Recreation
and Places of Interest
Utah’s great
variety of beautiful scenery is one
of the state’s outstanding tourist
attractions. Rugged areas of colorful
mesas, cliffs, and mountain peaks
provide tourists and residents with
excellent opportunities for hiking,
camping, and riding. In the Wasatch
Range and Uinta Mountains are many
winter sports areas. A favorite activity
for the more adventurous is boating
on the Colorado and Green rivers.
National
Parks
The National Park
Service administers a large number
of units in Utah. The national parks
in Utah preserve several areas of
great natural beauty. In Bryce Canyon
National Park, in southern Utah, are
some of the world’s most colorful
and unusual rock spires, pinnacles,
and domes. Canyonlands National Park,
in southeastern Utah, covers a rugged
area of high mesas and towering rock
pinnacles. Zion National Park, in
the southwestern part of the state,
is noted for its canyons and mesas.
Arches National Park lies in a region
of red sandstone that has been weathered
into natural bridges, arches, and
other spectacular rock shapes. Capitol
Reef National Park covers other areas
of brilliantly colored sandstone formations.
Cedar Breaks National
Monument has a spectacular amphitheater
formed in bright pink cliffs. Three
huge natural sandstone bridges formed
by erosion are included in Natural
Bridges National Monument. The largest-known
natural bridge in the world is in
Rainbow Bridge National Monument.
A number of limestone caves on the
side of Mount Timpanogos are preserved
in Timpanogos Cave National Monument.
Within Hovenweep National Monument
are pre-Columbian Native American
towers, pueblos, and cliff dwellings.
Dinosaur National Monument is the
site of a quarry containing numerous
fossils. Grand Staircase-Escalante
National Monument, one of the nation’s
newest protected areas, is an area
of scenic canyons, cliffs and rock
formations.
Glen Canyon National
Recreation Area, in southern Utah
and northern Arizona, and Flaming
Gorge National Recreation Area, in
northeastern Utah and southeastern
Wyoming, are popular recreation areas
that have facilities for swimming,
boating, and camping. In northern
Utah is the Golden Spike National
Historic Site, commemorating the completion
in 1869 of the first transcontinental
railroad in the United States.
National
Forests
There are eight national
forests in the state, encompassing
nearly 3.3 million hectares (8.1 million
acres). They offer facilities for
hiking, riding, camping, hunting,
and other recreational activities.
The largest forest, Dixie National
Forest, covers a section of rugged
country in the southwest. In the northeastern
corner is Ashley National Forest.
Within the forest is the beautiful
Red Gorge of the Green River and the
Flaming Gorge Dam. Fishlake National
Forest, which is principally in south
central Utah, is divided into four
sections. It includes Fish Lake, which
is popular for trout fishing. Other
national forests include Manti-La
Sal, Sawtooth, Caribou, Wasatch-Cache,
and Uinta national forests.
State Parks
Utah has 45 diverse
and beautiful state parks. Dead Horse
Point State Park, in the eastern part
of the state, affords spectacular
scenic views of canyons, buttes, mesas,
and colorful cliffs. Newspaper Rock
State Historical Monument in Indian
Creek Canyon, is known for its pictographs,
prehistoric drawings by Native Americans.
Located along the west bank of the
Green River is Green River State Park;
in the scenic southwestern corner
of the state is Dixie State Park.
This Is the Place
State Park, near Salt Lake City, includes
a huge granite and bronze monument
commemorating the arrival of the Mormons
in Utah. Territorial Statehouse State
Park, in Fillmore, includes Utah’s
first capitol building, which dates
from 1855. Anasazi State Park, in
south central Utah, contains replica
Anasazi dwellings and has a museum
of artifacts from a nearby ancient
Native American village. Bear Lake,
Willard Bay, Rockport Lake, and Scofield
Lake state parks have facilities for
picnicking and water sports.
Museums
A number of museums
in the state also have exhibits pertaining
to state and Mormon history, including
the Mormon Church-affiliated Museum
of Church History and Art in Salt
Lake City and the Pioneer Village
Museum in Farmington. The University
of Utah has museums of fine arts and
natural history. Other museums in
Utah include the Utah Field House
of Natural History State Park in Vernal,
the Children’s Museum of Utah
in Salt Lake City, and the Fairview
Museum of History and Art in Fairview.
Other Places
to Visit
There are many places
to visit in and near Salt Lake City,
including Temple Square, which contains
the Mormon Temple and the Tabernacle,
and Beehive House, built in 1855 as
the home of Mormon President Brigham
Young. Many motor vehicle speed records
have been set on the Bonneville Salt
Flats, a level area near the Nevada
border in the Great Salt Lake Desert.
Other scenic places
of interest in Utah include Goblin
Valley, which lies 80 km (50 mi) southwest
of Green River. The area is named
for its hundreds of fantastically
shaped rock formations, which are
situated in a valley surrounded by
rugged cliffs. In the Panguitch area
of southwest Utah is a scenic drive
that borders a vast wilderness of
forests, canyons, and rock outcrops.
Source: MSN
Encarta: Online Encyclopedia