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Sand Creek Massacre National Historic SiteSand Creek Massacre NHS, credit NPS/Heidi Sosiski
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Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site
Nature & Science
 
wetland at Sand Creek Massacre NHS

NPS

Cottonwood trees and pond at Sand Creek Massacre NHS

Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site (NHS) was established in 2007, in part to preserve and protect the cultural landscape of the massacre. Protection of native biological resources, including animals, is integral to preserving the cultural landscape. Sand Creek Massacre NHS is primarily composed of shortgrass prairie and sage shrubland. Sand Creek, an intermittent stream, crosses the site. Shortgrass prairies support numerous animal and plant species, including federal and state listed endangered, threatened, and candidate species.

The natural environment has impacted the lifestyles of humans who have used the area for the past 8,000-10,000 years through the availability of resources. Humans have also left their mark on the landscape. The site and surrounding area have been affected by hunting, grazing, cultivation, water diversion, development, introduction of non-native species, and local extinction (extirpation) of native species such as pronghorn antelope and bison. The landscape of Sand Creek Massacre NHS is a record of human relationships with the natural environment, the contrasting values of Indians and Euroamericans, and their competition for limited resources. The environmental history of the site describes how the impacts of human actions contributed to how the environment changed over time.

 
Sand Creek Massacre NHS, David Zettner

David Zettner

Sand Creek Massacre NHS

The continued protection and preservation of these resources will contribute to the changing diversity of the ecosystem and biological communities of the Plains and Sand Creek Massacre NHS. Scientific study and observation of these resources will add to our understanding of this unique environment.

 

For more in depth information on the resources and stories of Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site, explore the Nature & Science and History & Culture sections or follow the links on this page.
 

Nature and Science

Alsate's face  

Did You Know?
Near the mouth of Green Gulch the road passes the eastern end of the Pulliam Peak intrusion. Here erosion has sculptured the intrusion; from certain places, the mountain profile takes the shape of a man's face that is looking skyward. The mountain profile is locally known as Alsate's Face.
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Last Updated: August 17, 2008 at 21:52 EST