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- Bryce Canyon, Utah

- These pinnacle shaped land formations are called hoodoos and are found in Bryce Canyon National Park. Formed of sedimentary rock, slightly acidic rain water has washed away the limestone and “frost wedging” cracks the the rock. In this photograph,...
- Format: image/photograph
- Bryce Canyon, Utah

- Spectacular colors can be seen in the layers of sediment in this photograph taken in Bryce Canyon National Park. There are pinks, purples, terracotta, tan, and white layers.
- Format: image/photograph
- Peek-a-boo Trail at Bryce Canyon, Utah

- This photograph was taken looking up at some of the unique sedimentary land formations that can be seen on Peek-a-boo Trail in Bryce Canyon National Park.
- Format: image/photograph
- Chelser Park Trail in Needles area of Canyonlands National Park

- The Needles area is located in the southeast section of Canyonlands National Park. Visitors hiking along the Chesler Trail will see rock formations created by millions of years of erosion. The layers of sedimentary rock have rounded, smooth edges. Surrounding...
- Format: image/photograph
- Lost Canyon Loop Trail in Canyonlands National Park

- The rock formations along the Lost Canyon Loop trail in the Needles area of Canyonlands National Park show millions of years of erosion. This photograph shows the layers of sedimentary rock and an area of trees growing in harsh conditions below. The layers...
- Format: image/photograph
- Dead tree in Canyonlands National Park

- The twisted remains of a dead tree stands in front of the smooth tops of rounded rock formations along a Chesler Park trail in the Needles section of Canyonlands National Park. The sedimentary rock layers have been exposed over millions of years of erosion....
- Format: image/photograph
- Lost Canyon Loop Trail in Canyonlands National Park

- In the Needles area of Canyonlands National Park scrubby bushes find a niche to grow in the smooth rock formed by years of erosion. In the distance, two red sedimentary rock towers stand watch over this harsh terrain.
- Format: image/photograph
- Chelser Park Trail in Needles area of Canyonlands National Park

- Over millions of years sedimentary rock has eroded into the formations that are present today in Canyonlands National Park. This photograph shows the multi-colored layers of rock towering above the high desert floor below. The green scrubby bushes and trees...
- Format: image/photograph
- Chelser Park Trail in Needles area of Canyonlands National Park

- An old Pinion Pine tree with its twisted trunk stands before a terracotta red rock formation along the Chesler Park Trail in the Needles area of Canyonlands National Park. The tree has only sparse greenery on its highest branches. A healthy evergreen tree...
- Format: image/photograph
- Mesa Arch in the Island in the Sky area of Canyonlands National Park

- Visitors looking through Mesa Arch will see a beautiful vista before them. Utah's snowcapped La Sal Mountains can be seen in the distance. Washer Woman Arch stands next to Monster Tower. The rock formation looks like a washer woman bending over and scrubbing...
- Format: image
- Chelser Park, Canyonlands National Park

- These odd looking rock formations have mushroom-shaped tops. The base of the formations are terracotta red and the “caps” are tan. In the background taller formations can be seen with horizontal cracks running all the way across them. Green shrubbery...
- Format: image/photograph
- Island in the Sky in Canyonlands National Park

- Millions of years of erosion have created this landscape in the southeast corner of Utah. This photograph shows a green flat plain with deep canyons carved into it. This aerial view captures a dirt road running near a canyon in the foreground. Canyons and...
- Format: image/photograph
- Chesler Park Trail in the Needles area of Canyonlands National Park

- Formed over millions of years, these rock formations show the layers of sediment that were laid down and later became rock. The layers' colors are in tans, red, gray, and black. In the foreground, chips of stone line the trail while in the background the rock...
- Format: image/photograph
- Lost Canyon Loop in Canyonlands National Park

- Over millions of years, layers of sediment formed into rock and then erosion has carved the rock into interesting land forms. This can be seen in this photograph taken on the Lost Canyon Loop in the Needles section of Canyonlands National Park. Scrubby vegetation...
- Format: image/photograph
- Chesler Park Trail in the Needles area of Canyonlands National Park

- This photograph shows how erosion has carved the sedimentary rock over millions of years. The boulder in the foreground is breaking down and chips of rock litter the ground next to it. The rocks in the background have perfectly straight horizontal cracks running...
- Format: image/photograph
- Along Chesler Park Trail in Canyonlands National Park

- This photograph was taken looking up at the many layers of rock. Some of the layers are tan, some are red, and some are gray. Their ridges are smooth and rounded. Bushes and other plants are at their base.
- Format: image/photograph
- Chesler Park Trail, Canyonlands National Park

- This photograph was taken from under an overhang along the Chesler Park Trail. Pinyon Pine and Juniper trees grow next to it. In the distance are rounded topped rock formations with layers of red and tan sedimentary rock.
- Format: image/photograph
- Trail to Chesler Park in Canyonlands National Park

- A natural arch has been formed by erosion on the rock formations in this photograph taken along the trail to Chesler Park in Canyonlands National Park in Utah. Deep pits can be seen in these rocks which are colored red, tan, and gray. Blue sky peaks through...
- Format: image/photograph
- Rock around the rock cycle
- Students will study the rock cycle to understand the relationship between the three types of rocks, sedimentary, metamorphic, and igneous, and the conditions needed to transform one type of rock into another. This hopefully will be accomplished through visual learning with computer activities and the demonstration and through auditory learning with the discussion. The student can then apply the knowledge they learned through a story.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 9–12 Science)
- By Mark Clinkscales and Carrie Palmer.
- Learning about rocks
- In this lesson, students will be engaged in hands-on experiences while they explore rocks.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 1 Mathematics and Science)
- By Debbie Hansman.