Zion National Park

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Zion National Park – UtahSkip to content

Located at the junction of the Colorado Plateau, Great Basin, and Mojave Desert regions, Zion’s unique geography and variety of life zones allow for unusual plant and animal diversity. Zion National Park includes deserts, mountains, canyons, buttes, mesas, monoliths, rivers, slot canyons, and natural arches.

Zion National Park is truly an outdoor temple. One can gain a sense of its vibrantly spiritual character just listening to the names of the park’s formations: West Temple, Towers of the Virgin, the Altar of Sacrifice, Angel’s Landing, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob Peaks, Mount Majestic, Cathedral Mountain, Mystery Canyon, Mountain of Mystery, Temple of Sinawava, the Pulpit, Weeping Rock, Great White Throne, Mountain of the Sun, East Temple, the Watchman. …show more content…

Mukuntuweap was renamed Zion National Monument by the director of the National Park Service. When the size of the monument was expanded from the original 5,840 acres to 76,800 acres, Zion Canyon was no longer appropriate the name Zion National Monument was given. In 1919 the monument was declared a National Park and the name Zion National Park was set in stone by President Wilson.

Time spent at Zion never fails to send the physical and spiritual adventurer home with an attitude of profound joy and hope that overflow into the routines of daily life for a very long time

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