UTAH: Zion National Park

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ZION NATIONAL PARK

Zion National Park is located along the edge of a region known as the Colorado Plateau. The rock layers have been uplifted, tilted, and eroded, forming a feature called the Grand Staircase, a series of colorful cliffs stretching between Bryce Canyon and the Grand Canyon. The bottom layer of rock at Bryce Canyon is the top layer at Zion, and the bottom layer at Zion is the top layer at the Grand Canyon.
Zion was a relatively flat basin near sea level 240 million years ago. As sands, gravels, and muds eroded from surrounding mountains, streams carried these materials into the basin and deposited them in layers. The sheer weight of these accumulated layers caused the basin to sink, so that the top surface always remained near sea level. As the land rose and fell and as the climate changed, the depositional environment fluctuated from shallow seas to coastal plains to a desert of massive windblown sand. This process of sedimentation continued until over 10,000 feet of material accumulated.



There are 428 miles (689 kilometers) by car from Los Angeles to Zion National Park, following the I-15 route.
Los Angeles and Zion are 6 hours 30 minutes (depends on the traffic) far apart, if you drive non-stop.
The time difference between Los Angeles, CA and Zion National Park, UT is 1 hour (current time in Los Angeles is 12:30 pm and the current time in Zion is 1:30 pm).

Click here ( Zion National Park ) for more information about Zion.

* I love to hear about your trip (where did you go? how's your experience?) share it by commenting below. :)

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