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KANSAS Byways
Western Vistas

Western Vistas: Communities | Spotlights | Maps | Images | GPS Tour



Visit a rugged landscape on the culturally and visually fascinating route known as the Western Vistas Historic Byway. Imagine an ancient ocean once covering the shortgrass prairie. When the water receded and erosion set in, the ocean floor’s limestone layers became not only flat plains but oddly placed and shaped buttes, mounts and other chalk formations. Here, in western Kansas, is the Wild, Wild West of legend, where American Indians hunted bison, pioneers trekked and rustlers roamed – all attempting to eke out a living.
 
The region surrounding the Byway is a geologist’s and paleontologist’s paradise, punctuated with unusual rock formations and among the best fossil hunting areas in the world. Active fossil digs began with regularity in the 1870s. Early discoveries contributed significantly to the fossil record and included previously unknown and extinct animals, such as flying reptiles and toothed birds. While the area literally “rocks,” its cultural history may be petrifying to some. Here you can explore Fort Wallace, “the fightin-est Fort in the West,” walk in the footsteps of bison hunter Buffalo Bill Cody and visit Battle Canyon, site of the last conflict between American Indians (the Cheyenne) and United States troops. 

Highlights along the 102-mile Western Vistas Historic Byway include: 


El Quartelejo Museum Dig for fossils in a sandbox and learn about Western Vistas from prehistory to today.

Fort Wallace Museum Tour interpretative displays and see the Pond Creek Stagecoach Station, one of the oldest buildings between Leavenworth and Denver.

Monument Rocks National Landmark -
Large chalk formations, rich in fossils that formed approximately 80 million years ago. 

 
Western Vistas
Brochure
Website

For more information about the Western Vistas Historic Byway, contact:

 

Wild West Historical Foundation
info@buffalobilloakley.org 
785-671-1000