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  • Shiprock (Navajo: Tsé Bitʼaʼí, "rock with wings" or "winged rock") is a rock formation rising nearly 1,583 feet  above the high-desert plain on the Navajo Nation in San Juan County, New Mexico.
    Shiprock-NM-8181.jpg
  • The Mittens (East & West) along with Merrick Butte at Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park, UT
    Monument-Valley-UT-0841.jpg
  • Antelope Canyon is the most-visited and most-photographed slot canyon in the American Southwest. Located on Navajo land near Page, Arizona, it includes two separate, photogenic slot canyon sections, referred to individually as Upper Antelope Canyon and Lower Antelope Canyon.
    Antelope-slot-canyon-UT-1892.jpg
  • From Sunset Point overlook, a view of the climb down into Bryce Canyon through a series of switchbacks leading to the Navajo Loop and Queen's Garden hiking trails. Bryce Canyon National Park in Southern Utah is distinctive due to geological structures called hoodoos, formed by wind, water and ice erosion of the river and lake bed sedimentary rocks. The red, orange and white colors of the rocks provide spectacular vistas for park visitors.
    Bryce-Canyon-Utah-5224.jpg
  • Antelope Canyon is the most-visited and most-photographed slot canyon in the American Southwest. Located on Navajo land near Page, Arizona, it includes two separate, photogenic slot canyon sections, referred to individually as Upper Antelope Canyon  and Lower Antelope Canyon.
    Antelope-slot-canyon-AZ-1825.jpg
  • Antelope Canyon is the most-visited and most-photographed slot canyon in the American Southwest. Located on Navajo land near Page, Arizona, it includes two separate, photogenic slot canyon sections, referred to individually as Upper Antelope Canyon  and Lower Antelope Canyon.
    Antelope-slot canyon-AZ-1829.jpg
  • Antelope Canyon is the most-visited and most-photographed slot canyon in the American Southwest. Located on Navajo land near Page, Arizona, it includes two separate, photogenic slot canyon sections, referred to individually as Upper Antelope Canyon  and Lower Antelope Canyon.
    Antelope-slot-canyon-AZ-1911.jpg
  • Lake Powell as seen from Alstrom Point, with Navajo Mountain in the background. This is as remote as it gets, accessible by rough 4x4 road through washboard, soft sand and bone-jarring slickrock. Worth every bump along the way.
    Alstrom-Point-Lake-Powell-6645.jpg
  • Antelope Canyon is the most-visited and most-photographed slot canyon in the American Southwest. Located on Navajo land near Page, Arizona, it includes two separate, photogenic slot canyon sections, referred to individually as Upper Antelope Canyon and Lower Antelope Canyon.
    Antelope-slot-canyon-UT-1827.jpg
  • Known as Shiprock, this 1700-foot eroded volcanic plume is sacred to the Navajos as Tse Bi dahi, or the Rock with Wings. The name comes from an ancient folk myth that tells how the rock was once a great bird that transported the ancestral people of the Navajos to their lands in what is now northwestern New Mexico. Geologists tell us this mountain was formed by a volcanic vent 27 million years ago. Shiprock is the world's finest example of an exposed volcanic throat. It can be seen for 100 miles.
    Shiprock-NM-8294.jpg
  • Known as Shiprock, this 1700-foot eroded volcanic plume is sacred to the Navajos as Tse Bi dahi, or the Rock with Wings. The name comes from an ancient folk myth that tells how the rock was once a great bird that transported the ancestral people of the Navajos to their lands in what is now northwestern New Mexico. Geologists tell us this mountain was formed by a volcanic vent 27 million years ago. Shiprock is the world's finest example of an exposed volcanic throat. It can be seen for 100 miles.
    Shiprock-NM-8291.jpg
  • A young girl chooses to salute as her parents snap a photo. As sunset casts its shadows on this special place, her salute is magical -- a moment of simplicity and emotion.
    Monument-Valley-Salute-0799.jpg
  • Totem Pole and Yei Bi Chei formations at Monument Valley
    Monument-Valley-formations-0688.jpg
  • Mile marker 13 on U.S. Route 163 in Utah, looking south towards Monument Valley. Also known in the movie as the exact spot where Forrest Gump finally decides to stop running.
    Road-Monument-Valley-UT-0953.jpg
  • The area around Rainbow Vista in Valley of Fire State Park is one of the most colorful places on earth. The 200 million-year-old petrified sand dunes and rocks sculpted by water, wind and time appear in hues from yellow, red, orange, white, brown, pink, and mauve to purple.
    Valley-of-Fire-road-4864.jpg
  • Canyon De Chelly National Monument's most distinctive feature is Spider Rock, a sandstone spire that rises 750 feet from the canyon floor.
    Spider-Rock-Canyon-de-Chelly-1244.jpg
  • Diatremes or volcanic plugs of Church Rock, Agathla Peak (far right) and others east of Kayenta, AZ, on the outskirts of Monument Valley
    Church-Rocks-desert-AZ-0565.jpg
  • The iconic sunrise view through Mesa Arch at Canyonlands National Park near Moab, Utah
    Mesa-Arch-Canyonlands-sunrise-6010.jpg
  • The La Sal Mountains, part of the Manti-La Sal National Forest and the southern Rocky Mountains, rise above the town of Moab, Utah, and Arches National Park, providing contrast to the hot red-rock landscape of Arches.
    Arches-National-Park-mountains-6000.jpg
  • A person could get incredibly lost wandering around New Mexico's Bisti Badlands. Every turn brings you to new formations and new directions to turn. There are no paths to follow. GPS highly recommended!
    Bisti-Badlands-formations-NM-8149.jpg
  • Sculpted by water, wind and time, this is the sandstone formation called "Lady in the Wind" in Lower Antelope Canyon, Page, Arizona.
    Lower-Antelope-Canyon-9039.jpg
  • The desolate and remote Bisti Badlands in Northwest New Mexico showcase the area's awesome color and light.
    Bisti-Badlands-NM-8172.jpg
  • Balanced Rock is a popular landmark at Arches National Park in Moab, UT. The large boulder perched atop a relatively slender pillar of rock is the size of three school buses. The boulder and pillar are made of two different types of stone, so they are wearing away at different rates. Balanced Rock is 128 feet (39 m) high and the boulder weighs approximately 3,577 tons.
    Balanced-Rock-Arches-UT-5972.jpg
  • Horseshoe Bend is the name for a horseshoe-shaped bend of the Colorado River. It is located slightly downstream from the Glen Canyon Dam and Lake Powell within Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, about four miles south of Page, AZ. It can be viewed from the steep cliff above, forming a spectacular vista.
    Horseshoe-Bend-Colorado-River-1730.jpg
  • the Bisti Wilderness is a desolate area of steeply eroded badlands that offers some of the most unusual scenery in the Southwest. Time and natural elements have etched this fantasy world of strange rock formations and fossils.
    Bisti-Badlands-NM-8143.jpg
  • The iconic view through Mesa Arch at Canyonlands National Park near Moab, Utah
    Mesa-Arch-Canyonlands-6024.jpg
  • A cairn is a man-made pile of stones, often in conical form, erected as a landmark or monument. This cairn, along with hundreds of others, can be found in one special place along the Navajo Loop trial in Bruce Canyon National Park in Southern Utah.
    Bryce-Canyon-Utah-5254.jpg
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