2,461,269
~35,835 acres
National Park
1928
2,461,269
~35,835 acres
National Park
1928
Bryce Canyon National Park in southern Utah is famous for its surreal hoodoos—towering spires of red, orange, and white rock carved by erosion. The park’s main feature, the Bryce Amphitheater, offers stunning sunrise and sunset views from overlooks like Sunrise Point, Sunset Point, Inspiration Point, and Bryce Point. Trails such as Navajo Loop and Queen’s Garden lead hikers down into the maze of formations for an up-close perspective. At over 8,000 feet in elevation, Bryce offers cool summer temperatures and crisp winter snows that dust the hoodoos in white. The park is also an International Dark Sky Park, offering spectacular stargazing events. Wildlife includes mule deer, prairie dogs, and numerous bird species. Whether you’re hiking, photographing, or simply gazing from the rim, Bryce Canyon National Park delivers one of the most unique landscapes in the American West.
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