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Print this page (pdf file) The Sand Hills are a huge complex of wetlands, prairie and sandy
hills in northwestern Nebraska, an incredible region of biological
diversity and scenic vistas. Biologists refer to them as the most
important biologically intact focal area within the Great Plains.
The area includes the largest continuous tract of mid and tallgrass
prairie in North America, and the 12 million acres of rolling sandhills
make the region the largest dune area in America.
The Sand Hills region is often described as a "sea of grass," as grass
anchors the sand. It is famous for rolling sand hills and picturesque
giant ripples with some dunes reaching 400-feet tall and as
long as 20 miles. Covering a full quarter of Nebraska, the Sand
Hills provide plenty of canoeing, hunting, photography, birding,
fishing and hiking opportunities.
The combination of sand dunes and sandy soils creates a unique
grassland environment where hundreds of bird species thrive.
Spanning a segment of the Great Plains Flyway, the Sand Hills are
a critical part of the sandhill crane migratory route. Water birds
including swans, ducks and grebes as well as sandpipers and terns
share the Sand Hills with river otter, elk, deer, pronghorn and
bats. Half of the world's population of the Blandings turtle — an
international species of concern — resides within the Sand Hills.
The Sand Hills is a rare place where people don’t hesitate to drink
directly from the springs. But development, wetland drainage and
plans to export and sell water from portions of the Sand Hills and
threatens to compromise the clean water, stunning vistas and biological
diversity of this landscape.
To join Sierra Club's efforts to curtail destruction of the Sand Hills,
please contact Buffalo Bruce, buffalobruce@panhandle.net
(308) 432-3458, (402) 416-3239.

Nebraska Chapter website
Photo courtesy Buffalo Bruce; used with permission.
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