by
Rex Buchanan, Burke Griggs, and Josh Svaty
Recorded Presentation
Thursday, May 7, 2020
3 pm | Virtual Presentation
The authors will speak about their recently published book
Order your copy of the new book now, have it in hand for the virtual presentation
Long before the coming of Euro-Americans, native inhabitants of what is now Kansas left their mark on the land: carvings in the soft orange and red sandstone of the state’s Smoky Hills. In a series of photographs, Petroglyphs of the Kansas Smoky Hills offers viewers a chance to read the story that these carvings tell of the region’s first people- and to appreciate an important feature of Kansas history and its landscape that is increasingly threatened by erosion and vandalism.
Virginia Wulkfkuhle, Public Archaeologist Emerita at The Kansas Historical Society and Editor of The Kansas Anthropologist
Brian L. O’Neill, PhD, Senior Research Associate/Archaeologist, University of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History
LJ World.com
“The book documents many carvings associated with the Wichita and the Pawnee tribes that have survived for centuries in the outcroppings, bluffs and caves of central Kansas.”
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Rex C. Buchanan, a native of central Kansas, is the director emeritus of the Kansas Geological Survey at the University of Kansas.
Burke W. Griggs, associate professor of law at Washburn University School of Law, is a fellow at the Woods Institute for the Environment and an affiliated scholar at the Bill Lane Center for the American West, both at Stanford University.
Joshua L. Svaty is the fifth generation of his family to farm in Ellsworth County and has worked on natural resource issues with nonprofits and state and federal government. He was the 14th Kansas Secretary of Agriculture.
This promises to be a very interesting presentation