Front cover image for This fragile land : a natural history of the Nebraska Sandhills

This fragile land : a natural history of the Nebraska Sandhills

"The Nebraska Sandhills is the largest area of sand dunes in the western hemisphere, covering an area about as large as Vermont, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island combined. Unlike most dunes, the Sandhills region supports an astonishing variety of wildlife."--BOOK JACKET. "Sixty million years ago the area lay submerged in a vast inland sea. As the land lifted and the waters receded, the sandhills were formed, built upon a sandy floor above a sandy basement. Paul A. Johnsgard's appreciation for the region includes its evolution, making a very special place patiently shaped by water, wind, and time."--BOOK JACKET. "Sometimes 450 feet higher than their sloping valleys, the hills themselves are almost entirely covered with plants that manage to survive on an unstable substrate and in a climate of merciless heat and cold. They provide homes and resting places for rare species and sustain the livelihoods of a remarkable variety of people."--BOOK JACKET. "Though firmly established in science, this book is an extended love letter to the Sandhills region and its people, plants, and animals. Johnsgard is now in his third decade of research in the Sandhills. This Fragile Land lets others see what he sees, a land with a fascinating range of geological, biological, and ecological vistas."--BOOK JACKET
Print Book, English, ©1995
University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, ©1995
xv, 256 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
9780803225787, 0803225784
31243099