe, and grassland. It is the southern and main part of the Interior Plains, which also include the tallgrass prairie between the Great Lakes and Appalachian Plateau, and the Taiga Plains Ecozone, Taiga Plains and Boreal Plains Ecozone, Boreal Plains ecozones in Northern Canada. The term Western Plains is used to describe the ecoregion of the Great Plains, or alternatively the western portion of the Great Plains. The Great Plains lies across both Central United States and Western Canada, encompassing: * The entirety of the U.S. states of Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota; * Parts of the U.S. states of Colorado, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas and Wyoming; * The southern portions of the Provinces and territories of Canada, Canadian provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. The term "Great Plains" usually refers specifically to the United States portion of the ecozone while the Canadian portion is known as the Canadian Prairies. In Canada it covers southeastern Alberta, southern Saskatchewan and a narrow band of southwestern Manitoba, these three provinces collectively known as the "Prairie Provinces". The entire region is known for supporting extensive cattle-ranching and dryland farming. Grasslands are among the least protected biomes with vast areas having been converted for agricultural purposes and pastures.


Usage

The term "Great Plains" is used in the United States to describe a sub-section of the even more vast Interior Plains physiographic division, which covers much of the interior of North America. It also has currency as a region of human geography, referring to the Plains Indians or the Plains states. In Canada the term is rarely used; Natural Resources Canada, the government department responsible for official mapping, treats the Interior Plains as one unit consisting of several related plateaus and plains. There is no region referred to as the "Great Plains" in the ''Atlas of Canada''. In terms of human geography, the term ''prairie'' is more commonly used in Canada, and the region is known as the Canadian Prairies, Prairie Provinces or simply "the Prairies". The ''North American Environmental Atlas'', produced by the Commission for Environmental Cooperation, a NAFTA agency composed of the geographical agencies of the Mexican, American, and Canadian governments, uses the "Great Plains" as an ecoregion synonymous with predominant prairies and grasslands rather than as physiographic region defined by topography. The Great Plains ecoregion includes five sub-regions: Temperate Prairies, West-Central Semi-Arid Prairies, South-Central Semi-Arid Prairies, Texas Louisiana Coastal Plains, and Tamaulipas-Texas Semi-Arid Plain, which overlap or expand upon other Great Plains designations.


Extent

The region is about east to west and north to south. Much of the region was home to American bison herds until they were hunted to near extinction during the mid/late-19th century. It has an area of approximately . Current thinking regarding the geographic boundaries of the Great Plains is shown by thi
map
at the Center for Great Plains Studies, University of Nebraska–Lincoln. This definition, however, is primarily ecological, not physiographic. The Boreal Plains of Western Canada are physiographically the same, but differentiated by their tundra and forest (rather than grassland) appearance. The term "Great Plains", for the region west of about the 96th meridian west, 96th and east of the Rocky Mountains, was not generally used before the early 20th century. Nevin M. Fenneman, Nevin Fenneman's 1916 study ''Physiographic Subdivision of the United States'' brought the term Great Plains into more widespread usage. Before that the region was almost invariably called the High Plains, in contrast to the lower Prairie Plains of the Midwestern United States, Midwestern states. Today the term "High Plains (United States), High Plains" is used for a subregion of the Great Plains. The term still remains little-used in Canada compared to the more common, "prairie".


Geography

The Great Plains are the westernmost portion of the vast North American Interior Plains, which extend east to the Appalachian Plateau. The United States Geological Survey divides the Great Plains in the United States into ten physiographic subdivisions: * Missouri Coteau or Missouri Plateau (which also extends into Canada), glaciated – east central South Dakota, northern and eastern North Dakota and northeastern Montana; * Coteau du Missouri, unglaciated – western South Dakota, northeastern Wyoming, southwestern North Dakota and southeastern Montana; * Black Hills – western South Dakota; * High Plains (United States), High Plains – southeastern Wyoming, southwestern South Dakota, western Nebraska (including the Sandhills (Nebraska), Sand Hills), eastern Colorado, western Kansas, western Oklahoma, eastern New Mexico, and northwestern Texas (including the Llano Estacado and Texas Panhandle); * Plains Border – central Kansas and northern Oklahoma (including the Flint Hills, Flint, Red Hills (Kansas), Red and Smoky Hills); * Colorado Piedmont – eastern Colorado; * Raton, New Mexico, Raton section – northeastern New Mexico; * Pecos River, Pecos Valley – eastern New Mexico; * Edwards Plateau – south central Texas; and * Central Texas section – central Texas. Further to this can be added Canadian physiographic sub-regions such as the Alberta Plain, Cypress Hills (Canada), Cypress Hills, Manitoba Escarpment (eastward), Manitoba Plain, Missouri Coteau (shared), Rocky Mountain Foothills (eastward), and Saskatchewan Plain. The Great Plains consist of a broad stretch of country underlain by nearly horizontal stratum, strata extending westward from the 97th meridian west to the base of the Rocky Mountains, a distance of . It extends northward from the Mexico, Mexican boundary far into Canada. Although the altitude of the plains increases gradually from 600 or on the east to 4,000–5,000 or near the mountains, the local relief is generally small. The semi-arid climate excludes tree growth and opens far-reaching views. The plains are by no means a simple unit. They are of diverse structure and of various stages of erosional development. They are occasionally interrupted by buttes and escarpments. They are frequently broken by valleys. Yet on the whole, a broadly extended surface of moderate relief so often prevails that the name, Great Plains, for the region as a whole is well-deserved. The western boundary of the plains is usually well-defined by the abrupt ascent of the mountains. The eastern boundary of the plains (in the United States) is more climate, climatic than topography, topographic. The line of of annual rainfall trends a little east of northward near the 97th meridian. If a boundary must be drawn where nature presents only a gradual transition, this rainfall line may be taken to divide the drier plains from the moister prairies. However, in Canada the eastern boundary of the plains is well defined by the presence of the Canadian Shield to the northeast. The plains (within the United States) may be described in northern, intermediate, central and southern sections, in relation to certain peculiar features. In Canada, no such division is used: the climatic and vegetation regions are more impactful on human settlement than mere topography, and therefore the region is split into (from north to south), the taiga plains, boreal forest, boreal plains, aspen parkland, and prairies, prairie ecoregion regions.


Northern Great Plains

The northern section of the Great Plains, north of 44th parallel north, latitude 44°, includes eastern Montana, eastern Wyoming, most of North Dakota and South Dakota, southwestern Minnesota and portions of the Canadian provinces including southeastern Alberta, southern Saskatchewan and southwestern Manitoba. The strata here are Cretaceous or early Tertiary, lying nearly horizontal. The surface is shown to be a plain of degradation by a gradual ascent here and there to the crest of a ragged escarpment, the escarpment-remnant of a resistant stratum. There are also the occasional lava-capped mesas and dike (geology), dike formed ridges, surmounting the general level by or more and manifestly demonstrating the widespread erosion of the surrounding plains. All these reliefs are more plentiful towards the mountains in central Montana. The peneplain is no longer in the cycle of erosion that witnessed its production. It appears to have suffered a regional uplift or increase in elevation, for the upper Missouri River and its branches no longer flow on the surface of the plain, but in well graded, maturely opened valleys, several hundred feet below the general level. A significant exception to the rule of mature valleys occurs, however, in the case of the Missouri, the largest river, which is broken by several falls on hard sandstones about east of the mountains. This peculiar feature is explained as the result of displacement of the river from a better graded preglacial valley by the Pleistocene ice sheet. Here, the ice sheet overspread the plains from the moderately elevated Canadian highlands far on the north-east, instead of from the much higher mountains nearby on the west. The present altitude of the plains near the mountain base is . The northern plains are interrupted by several small mountain areas. The Black Hills, chiefly in western South Dakota, are the largest group. They rise like a large island from the sea, occupying an oval area of about north-south by east-west. At Black Elk Peak, they reach an altitude of and have an effective relief over the plains of 2000 or This mountain mass is of flat-arched, dome-like structure, now well dissected by radiating consequent streams. The weaker uppermost strata have been eroded down to the level of the plains where their upturned edges are evenly truncated. The next following harder strata have been sufficiently eroded to disclose the core of underlying igneous and metamorphic rocks, metamorphic crystalline rocks in about half of the domed area.


Intermediate Great Plains

In the intermediate section of the plains, between 44th parallel north, latitudes 44° and 42nd parallel north, 42°, including southern South Dakota and northern Nebraska, the erosion of certain large districts is peculiarly elaborate. Known as the Badlands, it is a minutely dissected form with a relief of a few hundred feet. This is due to several causes: * the dry climate, which prevents the growth of a grassy turf * the fine texture of the Tertiary strata in the badland districts * every little rill, at times of rain, carves its own little valley.


Central Great Plains

The central section of the Great Plains, between 42nd parallel north, latitudes 42° and 36th parallel north, 36°, occupying eastern Colorado and western Kansas, is mostly a dissected fluvial, fluviatile plain. That is, this section was once smoothly covered with a gently sloping plain of gravel and sand that had been spread far forward on a broad denuded area as a piedmont (disambiguation), piedmont deposit by the rivers which issued from the mountains. Since then, it has been more or less dissected by the erosion of valleys. The central section of the plains thus presents a marked contrast to the northern section. While the northern section owes its smoothness to the removal of local gravels and sands from a formerly uneven surface by the action of degrading rivers and their inflowing tributaries, the southern section owes its smoothness to the deposition of imported gravels and sands upon a previously uneven surface by the action of aggrading rivers and their outgoing distributaries. The two sections are also alike in that residual eminences still here and there surmount the peneplain of the northern section, while the fluviatile plain of the central section completely buried the pre-existent relief. An exception to this statement must be made for the southwest, close to the mountains in southern Colorado, where some lava-capped mesas (Mesa de Maya, Raton Mesa) stand several thousand feet above the general plain level, and thus testify to the widespread erosion of this region before it was aggraded.


Southern Great Plains

The southern section of the Great Plains, between latitudes 35.5° and 25.5°, lies in western Texas, eastern New Mexico, and western Oklahoma. Like the central section, it is for the most part a dissected fluviatile plain. However, the lower lands which surround it on all sides place it in such strong relief that it stands up as a table-land, known from the time of Mexican occupation as the Llano Estacado. It measures roughly east-west and north-south. It is of very irregular outline, narrowing to the south. Its altitude is at the highest western point, nearest the mountains whence its gravels were supplied. From there, it slopes southeastward at a decreasing rate, first about , then about 7 ft per mile (1.3 m/km), to its eastern and southern borders, where it is in altitude. Like the High Plains farther north, it is extraordinarily smooth. It is very dry, except for occasional shallow and temporary water sheets after rains. Llano is separated from the plains on the north by the mature consequent valley of the Canadian River, and from the mountains on the west by the broad and probably mature valley of the Pecos River. On the east, it is strongly undercut by the retrogressive erosion of the headwaters of the Red, Brazos, and Colorado rivers of Texas and presents a ragged escarpment approximately high, overlooking the central denuded area of that state. There, between the Brazos and Colorado rivers, occurs a series of isolated outliers capped by limestone that underlies both the Llano Uplift on the west and the Grand Prairies escarpment on the east. The southern and narrow part of the table-land, called the Edwards Plateau, is more dissected than the rest, and falls off to the south in a frayed-out fault scarp. This scarp overlooks the coastal plain of the Rio Grande embayment. The central denuded area, east of the Llano, resembles the east-central section of the plains in exposing older rocks. Between these two similar areas, in the space limited by the Canadian and Red Rivers, rise the subdued forms of the Wichita Mountains in Oklahoma, the westernmost member of the Ouachita system.


Other terminology

The term "Western Plains" is used to describe the ecoregion of the Great Plains, or alternatively the western portion of the Great Plains.


Natural history


Climate

In general, the Great Plains have a wide range of weather, with very cold and harsh winters and very hot and humid summers. Wind speeds are often very high, especially in winter. The 100th meridian roughly corresponds with the line that divides the Great Plains into an area that receives or more of rainfall per year and an area that receives less than . In this context, the High Plains, as well as Southern Alberta, south-western Saskatchewan and Eastern Montana are mainly Semi-arid climate, semi arid steppe land and are generally characterised by ranch, rangeland or marginal Agriculture, farmland. The region (especially the High Plains) is periodically subjected to extended periods of drought; high winds in the region may then generate devastating dust storms. The eastern Great Plains near the eastern boundary falls in the humid subtropical climate zone in the southern areas, and the northern and central areas fall in the humid continental climate. Many thunderstorms occur in the plains in the spring through summer. The southeastern portion of the Great Plains is the most tornado active area in the world and is sometimes referred to as Tornado Alley.


Flora

The Great Plains are part of the floristic North American Prairies Province, which extends from the Rocky Mountains to the Appalachian Mountains, Appalachians.


Fauna

Mammals: Although the American bison (''Bison bison'') historically ranged throughout much of North America (from New York (state), New York to Oregon and Canada to northern Mexico), they are strongly associated with the Great Plains where they once roamed in immense herds. Pronghorn (''Antilocapra americana'') range into western areas of the region. The black-tailed prairie dog (''Cynomys ludovicianus'') is another iconic species among several rodents that are linked to the region including the thirteen-lined ground squirrel (''Ictidomys tridecemlineatus''), spotted ground squirrel (''Xerospermophilus spilosoma''), Franklin's ground squirrel (''Poliocitellus franklinii''), plains pocket gopher (''Geomys bursarius''), hispid pocket mouse (''Chaetodipus hispidus''), olive-backed pocket mouse (''Perognathus fasciatus''), plains pocket mouse (''Perognathus flavescens''), and plains harvest mouse (''Reithrodontomys montanus''), Two carnivores associated with the Great Plains include the swift fox (''Vulpes velox'') and the endangered black-footed ferret (''Mustela nigripes'').Reid, Fiona, A. 2006. ''A Field Guide to mammals of North America North of Mexico, Peterson Field Guide Series, 4th ed.'' Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. New York, N. Y. xx, 579 pp. Birds: The lesser prairie chicken (''Tympanuchus pallidicinctus'') is Endemism, endemic to the Great Plains and the distribution of the greater prairie chicken (''Tympanuchus cupido'') predominantly occurs in the region, although the latter historically ranged further eastward. The Harris's sparrow (''Zonotrichia querula'') spends winter months in southern areas of the region. Other species migrate from the south in the spring and spend their breeding season on the plains, including the white-faced ibis (''Plegadis chihi''), mountain plover (''Charadrius montanus''), marbled godwit (''Limosa fedoa''), Sprague's pipit (''Anthus spragueii''), Cassin's sparrow (''Peucaea cassinii''), Baird's sparrow (''Centronyx bairdii''), lark bunting (''Calamospiza melanocorys''), chestnut-collared longspur (''Calcarius ornatus''), thick-billed longspur or McCown's longspur (''Rhynchophanes mccownii''), and dickcissel (''Spiza americana'').Mulroy, Kevin (Editor-in-Chief). 2002. ''Field Guide to the Birds of North America, 4th edition.'' National Geographic, Washington, D. C. 480 pp. Reptiles: The prairie rattlesnake (''Crotalus viridis'') ranges throughout much of the Great Plains and into the valleys and lower elevations of the eastern Rocky Mountains and portions of the Southwestern United States, American southwest. Other snakes include the plains hog-nosed snake (''Western hognose snake, Heterodon nasicus''), western milksnake (''Milk snake, Lampropeltis gentilis''), great plains ratsnake (''Pantherophis emoryi''), bullsnake (''Bullsnake, Pituophis catenifer sayi''), plains black-headed snake (''Plains black-headed snake, Tantilla nigriceps''), plains gartersnake (''Plains garter snake, Thamnophis radix''), and lined snake (''Tropidoclonion, Tropidoclonion lineatum''). Reptile diversity increases significantly in southern regions of the Great Plains. The ornate box turtle (''Terrapene ornata'') and great plains skink (''Great Plains skink, Plestiodon obsoletus'') occur in southern areas.Powell, Robert, Roger Conant, and Joseph Collins. 2016. ''Peterson Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America, 4th ed.'' Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. New York, N. Y. xiii, 494 pp. [pages 202-209] Amphibians: Although few salamanders are strongly associated with region, the western tiger salamander (''Barred tiger salamander, Ambystoma mavortium'') ranges through much of the Great Plains and the Rocky Mountains, as does the rocky mountain toad (''Rocky Mountain toad, Anaxyrus w. woodhousi''). Other anurans related to region include the great plains toad (''Great Plains toad, Anaxyrus cognatus''), plains leopard frog (''Plains leopard frog, Lithobates blairi''), and plains spadefoot (''Plains spadefoot toad, Spea bombifrons'').Dodd Jr., C. Kenneth (2013) ''Frogs of the United States and Canada, Vol. I & II''. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore. 982 pp. Fish: Some species predominately associated with various river basins in the Great Plains include sturgeon chub (''Macrhybopsis gelida''), peppered chub (''Macrhybopsis tetranema''), prairie chub (''Macrhybopsis australis''), western silvery minnow (''Hybognathus argyritis''), plains minnow (''Hybognathus placitus''), smalleye shiner (''Notropis buccula''), Arkansas River shiner (''Notropis girardi''), Red River shiner (''Notropis bairdi''), Topeka shiner (''Notropis topeka''), plains topminnow (''Fundulus sciadicus''), plains killifish (''Fundulus zebrinus''), Red River pupfish (''Cyprinodon rubrofluviatilis''), and Arkansas darter (''Etheostoma cragini'').Lee, D. S., C. R. Gilbert, C. H. Hocutt, R. E. Jenkins, D. E. McAllister, and J. R. Stauffer, Jr. 1980. ''Atlas of North American Freshwater Fishes.'' North Carolina State Museum of Natural History. x, 867 pp. Page, L. M. and B. M. Burr. 2011. ''Peterson Field Guide to Freshwater Fishes: North America North of Mexico, Second Edition.'' Peterson Field Guide Series. Houghton Mifflin Company. Boston, Massachusetts. xix, 663 pp. File:Black-footed Ferrets in Preconditioning Pens (15519959116) (cropped).jpg, Black-footed ferret (''Mustela nigripes'') National Black-footed Ferret Conservation Center, Colorado File:Swift Fox (cropped).jpg, Swift fox (''Vulpes velox''), Colorado File:Tympanuchus pallidicinctus-1jpg (cropped).jpg, Lesser prairie-chicken (''Tympanuchus pallidicinctus'') on a Lek mating, lek in the Red Hills of Kansas File:Great Plains Rat Snake (Pantherophis emoryi) (8726969667).jpg, Great Plains ratsnake (''Pantherophis emoryi''), Missouri File:Great Plains toad (cropped).jpg, Great Plains toad (''Anaxyrus cognatus'')


Paleontology

During the Cretaceous Period (145–66 million years ago), the Great Plains were covered by a shallow Inland sea (geology), inland sea called the Western Interior Seaway. However, during the Late Cretaceous to the Paleocene (65–55 million years ago), the seaway had begun to recede, leaving behind thick marine deposits and a relatively flat terrain which the seaway had once occupied. During the Cenozoic era, specifically about 25 million years ago during the Miocene and Pliocene epochs, the continental climate became favorable to the evolution of grasslands. Existing forest biomes declined and grasslands became much more widespread. The grasslands provided a new Ecological niche, niche for mammals, including many ungulates and glires, that switched from browsing diets to grazing diets. Traditionally, the spread of grasslands and the development of grazers have been strongly linked. However, an examination of mammalian teeth suggests that it is the open, gritty habitat and not the grass itself which is linked to diet changes in mammals, giving rise to the "Grit, not grass hypothesis, grit, not grass" hypothesis. Paleontology, Paleontological finds in the area have yielded bones of mammoths, Smilodon, saber-toothed cats and other ancient animals, as well as dozens of other megafauna (large animals over ) – such as Ground sloth, giant sloths, Evolution of the horse, horses, mastodons, and American lion – that dominated the area of the ancient Great Plains for thousands to millions of years. The vast majority of these animals became extinct in North America at the end of the Pleistocene (around 13,000 years ago). A number of significant fossil sites are located in the Great Plains including Agate Fossil Beds National Monument (Nebraska), Ashfall Fossil Beds (Nebraska), Clayton Lake State Park (New Mexico), Dinosaur Valley State Park (Texas), Hudson-Meng Bison Kill (Nebraska), Makoshika State Park (Montana), and The Mammoth Site (South Dakota).


Public and protected lands

Public and protected lands in the Great Plains include National Parks and National Monuments, administers by the National Park Service with the responsibility of preserving ecological and historical places and making them available to the public.National Park Service
About Us
(referenced April 9, 2022)
The United States Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service manages the National Wildlife Refuges, with the primary responsibility of conserving and protecting fish, wildlife, plants, and habitat in the public trust.United States Fish and Wildlife Service: https://www.fws.gov/ (referenced April 9, 2022) Both are agencies of the United States Department of the Interior, Department of the Interior. In contrast, United States Forest Service, U.S. Forest Service, an agency of the United States Department of Agriculture, U. S. Department of Agriculture, administers the National Forests and National Grasslands, under a multiple-use concept. By law, the U.S. Forest Service must consider all resources, with no single resource emphasized to the detriment of others, including water, soil, grazing, timber harvesting, and minerals (mining and drilling), as well as recreation and conservation of fish and wildlife.United States Forest Service
Managing the Land
(referenced April 9, 2022)
Each individual state also administers state lands, typically smaller areas, for various purposes including conservation and recreation. Grasslands are among the least protected biomes. Humans have converted much of the prairies for agricultural purposes or to create pastures. Several of the protected lands in the region are centered around aberrant and uncharacteristic features of the region, such as mountains, outcrops, and canyons (e.g. Devils Tower, Devil's Tower National Monument, Wind Cave National Park, Scotts Bluff National Monument), and as splendid and worthy as they are, they are not primarily focused on conserving the plains and prairies. *Alberta: Elk Island National Park (48,000 acres), Suffield National Wildlife Area (113,263 acres). *Colorado: Comanche National Grassland (443,081 acres), Pawnee National Grassland (193,060 acres), Thunder Basin National Grassland (547,499 acres) *Iowa: DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge (8,362 acres) *Kansas: Cheyenne Bottoms, Cheyenne Bottoms Wildlife Area (41,000 acres), Cimarron National Grassland (108,176 acres), Flint Hills National Wildlife Refuge (18,463 acres), Kirwin National Wildlife Refuge (10,778 acres), Marais des Cygnes National Wildlife Refuge (7,500 acres), Quivira National Wildlife Refuge (22,135 acres), Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve (10,882 acres). *Manitoba: Riding Mountain National Park (733,400 acres), Turtle Mountain Provincial Park (46,080 acres). *Oklahoma: Black Kettle National Grassland (31,286 acres), Salt Plains National Wildlife Refuge (32,080 acres), Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge (59,000 acres). *Missouri: Loess Bluffs National Wildlife Refuge (7,350 acres). *Minnesota: Agassiz National Wildlife Refuge (61,500 acres), Big Stone National Wildlife Refuge (11,586 acres), Glacial Lakes State Park (2,423 acres), Blue Mounds State Park ( 1,567 acres). *Montana: Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge (915,814 acres), Makoshika State Park (11,538 acres), Medicine Lake National Wildlife Refuge (31,533 acres), Rosebud Battlefield State Park (3,052 acres), UL Bend National Wildlife Refuge (56,048), Upper Missouri River Breaks National Monument (377,000 acres). *Nebraska: Scotts Bluff National Monument (3,000 acres), Boyer Chute National Wildlife Refuge (4,040 acres), Crescent Lake National Wildlife Refuge (45,818 acres), Fort Niobrara National Wildlife Refuge (19,131 acres), John and Louise Seier National Wildlife Refuge (2,400 acres), North Platte National Wildlife Refuge (5,047 acres), Rainwater Basin, Rainwater Basin Wetland Management District (22,864 acres), Valentine National Wildlife Refuge (71,516 acres). *New Mexico: Grulla National Wildlife Refuge (3,236 acres), Kiowa National Grassland (137,131 acres). *North Dakota: Arrowwood National Wildlife Refuge (15,934 acres), Audubon National Wildlife Refuge (14,739 acres), Little Missouri State Park (6,492 acres), Sheyenne National Grassland (70,180 acres), Theodore Roosevelt National Park (70,446 acres). *Saskatchewan: Grasslands National Park (224,000 acres), Last Mountain Lake National Wildlife Area (38,553 acres). *South Dakota: Badlands National Park (242,756 acres), Black Hills National Forest (1,253,308 acres), Custer State Park (71,000 acres), Fort Pierre National Grassland (115,890 acres), Grand River National Grassland (154,783 acres), Wind Cave National Park (33,847 acres). *Texas: Buffalo Lake National Wildlife Refuge (7,664 acres), Caddo National Grassland (17,873-acres), Caprock Canyons State Park and Trailway, Caprock Canyons State Park (15,313 acres), Hagerman National Wildlife Refuge (11,320 acres), Lyndon B. Johnson National Grassland (20,309 acres), Muleshoe National Wildlife Refuge (6,440 acres), Palo Duro Canyon, Palo Duro Canyon State Park (26,200 acres), Rita Blanca National Grassland (230,000 acres). *Wyoming: Curt Gowdy State Park (3,395), Devils Tower, Devil's Tower National Monument (1,346 acres), Glendo State Park (ca. 10,000 acres of land).


History


Original American contact

The first Peoples (Paleo-Indians) arrived on the Great Plains thousands of years ago. Historically, the Great Plains were the range of the Blackfoot Confederacy, Blackfoot, Crow Nation, Crow, Sioux, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Comanche, and others. Eastern portions of the Great Plains were inhabited by tribes who lived at Etzanoa and in semi-permanent villages of earth lodges, such as the Arikara, Mandan, Pawnee people, Pawnee, and Wichita people, Wichita. The introduction of corn around 800 CE allowed the development of the mound-building Mississippian culture along rivers that crossed the Great Plains and that included trade networks west to the Rocky Mountains. Mississippians settled the Great Plains at sites now in Spiro Mounds, Oklahoma and Mitchell Site, South Dakota. Siouan languages, Siouan language speakers may have originated in the lower Mississippi River region. They were agriculturalists and may have been part of the Mound Builders, Mound Builder civilization during the 9th–12th centuries. Wars with the Ojibwe and Cree peoples pushed the Lakota people, Lakota (Teton Sioux) west onto the Great Plains in the mid- to late-17th century. The Shoshone originated in the western Great Basin and spread north and east into present-day Idaho and Wyoming. By 1500, some Eastern Shoshone had crossed the Rocky Mountains into the Great Plains. After 1750, warfare and pressure from the Blackfoot, Crow, Lakota, Cheyenne, and Arapaho pushed Eastern Shoshone south and westward. Some of them moved as far south as Texas, emerging as the Comanche by 1700.


Arrival of horses

The first known contact between Europeans and Indians in the Great Plains occurred in what is now Texas, Kansas, and Nebraska from 1540 to 1542 with the arrival of Francisco Vázquez de Coronado, a Spanish conquistador. In that same period, Hernando de Soto crossed a west-northwest direction in what is now Oklahoma and Texas which is now known as the De Soto Trail. The Spanish thought that the Great Plains were the location of the mythological ''Quivira and Zuni-Cibola Complex, Cíbola'', a place said to be rich in gold. People in the southwest began to acquire horses in the 16th century by trading or stealing them from Spanish colonists in New Mexico. As horse culture moved northward, the Comanche were among the first to commit to a fully mounted nomadic lifestyle. This occurred by the 1730s, when they had acquired enough horses to put all their people on horseback. The real beginning of the horse culture of the plains began with the Pueblo Revolt, Pueblo Revolt of 1680 in New Mexico and the capture of thousands of horses and other livestock. In 1683 a Spanish expedition into Texas found horses among Native people. In 1690, a few horses were found by the Spanish among the Indians living at the mouth of the Colorado River (Texas), Colorado River of Texas and the Caddo of eastern Texas had a sizeable number.Haines, Francis. "The Northward Spread of Horses among the Plains Indians. ''American Anthropologist'', Vol 40, No. 3 (1988) p. 382 The French explorer Claude Charles Du Tisne found 300 horses among the Wichita (tribe), Wichita on the Verdigris River in 1719, but they were still not plentiful. Another Frenchman, Étienne de Veniard, Sieur de Bourgmont, Bourgmont, could only buy seven at a high price from the Kaw (tribe), Kaw in 1724, indicating that horses were still scarce among tribes in Kansas. By 1770, that Plains Indians culture was mature, consisting of mounted buffalo-hunting nomads from Saskatchewan and Alberta southward nearly to the Rio Grande. The milder winters of the southern Plains favored a pastoral economy by the Indians. On the northeastern Plains of Canada, the Indians were less favored, with families owning fewer horses, remaining more dependent upon dogs for transporting goods, and hunting bison on foot. The scarcity of horses in the north encouraged raiding and warfare in competition for the relatively small number of horses that survived the severe winters. Comanche power peaked in the 1840s when they conducted Comanche–Mexico Wars, large-scale raids hundreds of miles into Mexico proper, while also Texas–Indian wars, warring against the Anglo-Americans and Tejanos who had settled in Republic of Texas, independent Texas.


Fur trade

The fur trade brought thousands of colonial settlers into the Great Plains over the next 100 years. Fur trappers made their way across much of the region, making regular contacts with Indians. The United States acquired the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 and conducted the Lewis and Clark Expedition in 1804–1806, and more information became available concerning the Plains, and various pioneers entered the areas. Fur trading posts were often the basis of later settlements. Through the 19th century, more settlers migrated to the Great Plains as part of a vast United States territorial acquisitions, westward expansion of population, and new settlements became dotted across the Great Plains. The settlers also brought diseases against which the Indians had no resistance. Between a half and two-thirds of the Plains Indians are thought to have died of smallpox by the time of the Louisiana Purchase. The 1837 Great Plains smallpox epidemic spread across the Great Plains, killing many thousands between 1837 and 1840. In the end, it is estimated that two-thirds of the Blackfoot population died, along with half of the Assiniboines and Arikaras, a third of the Crows, and a quarter of the Pawnees.


Pioneer settlement

* Fort Lisa (North Dakota), Fort Lisa (1809), North Dakota * Fort Lisa (Nebraska), Fort Lisa (1812), Nebraska * Fort Atkinson (Nebraska) (1819), Nebraska * Fontenelle's Post (1822), Nebraska * Cabanne's Trading Post (1822), Nebraska * Fort Kiowa (1822), South Dakota * Fort Laramie National Historic Site, Fort Laramie (1834), Texas * Fort Parker Massacre, Fort Parker (1834), Texas * New Braunfels, Texas, Zinkenburg (1845), Texas * Fort Kearney (1848), Nebraska * Fort Martin Scott (1848), Texas * Fort Croghan (1849), Texas * Fort Gates (1849), Texas * Fort Graham (1849), Texas * History of Fort Worth, Texas, Fort Worth (1849), Texas * Fort Belknap (Texas), Fort Belknap (1851), Texas * Fort Mason (1851), Texas * Fort Chadbourne (1852), Texas * Fort McKavett State Historic Site, Fort McKavett (1852), Texas * Fort Phantom Hill (1852), Texas * Coleman, Texas, Camp Colorado (1855), Texas * Fort McPherson, Nebraska, Fort McPherson (1863), Nebraska * Fort Mitchell, Nebraska, Fort Mitchell (1864), Nebraska * Fort Concho (1867), Texas * Fort Griffin (1867), Texas * Fort Richardson (Texas), Fort Richardson (1867), Texas * Fort Sidney (1867), Nebraska * Fort Omaha (1868), Nebraska * Fort Hartsuff State Historical Park, Fort Hartsuff (1874), Nebraska * Fort Sill (1869), Oklahoma * Fort Robinson (1874), Nebraska * Camp Sheridan (Nebraska), Camp Sheridan (1874), Nebraska * Fort Niobrara (1880), Nebraska * Fort Elliott (1875), Texas Beginning in 1821, the Santa Fe Trail ran from the Missouri River to New Mexico, skirting north of Comancheria. Beginning in the 1830s, the Oregon Trail led from the Missouri River across the Great Plains. After 1870, the new railroads across the Plains brought hunters who killed off almost all the American bison, bison for their hides. The railroads offered attractive packages of land and transportation to American farmers, who rushed to settle the land. They also took advantage of the homestead laws to obtain farms. Land speculators and local boosters identified many potential towns, and those reached by the railroad had a chance, while the others became ghost towns. Towns flourished if they were favored by proximity to the railroad. Much of the Great Plains became open range where cattle roamed free, hosting ranching operations where anyone was free to run cattle. In the spring and fall, ranchers held roundups where their cowboys branded new calves, treated animals, and sorted the cattle for sale. Such ranching began in Texas and gradually moved northward. Between 1866 and 1895, cowboys herded 10 million cattle north to rail heads such as Dodge City, Kansas and Ogallala, Nebraska; from there, cattle were shipped east. The U.S. passed the Homestead Acts of 1862 to encourage agricultural development of the Great Plains and house a growing population. It allowed a settler to claim up to of land, provided that he lived on it for a period of five years and cultivated it. The provisions were expanded under the Kinkaid Act of 1904 to include a homestead of an entire section. Hundreds of thousands of people claimed such homesteads, sometimes building houses out of the very turf of the land. Many of them were not skilled farmers, and failures were frequent. The Dominion Lands Act of 1871 served a similar function for establishing homesteads on the prairies in Canada. File:Homesteader NE 1866.png, Homestead Acts, Homesteaders in central Nebraska in 1886 File:Johnson 1920 HighPlains.jpg, The Great Plains before the native grasses were plowed under, Haskell County, Kansas, 1897, showing a man near a buffalo wallow File:Cowboy1902.jpg, Cattle herd and cowboy, c. 1902 File:"Wheat field on Dutch flats near Mitchell, Nebr. Farm of T.C. Shawver." - NARA - 294480.tif, Wheat field on Dutch flats near Mitchell, Nebraska, 1910


Social life

The railroads opened up the Great Plains for settlement, making it possible to ship wheat and other crops at low cost to the urban markets in the East and overseas. Homestead land was free for American settlers. Railroads sold their land at cheap rates to immigrants in the expectation that they would generate traffic as soon as farms were established. Immigrants poured in, especially from Germany and Scandinavia. On the plains, very few single men attempted to operate a farm or ranch by themselves; they understood the need for a hard-working wife and numerous children to handle the many responsibilities. During the early years of settlement, farm women played an integral role in assuring family survival by working outdoors. After approximately one generation, women increasingly left the fields, thus redefining their roles within the family. New technology encouraged women to turn to domestic roles, including sewing and washing machines. Media and government extension agents promoted the "scientific housekeeping" movement, along with county fairs which featured achievements in home cookery and canning, advice columns for women regarding farm book keeping, and home economics courses in the schools. The eastern image of farm life in the prairies emphasized the isolation of the lonely farmer and wife, yet plains residents created busy social lives for themselves. They often sponsored activities which combined work, food, and entertainment, such as barn raisings, corn huskings, quilting bees, The National Grange of the Order of Patrons of Husbandry, Grange meetings, church activities and school functions. Women organized shared meals and potluck events, as well as extended visits among families.


20th century

The region roughly centered on the Oklahoma Panhandle was known as the Dust Bowl during the late 1920s and early 1930s, including southeastern Colorado, southwestern Kansas, the Texas Panhandle, and extreme northeastern New Mexico. The effects of an extended drought, inappropriate cultivation, and financial crises of the Great Depression forced many farmers off the land throughout the Great Plains. From the 1950s on, many areas of the Great Plains have become productive crop-growing areas because of extensive irrigation on large land-holdings. The United States is a major exporter of agricultural products. The southern portion of the Great Plains lies over the Ogallala Aquifer, a huge underground layer of water-bearing strata. Center pivot irrigation is used extensively in drier sections of the Great Plains, resulting in Overdrafting, aquifer depletion at a rate that is greater than the ground's ability to recharge.


Population decline

The rural Plains have lost a third of their population since 1920. Several hundred thousand square miles of the Great Plains have fewer than , the density standard that Frederick Jackson Turner used to declare the American frontier "closed" in 1893. Many have fewer than . There are more than 6,000 ghost towns in Kansas alone, according to Kansas historian Daniel Fitzgerald (writer), Daniel Fitzgerald. This problem is often exacerbated by the consolidation of farms and the difficulty of attracting modern industry to the region. In addition, the smaller school-age population has forced the consolidation of school districts and the closure of high schools in some communities. The continuing population loss has led some to suggest that the current use of the drier parts of the Great Plains is not sustainable,Amanda Rees, ''The Great Plains region'' (2004) p. xvi and there has been a proposal to return approximately of these drier parts to native prairie land as a Buffalo Commons.


Wind power

The Great Plains contributes substantially to wind power in the United States. T. Boone Pickens developed wind farms after a career as a petroleum executive, and he called for the U.S. to invest $1 trillion to build an additional 200,000 MW of wind power in the Plains as part of his Pickens Plan. He cited Sweetwater, Texas, as an example of economic revitalization driven by wind power development.


See also

* 1837 Great Plains smallpox epidemic * Bison hunting * Conservation of American bison * Dust Bowl * Great American Desert * Great bison belt * Great Plains Art Museum * Great Plains Conservation Program * Llano Estacado * Northern Great Plains History Conference * Territories of the United States on stamps


International steppe-lands

* Eurasian Steppe * Kazakh Steppe * Pampas, in Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil * Pontic–Caspian steppe * Puszta


References


Further reading

* Bonnifield, Paul. ''The Dust Bowl: Men, Dirt, and Depression'', University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, New Mexico, 1978, hardcover, . * Courtwright, Julie. ''Prairie Fire: A Great Plains History'' (University Press of Kansas, 2011) 274 pp. * Danbom, David B. ''Sod Busting: How families made farms on the 19th-century Plains'' (2014) * Eagan, Timothy. ''The Worst Hard Time : the Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl''. Boston : Houghton Mifflin Co., 2006. * Michael Forsberg, Forsberg, Michael, ''Great Plains: America's Lingering Wild'', University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois, 2009, * Gilfillan, Merrill. ''Chokecherry Places, Essays from the High Plains'', Johnson Press, Boulder, Colorado, trade paperback, . * Grant, Michael Johnston. ''Down and Out on the Family Farm: Rural Rehabilitation in the Great Plains, 1929–1945'', University of Nebraska Press, 2002, * Hurt, R. Douglas. ''The Big Empty: The Great Plains in the Twentieth Century'' (University of Arizona Press; 2011) 315 pages; the environmental, social, economic, and political history of the region. * Hurt, R. Douglas. ''The Great Plains during World War II.'' University of Nebraska Press. 2008. Pp. xiii, 507. * Mills, David W. ''Cold War in a Cold Land: Fighting Communism on the Northern Plains'' (2015) Col War era
excerpt
* Peirce, Neal R. ''The Great Plains States of America: People, Politics, and Power in the Nine Great Plains States'' (1973) * Raban, Jonathan. ''Bad Land: An American Romance''. Vintage Departures, division of Vintage Books, New York, 1996. Winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for Nonfiction. * Rees, Amanda. ''The Great Plains Region: The Greenwood Encyclopedia of American Regional Cultures'' (2004) * Stegner, Wallace. ''Wolf Willow: A History, a Story, and a Memory of the Last Plains Frontier'', Viking Compass Book, New York, 1966, trade paperback, * Wishart, David J. (ed.). ''Encyclopedia of the Great Plains'', University of Nebraska Press, 2004,
complete text online


External links


Kansas Heritage Group: ''Native Prairie, Preserve, Flowers, and Research''



University of Nebraska-Lincoln: ''Center for Great Plains Studies''
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Oklahoma Digital Maps: Digital Collections of Oklahoma and Indian Territory
{{Authority control Great Plains, Ecoregions of the United States Physiographic provinces Plains of Canada Plains of the United States Regions of Canada Regions of the United States Regions of the Western United States Temperate grasslands, savannas, and shrublands in the United States