Poni is one of the earliest tribes founded in the Great Plains. Bonnie inherited the motherland from the states of Mississippi and the eastern part of Texas in the Gulf of Mexico. Since then, Poni has set up Republican, Pratt and Rupu river in Nebraska. The area has plenty of food, abundant soil, and many river / lake water so it is very suitable for living. As one of the few tribes of Great Plains, they have adequate food and water. In other words, the population of Poni will exceed 35,000 people.
Historically, Great Plains was a range of Bison and Hirano Indian Culture, and that tribe included black feet, crows, Sue, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Comanche and others. Tribes living in the villages of semi-permanent lands such as Alikala, Mandan, Pawnee and Wichita live in the eastern part of the Great Plains. Between 1540 and 1542 Texas, Kansas and Nebraska, the first record of residents' encounter with the arrival of the Spanish conquist Francisco Vazquez de Coronado between the Spaniards and the United States. At the same time, Hernando de Soto crossed Oklahoma and Texas in the west-northwest. Today this is called De Soto Trail. The Spaniard believes that the Great Plains have mythical Kibira and Cibola which are said to be rich in gold.
Kansas Nebraska state law "opened" settlement place in Kansas in 1854, but still a lot of people live in this area. These include several native American tribes. Plain Indian tribes of Kansas, Pawnee, Osage live according to the seasons of Kansas State and Kansas State. After 1830, about 20 tribes living in the east of the Mississippi River were located in the west of Missouri, according to the Federal government's expulsion policy in India. In 1853 the government began negotiations to emigrate these tribes. By the end of 1854, various tribes transferred the majority of the land of Kansas and Nebraska to the federal government through various treaties and transferred them to Oklahoma.