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K–12 teaching and learning · from the UNC School of Education

About this photograph

Creator
Margery H. Freeman
Date created
Unknown
Location
Capitol Reef National Park, Utah
License
This photograph copyright ©2008. All Rights Reserved

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A stream in Capitol Reef National Park, Utah

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This is a stream in a valley in Capitol Reef National Park, Utah. The stream flows between two tall, pink sandstone cliffs. On either side of the stream, there are narrow rows of lush vegetation.

Capitol Reef National Park encompasses over 75 miles of the 100 mile long Waterpocket Fold. Waterpocket Fold is a steep rift in the landscape known as a monocline, a fold in the Earth’s crust usually resulting from an underlying fault. It is known as Waterpocket Fold for the basins that form in the rift as water erodes the formations. The park itself is named after one of its most magnificent features, Capitol Reef. Capitol Reef is named for the large domes of white Navajo sandstone that resemble the domes of capitol buildings, as well as the tall cliffs that surround the area and impede travel.