Hell's half acre site is about 40 miles west of Casper, Wyoming. It covers 320 acres and has a strange landscape consisting of deep trenches, caves, rock formations and eroded soil. Native American Indians used the trenches to expel bison to death during hunting. Now this is a scenic spot on Highway 20.
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Hell's half acre site is about 40 miles west of Casper, Wyoming. It covers 320 acres and has a strange landscape consisting of deep trenches, caves, rock formations and eroded soil. Native American Indians used the trenches to expel bison to death during hunting. Now this is a scenic spot on Highway 20.
Half an acre of hell is a scenic spot in central Wyoming, the United States, where the landform is strange, composed of deep trenches, caves and rock formations. The unique way of life that Native American Indians used to drive bison to death during hunting has been continued until more than a hundred years ago, when the US military killed all bison in order to eliminate Indians in western North America. But the crow here is also traditional to guard the mountain valley, waiting for the bison to fall into the mountain valley. # WorldHistoricHeritage