Long before GPS, natural landmarks like Scotts Bluff rose high above the prairie, signaling to travelers that they were on the right path heading west. Before Gering became a town in 1887 and decades before Nebraska achieved statehood in 1867, these sandstone and siltstone formations were already guiding thousands along the Oregon, California, and Mormon Trails. Scotts Bluff National Monument is named after Hiram Scott, a fur trader with the Rocky Mountain Fur Company who died under mysterious circumstances nearby in the 1820s.
Scotts Bluff National Monument, Gering, Nebraska
Today in History
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Lights, camera, Sundance
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International Day of the Worlds Indigenous Peoples
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Upstate autumn
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International Sloth Day
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International Mountain Day
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What are we looking at?
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The rainbow connection
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All hail the king of shrubs
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Invisible no longer
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Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, California
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Things are looking up
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Eurasian red squirrel in Northumberland, England
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