
Step onto the Island Trail at Walnut Canyon and let a self‑guided walk reveal a hidden world carved into Arizona’s red rock. In just forty minutes you’ll descend 185 feet via ramps and stone steps to the “Saddle,” then follow a gentle path that circles the rocky island where more than a hundred ancient cliff dwellings cling to the walls. Along the way numbered markers point to concise explanations of the canyon’s geology, plant life, and the lives of the Pueblo peoples who once called these shelters home.
The trail offers striking contrasts: desert vegetation on the sun‑baked north side and higher‑elevation flora on the opposite lip, all framed by sweeping views of the canyon’s horseshoe bend. A brief geological sketch shows how ancient flood plains, a shallow Permian sea, and volcanic activity shaped the layered cliffs you now explore. With clear, friendly guidance, the walk invites you to appreciate both natural splendor and the fragile archaeology that the National Park Service strives to protect.
Full title
Island Trail at Walnut Canyon Walnut Canyon National Monument
Language
en
Duration
~38 minutes (37K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Lisa Corcoran and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2019-06-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
Founded to help visitors better understand national park sites in the Southwest, this nonprofit publishing and support group grew into what is now Western National Parks Association. Its story is closely tied to the early effort to make park interpretation more accessible through affordable guides and educational materials.
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