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National Parks Near Cherokee Springs
Bryce Canyon National
Park is named for one of a series of
horseshoe-shaped
amphitheaters carved from the eastern
edge of the Paunsaugunt Plateau in southern Utah.
Erosion has shaped colorful Claron limestones,
sandstones and mudstones into thousands of spires, fins,
pinnacles and mazes. Collectively called
"hoodoos," these unique formations are
whimsically arranged and tinted with colors too numerous
and subtle to name. Bryce
Canyon National Park is only a short drive from Cherokee
Springs. For
more information on the park, visit the Bryce
Canyon home page.
Zion
National Park was established in 1909 as
Mukuntuweap National Monument. It became Zion National
Park in 1919. The name "Zion" meaning
"place of refuge," was given to the canyon
by Mormon pioneers. Protected within Zion National
Park's 229 square miles (593.1 km) is a spectacular
cliff-and-canyon landscape and wilderness full of the
unexpected including the world's largest arch - Kolob
Arch - with a span that measures 310 feet. Zion
National Park's east entrance is within an hour's drive from Cherokee
Springs. For more information on the park,
visit the Zion
National Park home page.
Cedar
Breaks National Monument is
a huge natural amphitheater has been eroded out of the
variegated Pink Cliffs (Claron Formation) near Cedar
City, Utah. Millions of years of sedimentation, uplift
and erosion have created a deep canyon of rock walls,
fins, spires and columns, that spans some three miles,
and is over 2,000 feet deep.
The
rim of the canyon is over 10,000 feet above sea level, and is
forested with islands of Englemann spruce, subalpine fir and
aspen; separated by broad meadows of brilliant summertime wild
flowers. For more information on Cedar Breaks,
visit the Cedar
Breaks National Monument home page.
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