Nebraska panhandle
The Nebraska panhandle is an area in the western part of the state of Nebraska and one of several U.S. state panhandles, or elongated geographical regions that extend from their main political entity.
The Nebraska panhandle is two-thirds as high and a quarter as broad as the rest of the state is. It is approximately east to west and north to south. The Nebraska panhandle roughly encompasses the area in Nebraska between 102° and 104°W longitude and 41° and 43°N latitude. It comprises 11 counties with a combined land area of, or about 18.45 percent of the state's land. Its population as of the 2010 Census was 87,789 inhabitants, or about 4.70 percent of the state's population. Its largest city is Scottsbluff, in the west-central part of the area.
Counties
Cities and towns
Major cities in the Nebraska panhandle include:- Alliance
- Bridgeport
- Chadron
- Hemingford
- Kimball
- Mitchell
- Scottsbluff - Gering
- Sidney
Population shifts
Points of interest
The Nebraska panhandle has a great deal of geographical and geological diversity; the region itself is made up of several smaller areas. Areas, features, and sites of interest in the Nebraska panhandle include:- Agate Fossil Beds National Monument
- Carhenge
- Chadron State Park
- Sandhills
- Chimney Rock
- Fort Robinson
- Pine Ridge
- Rush Creek Ranch
- Toadstool Geologic Park
- Scotts Bluff National Monument
- Wildcat Hills
- North Platte River