Smoky Hill Trail
The Smoky Hill Trail was an American trail across the central Great Plains of North America in use from 1855 to 1870.[1][2] Established in what was then Kansas Territory, it extended west from Atchison, Kansas on the Missouri River to Denver, spanning the length of what is today Kansas and the eastern portion of Colorado.[2] The trail was named after the Smoky Hill River whose course it paralleled for much of its length.[3] Used by prospectors as the most direct route west to the Colorado gold fields during the Pike's Peak Gold Rush, it later served as a path westward for American settlers before being gradually superseded by the Kansas Pacific Railway.[1][3]
Smoky Hill Trail | |
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Route information | |
Length | 592 mi (953 km) |
Existed | 1855–1870 |
Major junctions | |
East end | Atchison, Kansas |
West end | Denver, Colorado |
Highway system |
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Trails |
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Gallery
- Smoky Hill Trail Marker on Pioneer Monument
- Pioneer Monument, Denver, Colorado
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gollark: The hydrogen can be burned cleanly, which is nice.
gollark: Oh, and you can't convert carbon dioxide and water into oxygen and carbon, it'd be oxygen, carbon and hydrogen.
gollark: Also, you might be able to get the carbon out as diamonds using whatever magic molecular reorganization thing you're using to do this, in which case it doesn't need to be buried and we can just use ridiculous volumes of diamond as a structural material.
gollark: *Can* you efficiently just convert carbon dioxide/water back into oxygen/carbon? I mean, the whole reason we do it the other way round is the fact that a lot of energy is released.
References
- "Smoky Hill Trail and Butterfield Overland Despatch". Kansas Historical Society. Nov 2011. Retrieved 2013-06-17.
- "Who We Are..." Smoky Hill Trail Association. Retrieved 2013-06-17.
- Weiser, Kathy (Nov 2012). "Smoky Hill Trail - Heading for Gold". Legends of America. Retrieved 2013-06-17.
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