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Monument
Rocks, as well as nearby Castle Rock, and numerous sandstone bluffs in
the area are today collectively known as the "Badlands of Kansas." The
region is also known as the source of some of the best Cretaceous
marine fossils that have been found anywhere in the world. Beneath
these bluffs and outcroppings lie thousands of feet of marine
sediments that have provided paleontologists with a wealth of fossils
and the remains of extinct animals.
A number of fossils, including fish bones,
turtles, oyster shells, swimming reptiles, birds, coral, dinosaurs and
sharks teeth can be seen at the nearby
Keystone Gallery, the Fick Fossil and History Museum in Oakley, and at the
Sternberg Museum in Hays, Kansas. According to locals, after a
heavy rain, the area still smells like an ocean bay.
Today, it is hard to imagine that this
flat, arid, cactus and buffalo grass prairie was completely covered by
water, yet these awe-inspiring rock outcroppings tell a different
story. The arches and buttes of Monument Rocks is spread out over ten
acres and its history stretches beyond the prehistoric period into the
more recent past, when the
Cheyenne,
Arapaho,
Kiowa,
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