번역본은 밑에 첨부했으며 구글의 번역을 인용했읍니다.
Welcome!
Of all the wonderful attractions in Northern Arizona, thank you for visiting Petrified Forest National Park. This piece of America’s heritage was set aside in 1906 to protect and make available for public enjoyment one of the largest petrified wood deposits in the world. If you imagine that the ground you’re standing on is in a steamy, swampy, equatorial climate 225 million years ago, you will have no problem placing the oversized Triassic trees and dinosaurs that inhabited this area into your mind’s eye. That is the primary story we have to tell here, but there are several others, too.
Humans have lived in this area for at least 10,000 years—the
archeological record tells us that story. Several modern American
Indian Tribes have ancestral ties to this place. And, of course,
in recent times, Route 66 passed through the park and all of the
structures we use today to support your visit and our management
activities are now on the National Register of Historic Places, including the Painted Desert Inn, a National Historic Landmark.
Whatever your interest, please ask a ranger for more information or check out our website at www.nps.gov/pefo Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter. We want to make your visit informative and enjoyable and if we spark your continuing interest in the stories the park has to tell, we’re glad to help you find more information. The most popular way to experience the park is to drive the 28-mile park road from one end to the other. There are many pullouts and several short trails to get you closer to the story.
Please help us keep the petrified wood in its natural place. one of our greatest challenges is the amount of petrified wood that is stolen every year by visitors who either don’t know or don’t care enough about those who come later to refrain from taking a souvenir. If you see this type of illegal activity, please let our law enforcement staff knows. Petrified wood collected legally from locations outside the park is available for sale in the park gift shop.
We hope you enjoy your connection with Petrified Forest National Park. We invite you to walk the trails amidst ancient petrified logs, take in the wide vistas of the Painted Desert, discover voices of the past in the petroglyphs, and listen to the silence of the wilderness. Or make whatever connection works best for you. Enjoy your park and thanks for your support!
Brad Traver, Superintendent
What’s Inside?
2...Trails and Safety
3...Park Programs and Places
4...Park Events, online, and Artists
5...Wilderness Camping and Horses
6... Kids and Volunteers
7...Area Info, Bookstore, and Fees
8...Park Map and Rules and Regulations
Trails and Safety
Out of the Car and on the Trail
The best way to enjoy and experience Petrified Forest National Park is on foot. Designated trails range in length from less than a half-mile to three miles.
Stay on designated trails in developed hiking areas. Off-
trail hiking damages the fragile grassland environment
and disturbs wildlife habitat, creating unsightly
“social” trails. Leaving the designated trail can also be
hazardous for hikers due to loose rock and dangerous
cliffs. Pets must be kept on leash at all times. Pets are
not permitted in the park buildings (except for service
animals). Please clean up after your animal; use the
trash receptacles. Bicycles are not allowed on trails or
off roads at any time.
Description
Trailhead
Trail
Length
1-mile round trip
Tawa and Kachina Points
Painted Desert Rim
0.3-mile loop
Puerco Pueblo parking lot
Puerco Pueblo
1-mile loop Moderate to strenuous
Blue Mesa sunshelter on the Blue Mesa road
Blue Mesa
Crystal Forest parking lot
0.75-mile loop
Crystal Forest
1.6-mile loop
2-miles round trip
Rainbow Forest parking area
Rainbow Forest parking area
Long Logs
Agate House
Giant Logs
Trail guide available in the Museum
Behind 0.4-mile loop
Rainbow
Forest
Museum
Safety
This trail winds through the rim woodland, a place for chance encounters of many species of plants and animals. The view of the Painted Desert is spectacular. Please do not harm animals or plants in the park.
Walk amidst the remains of a hundred room village, occupied by the ancestral Puebloan people between A.D. 1250 and 1400. Do not climb on the boulders or walls. Please do not touch petroglyphs.
Descending from the mesa, this trail loops among petrified wood deposits and badland hills of bluish bentonite clay. Plant fossils, including delicate ferns, have been found in the sedimentary layers of Blue Mesa. Please leave them for others to enjoy.
Despite more than a century of collecting, a few beautiful crystals hide in the petrified logs of Crystal Forest. Please leave the petrified wood for others to enjoy. Report anyone removing petrified wood from the park.
Long Logs is one of the largest concentrations of petrified wood in the park. Explore this ancient log jam at the base of gray badlands. Do not climb on the badland hills.
Archeologists believe that this small pueblo was occupied for
a short time about 700 years ago. Seasonal farmers or traders
possibly built Agate House as a temporary home. Long Logs and
Agate House Trails can be combined, as they start from the same
trail head, for a total of 2.6 miles round trip.
Giant Logs features some of the largest and most colorful logs in the park. “Old Faithful”, at the top of the trail, is almost ten feet across the base.
Blue Mesa Trail
2 Newspaper
Stay on the designated trails. Do not go beyond protective fencing. Avoid cliff edges.
Be aware of symptoms of high altitude sickness: nausea, dizziness, headache, rapid heartbeat, and shortness of breath. Keep hydrated, rest, snack lightly, avoid alcohol and cigarettes.
Wear sunglasses with UV protection, hat, and sunscreen.
Wild animals can carry diseases including rabies, hanta virus, and plague. Do not handle or allow your pets near any live or dead animals. Avoid nests and burrows.
If you are injured or ill while visiting the park, contact a ranger at any visitor center.
For Lost and Found, contact any visitor center or call the park at 928-524-6228.
Yellow emergency phones are located at Puerco Pueblo, Blue Mesa, and Crystal Forest. The park number for emergency only is 928-524-9726.
Programs and Places
Points of Interest and Facilities
In order as seen from north to south:
Painted Desert Visitor Center provides information, book sales, exhibits, and restrooms. Timeless Impressions—a free orientation film about the park—is shown every half hour. A restaurant, gift shop, gas station, and convenience store are adjacent to the visitor center.
Tiponi, Tawa, Kachina, Chinde, Pintado, Nizhoni, Whipple, And Lacey Points are overlooks providing panoramic views of the red part of the Painted Desert.
Painted Desert Inn National Historic Landmark, located at Kachina Point, once served as a respite for travelers along historic Route 66. From the inn, you may view distant vistas and exhibits while touring this historic building.
Puerco Pueblo, a large archeological site, was occupied over 600 years ago. The pueblo has been partially excavated and a few of the room foundations stabilized. The trail also features petroglyphs.
Newspaper Rock has more than 650 petroglyphs adorning boulders below the overlook. Due to defacement of these petroglyphs and unstable hillsides, the area is closed below the cliff. Free spotting scopes are available at the viewpoint.
Blue Mesa is an ideal setting to see the effect of erosion on badland hills. The one-way spur road leads to the mesa top, a four-mile round trip from the main park road. Petrified wood can be seen from the overlooks along the road as well as the trail.
Agate Bridge is a large petrified log spanning a gully and Jasper Forest showcases bluffs which once encased the petrified wood now strewn across the valley floor.
Crystal Forest, Long Logs, Agate House, and Giant Logs are all trails that feature the many wonders of Petrified Forest. Refer to the Trails section for more information.
Rainbow Forest Museum provides exhibits of petrified wood, fossils, and displays of prehistoric animals as well as information, book sales, and restrooms. Timeless Impressions, a free orientation film about the park, is shown every half hour. A gift shop and a seasonal snack bar are located nearby.
Buckshot Dot, cowboy poet, singer, and storyteller
Ranger Guided Programs
Ranger programs are available throughout the year. You probably won’t be surprised that there are more programs available during our busy summer. There are three main programs:
Triassic Park: Discover the landscape of long ago and learn about the Late Triassic Epoch. Meet in the Rainbow Forest Museum sunroom. This will be either an easy Ranger-guided walk (with a few stairs) or a talk, depending on weather and interest.
Painted Desert Inn National Historic Landmark: Step back in time to learn about the inn’s captivating history and architecture. Meet at the Painted Desert Inn National Historic Landmark for this easy Ranger-guided tour.
Puerco Pueblo: Explore this ancestral Puebloan village and discover petroglyphs along the trail. Meet at the Puerco Pueblo parking lot trailhead for this easy Ranger-guided walk.
Additional activities, and events occur throughout the year. Call 928- 524-6228 for more information, check at one of the visitor facilities when you come to the park, or visit http://www.nps.gov/pefo.
Wildflower watching at Petrified Forest
A Timeless Treasure Trove
Imagine a place that protects pieces of natural and cultural history,
from artifacts centuries old to fossils millions of years old. This place
is the Petrified Forest National Park Museum Collection. More than
200,000 objects are housed in the collection, including archeological
objects recovered from hundreds of sites within the park’s
boundaries and associated field records; ethnological objects related
to Hopi and Navajo cultures; Triassic fossils; Park Photographic
Archive; representative geological specimens collected from the park;
and the biological collection (both plants and animals). The museum
collection provides a window of discovery into the Late Triassic—
its flora, fauna, and geology, as well as millennia of human use and
occupation, and the current environment—an aid to understanding
and education among researchers, park staff, and park visitors.
Explore some of the objects in the collection at the Rainbow Forest
Museum and at http://www.museum.nps.gov/pefo/page.htm.
Cultural Demonstrations
The Cultural Demonstration Program at Petrified Forest National Park provides the opportunity for regional people to share their history and traditional crafts in the dynamic setting of Petrified Forest National Park.
The park is pleased to promote awareness
and appreciation for the diverse history and
cultures of the region on Saturdays in March,
from Memorial Day weekend through Labor
Day weekend, and November. Through cultural
demonstrators, we can recognize the ancient
peoples, intertribal relationships, European-
descent cultures and even Route 66 history.
Events, online, and Artists
Special Event Calendar
March Arizona Archaeology and Heritage Awareness Month
April National Park Week, last full week in April
Summer Cultural Demonstrators: Most Saturdays through the summer, visit with silversmiths, dancers, weavers and other demonstrators, many with items for sale.
June Summer Solstice Celebration June 14-28—for about a two week period around the summer solstice, join rangers each morning to watch sunlight and shadow interact with a petroglyph at Puerco Pueblo.
August Founders Day: anniversary of the establishment of the National Park Service, August 25.
September National Public Lands Day: Last Saturday in September
Navajo County Fair: county fairgrounds in Holbrook.
October Ghosts of the Past-Lamplight tour of historic Painted Desert Inn, closest Saturday to Halloween.
November National American Indian Heritage Month December Petrified Forest’s Anniversary, December 8-9
Check for more special activities and details at the park website http://www.nps.gov/pefo or
Online with Petrified Forest
Want to plan for your trip? Can’t come out to visit us? You can virtually visit Petrified Forest National Park online! Start with our official website at http://www.nps.gov/pefo. Stay connected with the park through our social networks:
Twitter: http://twitter.com/PetrifiedNPS
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/PetrifiedForestNPS
Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/petrifiedforestranger and http://www.flickr.com/photos/petrifiedforestnps
Artist Jill Thurk overlooking the Painted Desert
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/PetrifiedForestNP
Artist-In-Residence Program
Artists have influenced the formation, expansion, and direction
of our national parks. The work of many artists has also
assisted in providing perspectives at parks, creating meaningful
experiences for visitors. Artists document national parks through
diverse approaches and techniques, including painting, poetry,
photography, prose, and music, reflecting the multi-faceted
qualities of parks, bringing enjoyment and a deeper understanding
of the parks.
Founded in 2006 as part of the park’s Centennial Celebration, Petrified Forest National Park’s Artist-in-Residence Program continues this tradition. The program offers visual, performing, and literary artists the opportunity to pursue their artistic discipline while being surrounded by Petrified Forest’s inspiring landscape. Selected artists stay in the park for two-weeks during April through October. Artists are prepared to work in this sometimes demanding environment.
Photographer Mark Klett at Long Logs
Participating artists are asked to donate an original piece of artwork from their residency in Petrified Forest to the park. The artwork will be accessioned into the park’s permanent museum collection. Artists will also present two programs to the public during their residency.
Aspire to share your vision of Petrified Forest National Park with the public through the world of art. Work completed under this program contributes to the public understanding and appreciation of our national parks and create a legacy preserved for future generations.
The application form and more details can be found at http://www.nps.gov/pefo/parknews/artist-in-residence.htm. 4 Newspaper
Wilderness and Camping
Wilderness Hiking and Camping
The Petrified Forest National Wilderness Area was one of the first two designated in the National Park System. What is wilderness? The concept is different for everyone. Artists may see shapes and color; backpackers anticipate an adventure; legislators define it in legal terms. In general, wilderness is a place where the human imprint is minimal. In 1964 Congress passed the Wilderness Act, restricting grazing, mining, timber cutting and mechanized vehicles in these areas. Wilderness Areas are protected and valued for their ecological, historical, scientific and experiential resources. The Petrified Forest National Wilderness Area consists of over 50,000 acres of mesas, buttes, badlands, and scattered areas of grasslands.
No permits are required for day hiking. Wilderness hiking offers the opportunity to visit sites seldom seen by most park visitors. There are no developed trails; hiking is cross- country. Clear air, sparse vegetation, and a variety of landmarks combine to make hiking conditions excellent. Be prepared! There is no water and little shade in the backcountry. A gallon of water per person per day is recommended in summer months. Day hikers must be back at their vehicles by the park’s posted closing time.
There are two units in the Petrified Forest National Wilderness Area. The Painted Desert unit is at the north end of the park, accessed from Kachina Point. The trailhead can be found on the northwest side of the Painted Desert Inn National Historic Landmark. Campers must hike at least one linear mile from the trailhead at Kachina Point or north of the Lithodendron Wash. The Rainbow Forest unit is at the south end of the park, accessed from the parking area at mile marker 24 south of the Flattops. In the Rainbow
Forest unit, campers must hike at least a half mile southeast of the main park road near the Flattops. There are no maintained campsites in the wilderness area.
Horseback riding and pack animals are permitted in the wilderness. All information and regulations contained in this article pertain to horse use in the wilderness.
A permit for backcountry camping may be obtained for a maximum of 14 consecutive days. The campsite must be relocated every three days to minimize impacts on the resource. Camping is allowed for not more than a total of 30 days in any calendar year park- wide. All permit applicants must read and sign the permit conditions sheet before being issued a permit.
Regulations:
-
· Collection of plants, rocks, petrified wood, fossils, archeological
objects or other materials is illegal everywhere in the park.
-
· No bicycles or motorized vehicles are allowed in the wilderness area.
-
· Camping in the park without a permit is prohibited.
-
· Group size for staying in the wilderness area overnight is limited to
eight (8) persons per group. Use of campsites is limited to eight (8)
persons.
-
· No wood or charcoal fires are allowed. The use of solar, propane/
butane, and white gas fueled stoves is allowed in wilderness camping
areas. Charcoal fires are not allowed in wilderness camping areas.
-
· Bury human waste. Pack out your trash.
Horseback Riding and Pack Animals
The park offers diverse riding and packing opportunities in the Petrified Forest National Wilderness Area.
When using parking areas, please leave room for
other visitors to park.
Park your trailer so that it does not interfere with
vehicle traffic flow.
Follow all park regulations.
Clean up after horses in improved areas (parking
lots, paved areas, etc).
All food and water must be packed in. Feed must
be certified weed-free.
Do not leave horses unattended, to prevent
encounters with other park visitors. Free-trailing
or loose-herding is not permitted. Horses are
prohibited on paved trails, paved roads and
around visitor use areas.
Water for horses may be obtained at the service
station by the Painted Desert Visitor Center. No
water is available in the wilderness area.
Animals are limited to six (6) per group.
The trail down to the northern unit of the wilderness area can be very steep with an unstable surface. While there are no maintained trails in the wilderness areas, there is very little grade change and riding is easy. Petrified wood is sharp and can cause damage to stock
hooves. Take care of yourself, your stock, and your park.
Did You Know?
Most of the fossil giant reptiles found in Petrified
Forest are not dinosaurs; instead they are
crocodilian relatives. Dinosaurs have different
hips, ankles, and other physical characteristics.
Kids and Volunteers
Junior Ranger Program
Junior Rangers take time to explore, learn and protect their national parks. Kids of any age who complete the required activities in the Petrified Forest Junior Ranger Activity Booklet are eligible for a Junior Park Ranger Badge and Patch. Stop at the Painted Desert Visitor Center, Painted Desert Inn National Historic Landmark, or Rainbow Forest Museum to request an activity booklet.
We invite YOU to become a member of this very special group of people. Help protect our national parks and join the team. Become a Petrified Forest National Park Junior Ranger today!
Junior Rangers are sworn in by one of the rangers
Education Programs
Educators! Bring your students to Petrified Forest National Park
for a ranger-led program that will meet your curriculum needs.
The park has endeavored to provide motivating educational
opportunities for students while meeting several Arizona Academic
Standards. We are always delighted to have classes visit the park with
the desire to learn more about this extraordinary place.
Volunteers Jo and George rove the park, offering their knowledge of the resources to visitors.
Volunteers—Very Important People
Haveyoureadtheheadlineslately? VandalsDestroyPetroglyphs— Fossils are Stolen From Park—Petrified Wood Theft Continues. This is what is happening on our public lands, lands set aside for everyone to enjoy. How can an interested person help deter the increasingdamagetoourcherishedlands? Becomeavolunteerat Petrified Forest National Park!
Volunteers Kate and David work with Ranger Sarah at the Navajo County Fair.
Volunteers receive training about the park, including the fascinating scientific discoveries being made here and the problems in protecting our park. Volunteers may work directly with the public at visitor centers, rove trails, aid researchers, or delve into the park collection with our museum curator. Volunteers are an important part of the National Park Service team. Volunteers make the visitor experience in parks more enjoyable.
Our volunteers are, without a doubt, Very Important People! Last year, nearly 150,000 volunteers donated 5 million hours of their time to national parks. The national parks belong to all of us and they need our protection. No one else will do it for us. If you care, please join us as a VIP, Volunteer-In-Park: learn something wonderful, meet new people, and make a difference.
Forinformationwriteto: VolunteerCoordinator,PetrifiedForest
National Park, P.O. Box 2217, Petrified Forest, AZ 86028
Call the Volunteer Coordinator at 928-524-6228
E-mail: PEFO_Superintendent@nps.gov
Petrified Forest offers:
-
· Developed Curriculum-
based programs on paleontology
and archeology, -
· Other ranger programs designed to meet specific curriculum needs,
-
· In-class programs, when a ranger brings the park to your students.
-
· Traveling trunks that you can sent to your school.
Students explore science at Petrfiied Forest
With the help of generous visitor donations, the Petrified Forest Travel Grant program has paid the travel costs for dozens of visiting school groups from the local area. Your donations change live!
For information write to:
Education Specialist
Petrified Forest National Park
P.O.Box2217
Petrified Forest, AZ 86028
Call the Education Specialist at 928-524-6228
E-mail: PEFO_Superintendent@nps.gov
Petrified Forest is a Science Park! Best known for globally significant Late Triassic fossils, the park attracts many researchers. Geologists study the multi-hued Chinle Formation. Archeologists research over 13,000 years of history. Biologists explore one of the best remnants of native Arizona grassland. Air quality is an ongoing study in the park. Discover your own passion at Petrified Forest!
Area Information, Climate, Museum Association, and Park Fees
National Park Service
Petrified Forest National Park
Mailing Address
Petrified Forest National Park
P.O. Box 2217
Petrified Forest, AZ 86028
PEFO_Superintendent@nps.gov
Fax Number 928-524-3567
Park Headquarters 928-524-6228
Website
http://www.nps.gov/pefo
The National Park Service cares for special places saved by the American people so that all may experience our heritage.
Painted Desert Inn National Historic Landmark in the snow.
Petrified Forest
Museum Association
Petrified Forest Museum Association
Promoting Interpretive and Educational programs
Promoting scientific research and resource
understanding
Producing park-specific publications and materials
Preparing the park for future generations
Become a Member of the Petrified Forest Museum Association and help support your park!
Membership Benefits include an initial 20% discount on anything purchased along with the membership 15% discount at all Petrified Forest Museum
Association bookstores, and 10-20% discount at other national park bookstores around the country. Depending on the membership level, there are additional benefits, such as park publications.
Membership applications are available at park visitor
centers and museums.
Contact: 928-524-6228 x239
Email: pfma@frontiernet.net
Website: http://www.npsbookstore.com
Area Information
89 52 0.012 0.348
The park does not provide any
lodging facilities and camping
is limited to backpacking into Aug
the wilderness area. Nearby Sept
communities, national forests, and
state parks have a variety of motels Oct
and camping offerings. Communities Nov
also offer other services and
businesses. For more information:
Gallup Chamber of Commerce http://www.thegallupchamber.com/ 505-722-2228
Holbrook Chamber of Commerce http://www.ci.holbrook.az.us/ 1-800-524-2459
Winslow Chamber of Commerce http://winslowarizona.org/ 928-289-2434
For road conditions call:
Arizona 1-888-411-7623 (or 511 in Arizona)
http://www.az511.com
New Mexico 1-800-432-4269 http://www.nmroads.com/
Fees and Passes
Petrified Forest Entrance Fees
$20 annual pass to Petrified Forest
$10 per private vehicle for a seven-day pass
$5 per person: bicycles, pedestrians, motorcycle,
and non-commercial bus passenger
Fees subject to change at any time.
Short-horned lizard on petrified wood
National Parks and Federal Recreational Lands Pass Program
Passes admit the pass holder/s and passengers in a non-commercial vehicle at per vehicle fee areas, not to exceed 4 adults
at per person fee areas. Children under 16 are free. Both the Senior and Access Passes provide a 50% discount for some
fees, such as camping, swimming, boat launch, and specialized interpretive services.
Annual Pass – $80: can be obtained in person at the park, by calling 1-888-ASK USGS, Ext. 1, or via the Internet at http://store.usgs.gov/pass. Senior Pass—$10: lifetime for U.S. citizens or permanent residents age 62 or over. The pass can only be obtained in person at the park.
Access Pass—Free: lifetime for U.S. citizens or permanent residents with permanent disabilities. Acceptable documentation is required to obtain the pass. The pass can only be obtained in person at the park.
Volunteer Pass—Free: for volunteers with 500 service hours on a cumulative basis.
Did You Know?
Petrified Forest was one of the first two national parks to have a
designated national wilderness area. Wilderness areas are protected
by law to be “...affected primarily by the forces of nature, with the
imprint of man’s work substantially unnoticeable...”
Park Map and Information
Park Hours of Operation
Basic summer hours are 7 am to 7 pm Mountain Standard Time, extended for Painted Desert views. Winter hours are 8 am to 5 pm MST, with transitional hours of operation during spring and fall.
Rules and Regulations
Do not remove any natural or cultural object from the park, including fossils, rocks, animals, plants, artifacts, etc.
Vehicle travel is limited to the paved park road and park areas open to the public.
Observe speed limit signs, which range between 15 and 45 miles per hour.
Park or stop in designated areas. Do not stop in the middle of the road.
Bicycles are permitted only on the paved park roads and parking areas open to the public. Bikes are not allowed off road at any time or on any trails.
Pets must be leashed (no longer than 6 feet) and physically restrained at all times. Pets are not allowed in buildings, except for service animals. Pets may be tied to an object for short periods of time (less than 5 min.) in developed areas or during emergencies. Clean up after your pet!
Do not litter, including cigarette butts. Use appropriate trash receptacles.
Please recycle aluminum and plastic containers in the appropriate receptacles.
Public use of the park is prohibited during closed hours except by permit.
Camping in the park without a permit or outside of the wilderness area is prohibited.
Stay on designated trails in developed hiking areas.
Do not climb on prehistoric or historic walls or other structures.
Do not harm or remove any petroglyphs. Physical contact with any type of rock art is prohibited.
Do not feed, touch, tease, frighten, harm, or disturb any animals in the park.
Ground fires are prohibited. The use of solar, butane/propane, and white gas stoves and charcoal grills are allowed in designated picnic areas.
The consumption of alcohol or the presence of open alcoholic containers is prohibited, except in picnic areas.
All vehicles, including buses, microbuses and vans, are prohibited from idling their engines for extended periods of time. Idling shall not exceed five minutes during periods of inclement weather and two minutes all other times.
Firearms are prohibited in federal buildings.
8 Newspaper
What can I see?
If you have one hour:
· Stop at the Painted Desert Visitor Center
· Drive through the park
· Visit Rainbow Forest Museum
If you have several hours add:
· See the park film at the Painted Desert
Visitor Center or Rainbow Forest Museum · Stop at Kachina Point and Painted Desert
Inn National Historic Landmark
· Stop at Pintado Point, Newspaper Rock, and
Jasper Forest
· Walk Puerco Pueblo Trail
· Drive Blue Mesa Road
· Walk Giant Logs Trail (pick up a trail guide
in the Museum)
If you have half a day add:
· Walk more of the developed trails
If you have a day or more add:
·
Hike into the one of the units of the Petrified Forest National Wilderness Area
Most restrooms, visitor centers,
and picnic areas are accessible
or accessible with assistance for
wheelchair users. The park film is
Open Captioned. There is a free
book in Braille available at the
visitor centers. Service animals
are always welcome in the park!
Accessibility
Did you know?
Arizona, except for the Navajo Nation, does not
observe daylight savings, staying on Mountain
Standard Time (MST) year round. In summer, we are
the same time as the Pacific Time Zone; in winter, we
are the same as the rest of the Mountain Time Zone.
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